singleton
A balanced hand is one with at most one doubleton (two-card suit) and no suit shorter than that. A semi-balanced hand can have two doubletons (and usually no six-card suit).
In bridge, a suit which has only one card in your hand. For example, if you are dealt a hand with a number of spades, diamonds or clubs, but only only one heart, you are said to have a "singleton heart".
The probability of five cards being four cards from one suit and one card from another suit is the same as the probability of drawing four cards from one suit multiplied by the probability of drawing one card from another suit, multiplied by 5 (for each of the possible positions this other card can be drawn in). The probability of drawing four cards from one suit is 12/51 x 11/50 x 10/49. The probability of drawing a fifth card from another suit is 39/48. All these numbers multiplied together (and multiplied by 5) come to 0.0429. So the probability of drawing a hand of five cards with four cards from one suit and one card from another is 5.29%
A royal flush is the highest-ranking standard Poker hand. In a game of 5 card stud with no jokers or other wild cards, there is only four ways to make a royal flush- one chance in each suit.
A bridge hand with no cards in one suit is said to have a void.
Well, the Ace of a suit only wins if that is the first suit played in a hand. If you play it any other time, it is a sluff, and you don't win. Whoever leads chooses the suit that will win the hand. There is no trump in hearts, so whatever suit is lead, is the only one that can win the hand.
To determine the probability of picking 3 cards of one suit and 1 card of another in a standard 52 card deck, consider each card one at a time. The probability of picking a card in any suit is 52 in 52, or 1. Since there are now only 12 cards in the first suit, the probability of picking a card in the same suit is 12 in 51, or 4 in 17, or 0.2353. Since there are now only 11 cards in the first suit, the probability of picking a card in the same suit is 11 in 50, or 0.22. Since there are still 39 cards in the remaining three suits, the probability of picking a card in a suit different than the first is 39 in 49, or 0.7959. The probability of picking 3 cards of one suit and 1 card of another in a standard 52 card deck is, therefore, the product of the probabilities of each card, or (52 in 52) (12 in 51) (11 in 50) (39 in 49), or 267696 in 6497400, or 0.0412, or about 1 in 25.
When you have only one card left in your hand in Uno, you must say "Uno" out loud before playing that card. If you forget to say "Uno" and another player catches you, you may have to draw two penalty cards.
You say "uno" when you have only one card left in your hand during the card game.
In the card game of bridge, the bid "one no trump" signifies that the player's hand is balanced and has a certain strength, usually around 16-18 high card points. This bid is important because it helps the partnership communicate their hand strength and potential to win tricks without the use of a specific suit as the trump suit.
You have to say "uno" when you have only one card left in your hand while playing the card game.
In the Dutch card game with 4 cards, each player is dealt 4 cards and the goal is to have the highest total value of cards in one suit. Players take turns playing a card and must follow suit if possible. The player with the highest total value of cards in one suit wins the round.