diamonds
hearts
hearts
The solitaire game Forty Thieves uses 2 decks of cards. Ten piles of 4 cards are dealt face up. Cards are moved one by one from pile to pile in an attempt to get them in order by suit ace through king on the foundation piles.
There are four Aces, one of each suit.
There are four aces in a deck, one of each suit.
Unfortunately, there are hundreds of different kinds of solitaire games. If you tell us the name of the particular solitaire game, we could help more. The basic game that you get free on your computer sometimes (not Spider Solitaire, but the older one called Solitaire) is a game where you try to line up all the cards, black on red, in descending order, and eventually move them all to piles (by suit starting with the aces). There are options about whether you want to draw one or three, and difficulties with either choice. With draw three, it is important to see the second and third cards before you go through the pile three times (when the game ends), and with either option it is a major challenge to get access to the cards that are face-down. To do this, you have to move one of the face up cards on the top of the face-down card to another pile (so, a black Jack to a red Queen or a red 4 to a black 5 for instance). Hope that was the one you were asking about, but if not, check for rules specific to the name online, or ask another question here giving more of a description.
Both pair of cards were clubs and spades.
Spider Solitaire website ( http://www.solitaire-spider.com ) allows to download a free collection of 5 Spider Solitaire variations, including: Coleopter, Simple Simon, Spider, Spider One Suit, Spider Two Suits.
Spider is usually played with two standard decks of playing cards, but the game is very difficult that way. Spider One Suit and Two Suit game variations exist that still use 104 cards, but only use the Spades in the one suit game and Spades and Hearts in the two suit game.
for spider solitaire (it depends on the level), you are trying to get cards from King to Ace of the same suit. once you put them together, they make piles at the bottom of the screen and you have to make 8 of those to win. for normal solitaire, you are trying to get the suits to (somewhat intertwin) or go opposite like red, black, red, black and also drag them up to their own suits. SS - you just put them in their proper pile anywhere NS - you are intertwining them as well as dragging them up into their proper suits.
A pinochle deck consists of 48 cards. Eight of these cards are aces (2 aces per suit * 4 suits = 8 aces). So, for a random drawing from a complete pinochle deck, the probability of drawing an ace is 8/48 = 1/6.
There are two. One in each suit, two red suits, hearts and diamonds.