List of poker playing card nicknames
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
This list of poker playing card nicknames has some nicknames for the playing cards in a 52-card deck, as used in poker.
Poker hand nicknames
[edit]The following sets of playing cards can be referred to by the corresponding names in card games that include sets of three or more cards, particularly 3 and 5 card draw, Texas Hold 'em and Omaha Hold 'em. The nicknames would often be used by players when revealing their hands, or by spectators and commentators watching the game. With TV and web broadcasting of Poker tournaments, nicknames became much more popular all over the world.[according to whom?]
Card initials | Alternative names |
---|---|
flush | Golf Bag (set of clubs), Puppy Feet, Puppy Prints (from the design of the club) |
flush | Well-Dressed, Decked Out |
flush | Valentine's Day, All My Hearts, Heart-breaker (if it loses) |
flush | Laborers, Digging Deep, In The Hole (if it loses) |
J4o | Pure Bluff Catcher |
J4s | Bluff Catcher, NOT PURE |
AA235, 2358K | Fibonacci |
A3579, 3579J, 579JK | What Are The Odds |
2357J, 357JK | All The Primes |
2468T, 468TQ, 68TQA | Even Stevens |
AAAAK | Knights of the Round Table, Monty Python and the Holy Grail |
AAAA | Team Rocket, Thunderbirds, Musketeers |
AAAKK | Windsor Castle, The Penthouse, Updown Court, The Pinnacle, Bran Castle (amongst some of the world's largest and/or most expensive buildings and/or mansions) |
AAA | Athos, Porthos and Aramis |
AAKK | Big Slick Did the Trick (a rhyme, if the appropriate two-pair hand is formed from the AK starting hand (aka Big Slick); poker professionals will tend to bet aggressively with this hand) |
AAQQ | Aqua |
AAJJ | Jackasses (play on "Jacks and Aces") |
AA88 | Dead Man's Hand |
AKQJT | Broadway (off-suit), Royal Flush (suited) |
A3A6 | Austin 3:16 (after WWE wrestler Stone Cold Steve Austin) |
A23 | ABC |
AA23 | Princess Leia[1] |
A6A8T | Golden Hand (from the Golden Mean) |
AK47 | After the AK-47 assault rifle developed by Mikhail Kalashnikov |
KKKK | Four Horsemen, Kings of Leon |
AAAKKK | DUPLEX (Any two cards can be used. Basically two sets of trips. Instead of a 5-card hand called "Full House" you have a 6-card hand which makes a "bigger full house" or Duplex) |
KKKAA | The Nativity (the famous Biblical story in which the Three Wise Men visit Joseph & Mary to witness Jesus Christ's birth) |
KKKQQ | Buckingham Palace |
KKK | Alabama Knight Riders, Three Wise Men, Christmas Special, Ku Klux Klan, Keane |
KKQQ | Mommas and Poppas, ABBA, Double Date, "Aerosmith" (based on the song title, "Kings and Queens"), The Ice Breaker |
KQJT9 | Off-Broadway (off-suit), Hail to the King (suited) |
QQQQK | Elvis in Vegas, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy |
QQQQJ | Bachelor's Dream |
QQQQ | Village People, Magnolias, Scrabble Player's Dream, The Joy Luck Club |
QQQ | Six Tits, Daisy Hand |
QAAAK | The Duck |
QQ33 | San Francisco waiters (Queens and Treys) |
QJT98 | Honeymoon in Vegas (if it wins, based on a scene from the movie of the same name) |
JA55 | Jackass, Jazz |
JJJJQ | The Strip Club |
JJJJ8 | Riewoldt On A Roll (after AFL Richmond full-forward Jack Riewoldt) |
JJJJ5 | Neverland Ranch |
JJJ55 | Jackson Five |
JJJ | "Hart, Schaffner and Marx" |
JJ55 | Rock 'n' Roll, Motown |
JJ33 | Hookers With Crabs |
JT987 | Convenience Store Straight, Honeymoon in Vegas (if it loses, based on a scene from the movie of the same name) |
TTTT | Larry (after Larry Fortensky, Elizabeth Taylor's eighth husband), Shotgun |
TTT | Thirty Miles of Bad Road, Elk River, Gilroy, Judge Bean, Judge Duffy, Judge Judy, Judge Wapner, San Jose to Gilroy (approximate distance in miles between the two cities), Dallas to Fort Worth (ditto), Judas (his pay was "thirty pieces of silver") |
TT | Fingers n' Toes (ten of each), Dubs Dimes, Duff McKagan, Top Titties |
TJAAT | Golden String |
TT33 | Hot Waitresses (Tens with treys) |
TK42A | Star Wars, Stormtrooper (Why aren't you at your post?) |
T8642 | Rizlo, Scotch Straight |
9988 | Oldsmobile[1] |
9966 | Dinner For Four, Dubs Sixtyniners |
999 | Extra Virgin (99 is "German Virgin") |
888 | Television Subtitles |
77744 | Sailing Rednecks |
777 | 21, 21 Miles of Rough Road, Jackpot,[2] Slot Machine[3] |
7733 | Queens of the Stone Age (after their song 3's and 7's) |
75432 (off-suit) | Kansas City,[4] Sympathy Hand (it is the worst hand possible) |
6667J | Devil's Convenience Store |
666 | The Devil, Lucifer, The Beast, Devil's Area Code, Kotch |
65432 | Rabbit, The World Trade Center Straight[5] |
555 | Washington Monument, Pork Chop Sandwich, Movie Call (All bogus numbers start with "555") |
5432A | First Street, Little Minnie, Little Wheel[2], Pup, Puppy, Spoke[3], Steel Wheel (suited)[4], Steel Wheel Bike (suited)[5], The Bicycle[6] |
4444A | Hole-In-One |
4444 | Yacht Club |
444 | Grand Jury |
49 | Full Cup (Joke from the TV Series Friends, where Chandler and Joey play "Cups") |
36TJK | The Royal Sampler (from a joke on The Simpsons) |
3333T | Teddy, EJ, Mr Football (after AFL/VFL Footscray/Western Bulldogs legend Ted Whitten), 1961 (if it loses) |
3333 | Forest, Four Trees, The Magic Numbers |
3322 | Socks and Shoes, Mits and Mites, Mites and Lice,[6] Nits and Lice[6] |
3A4A5 | Pi |
2222 | Mighty Ducks |
222AA | Marksman[7] |
22233 | Tent (smallest full house), Mites and Lice,[6] Nits and Lice[6] |
222 | Huey, Dewey, and Louie |
Texas hold 'em pocket card nicknames
[edit]The following is a list of nicknames for pairs of two playing cards, usually hole cards, used in poker derivatives such as Texas hold 'em and Omaha hold 'em poker. These nicknames are usually used by the player when announcing their hand or by spectators or commentators who are watching the game.
Ace higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
AA | ||
Alan Alda | An alliteration, Alan Alda was the star of the television version of M*A*S*H[8] | |
Albert Anastasia | An alliteration, first mob boss killed gangland style in 1957[9] | |
American Airlines ( or ) | So called due to the commercial airline's acronym and logo, AA (the aces are of different colors to mimic the AA logo)[10] | |
Apollo 11 | So called due to it being the first mission to the moon while ace is considered 1, or because the hand "AA" means "11" | |
Banditerna ( | )Swedish for "the Bandits"[8] | |
Batteries | AA like a AA battery commonly used in portable electronic devices | |
Big Smoke | AA is a strong pre-flop favorite ("smokes") over Big Slick (AK) or any other two-card hand. | |
Bullets | Looks like bullets, possibly a reference to the Dead Man's Hand, two pair of aces and eights, suggesting that Wild Bill drew a third bullet in the back, which filled his hand in death[8] | |
Eyes | Probably from snake eyes in dice[8] | |
Eyes of Texas | From the song, probably an elaboration on dice[8] | |
Flying Nazis[11] | Probably because an A looks like a plane, and the Nazis had the most successful flying "aces" in their air force | |
Joe Louis ( | )Two black eyes, what you will get in the ring if you fight Joe Louis[12] | |
Pocket Rockets | Looks like rockets[8] | |
Needles | Looks like needles[8] | |
Rocky Mountains | Looks like mountains[8] | |
Sharp Tops | Sharp on top, see also A4[8] | |
Snake Eyes | From dice[8] snake eyes is the outcome of rolling the dice in a game of craps and getting only one pip on each die | |
Squirrel[13] | Probably named because the hand is "the nuts". Possibly also a reference to the phrase "Even a blind squirrel can find a nut once in a while"[14] | |
Sticks | Looks like sticks[8] | |
Teepees | Looks like teepees[8] | |
Two Pips[15] | A pip is a mark indicating the suit or numerical value of a playing card | |
Visine ( ) | Two red eyes, it gets the red out[16] | |
AK | Anna Kournikova | Initials; also looks good, but never wins.[17] |
Annalise Keating | Initials; | |
Barry Greenstein( ) | From 5th annual Jack Binion World Poker Open in Tunica MS, as per Hooter Huon[8] | |
Big Slick | It is a slippery hand that one can easily lose a fortune over[17] | |
Kalashnikov | Due to the name of a gun designed by Mikhail Kalashnikov, AK-47. | |
Big Ugly (offsuit)[17] | Imitating Big Slick, but "Ugly" if offsuit | |
Exxon Valdez ( ) | Since it has a lot of black in it.[18] | |
King Arthur[19] | Named after the legendary British leader. | |
Korean Airlines[19] | Named after the South Korean Airline | |
Mike Haven ( | )Mike played two pre-flops all-in in a row with these cards to win the final table, coming from behind[8] | |
Salt Lake Pair[17] | No explanation found. The "pair" refers to the cards being well matched, rather than of equal value. | |
Santa Barbara | Due to a big oil spill off Santa Barbara[8] | |
Arian Kollen | Named after the Norwegian rapper Arian Kollen. His initials are A K, and he has also won some considerable pots with this hand. | |
Walking Back to Houston | Gamblers who played this hand too strongly were often left with no getaway money.[8] Although other sources state its name was derived because the old time poker players would play this hand so well that they'd leave their opponents walking back to Houston[17] | |
AQ | Antony & Cleopatra[8] | A for Antony and Cleopatra his queen. Named after the famous lovers and Shakespearian works |
Big Chick | Imitating Big Slick[8](AK) | |
Big Slut[20] | Imitating Big Slick (AK). Hands involving Queens are often derogatory, especially if they don't win. | |
Doyle Brunson | In his book, Doyle said he would never play AQ, and busted out of the 2008 WSOP Main Event holding AQ offsuit. | |
Little Slick[20] | Imitating Big Slick (AK) | |
Mrs Slick[21] | Imitating Big Slick (AK) | |
Rocket Queen | A song made popular from Guns N'Roses | |
AJ | Armani Jeans | AJ is the acronym used by the brand Armani Jeans |
The Unrare | n/a | |
Apple Jacks[11] | Backronym of AJ | |
Ajax[15] | Named after the foam cleaner due to the phonetic similarity between "Ajax" and "Ace-Jack", or "A-Jacks" | |
Blackjack[22] | Named after the card game in which AJ (Or an Ace with a picture card or 10) is the highest possible hand | |
Foamy Cleanser | Ajax[8] | |
Hijack[23] | As in "High-Jack" | |
Jackass[24] | Imitative of "Jack-Ace" | |
Trapasso[25] | Likely to be named after the American Football player A.J. Trapasso | |
AT | Bookends | 2 ends of the highest straight[26] |
Johnny Moss | It's speculated that Johnny Moss is associated with this hand because he began playing poker at the age of 10[27] | |
Dick's Last Resort | An all in hand represented by the famous restaurant | |
A9 | Rounders Hand | From the movie[8] |
McDerment ( | )A corruption of the last name of Mike McDermott, the character played by Matt Damon in the movie Rounders, whose fortune rode heavily on this hand.[8] | |
Jesus (Chris Ferguson) | Chris Ferguson beat T. J. Cloutier at the final hand of the 2000 WSOP Championship event holding A9 against TJ's AQ[27] | |
Gimp Hand | Because it's so much weaker than Ace-Ten. | |
A8 | Dead Man's Hand | See Dead man's hand |
Asterix and Obelix[28] | Inspired by characters from René Goscinny's The Adventures of Asterix. Asterix represents the Ace due to the matching initial with Obelix representing the 8 due to their similar shape. | |
A7 | Slapshot | Nicknamed Slapshot as a hockey reference as sevens are sometimes called hockey sticks and aces are bullets[19] |
The Sonnert[29] | Named after poker player Bengt Sonnert for his success with it in the World Series of Poker Europe 2008 | |
A6 | Mile High Club | Airplane and sex[26] (Aces are often nicknamed after planes due to their shape, "six" in German is pronounced as sechs similar to "sex") |
Tennessee Ernie Ford | Singer famous for the song Sixteen Tons[3] | |
A5 | High Five[11] | An Ace is high, combined with a five gives us a high five |
A4 | Plane Crash[11] | Aces are synonymous with flying (e.g., 'Flying Nazis', 'Pocket Rockets' and 'American Airlines') probably due to the shape of the 'A', a '4' is like an 'A', but with a missing 'wing', hence Plane Crash |
Stu Ungar | Ungar won the last of his three World Series of Poker Main Event titles in 1997 with this hand, making a straight. | |
Fake Aces | Since a 4 looks a bit like an A, the A4 can be called fake aces. | |
A3 | Ashtray | Imitates Ace-trey[8] |
Baskin-Robbins | Nicknamed Baskin-Robbins because of their 31 different flavors of ice cream.[27] | |
Thrace | A portmanteau of "Three" and "Ace", also named after the historical and geographic area in southeast Europe Thrace[30] | |
A2 | Acey-Deucey | From the game Acey Deucy[31] |
Riewoldt | Playing number of St. Kilda Captain, Nick Riewoldt (12) | |
Hunting Season | Aces are known as bullets and twos are known as ducks, hence hunting season[27] | |
Little Slick[11] | Imitation of 'Big Slick' (AK) | |
Brutus | Imitates "et tu". From William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. As Brutus stab Caesar, he exclaims “Et tu, Brute?”. | |
Ax | ||
George Strait | Named after his Ace In The Hole Band and his song "Ace In The Hole" |
King higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
KK | Ace Magnets | Ace Magnets because the ace is the only card you don't want to see[27] |
Brokeback[7] | Named after the film that depicts the complex romantic and sexual relationship between two cowboys (KK also being called "Cowboys") | |
Butchers of Baghdad | Reference to 2003 invasion of Iraq and the most-wanted Iraqi playing cards | |
Cowboys[11] | No explanation found. The nickname is probably given for a number of reasons, including the association between cowboys and playing poker, the similarity between the "K" of "King" and the "C" of "Cowboys" and both characters are male. It could also come from a common nickname of the King card - the "Cowboy". | |
Elvis Presley[7] | Named after the "King" of Rock and Roll | |
Gorillas | From King Kong[8] | |
Gorillas in the Mist | From the movie starring Sigourney Weaver,[8] a nickname taken from "King Kong" (Also KK)[32] | |
Kangaroos | Kangaroos are used on children's alphabet cards to illustrate a K[8] | |
Kevin Keegan[33] | An alliteration | |
King Kenny | An alliteration; the nickname of former Liverpool player Kenny Dalglish, who would soon be manager of Liverpool, Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United | |
Knights[33] | An association with the feudal king images on the cards | |
King Kong[11] | An alliteration | |
Kinkerbells[34] | Courtesy of Vince Van Patten on Celebrity Poker | |
Krispy Kreme[11] | An alliteration | |
KQ | Tito Hand (suited) | If Tito loses |
Ferdinand and Isabella | A Spanish King and Queen[8] | |
Lucy and Ricky | Lucille Ball and Ricky "the King and queen of television"[8] | |
Marriage (suited) | If it wins, comes from the game Pinochle[8] | |
Mixed marriage (offsuit) | Comes from the game Pinochle[8] | |
Othello (offsuit)[11] | This is reference to Othello and Desdemona, the fated couple from William Shakespeare's play Othello. Possibly also a reference to 'Mixed Marriage' | |
Royal couple | A King and Queen[8] | |
King of Queens | Popular American Sitcom starring Kevin James and Leah Remini. | |
Throne | As befits a royal couple. | |
Valentine's Day ( )[27] | A matched couple, both showing their hearts | |
KJ | Bachelor's hand (offsuit) | "Jack-King-Off"[8] |
Bill Fillmaff (offsuit) | The "signature hand" of "Bill Fillmaff", a character parodying poker professionals in general and Phil Hellmuth in particular, portrayed by Internet personality Kevin Bowen[35] | |
Kalashnikov Jikita | Russian poker player Nikita Kalashnikov won $200 with this hand in an online poker room in 2020. | |
Harry Potter | Written by J.K. Rowling[8] | |
Jamiroquai | A British band fronted by singer Jay Kay | |
Just kidding[11] | Backronym of JK, from the textspeak "j/k" (see below) | |
Joking | 'Jo' referring to the Jack; in textspeak, "j/k" is a pseudo-emoticon meaning "joking" or "just kidding" | |
Jackie Kennedy | Wife of JFK | |
The rookie | As said by Daniel Negreanu | |
Jordy Kooistra | Initials of Dutch poker player | |
King John | KJ[8] | |
Kojak | Mimics KJack,[8] thanks to the '70s crime drama starring Telly Savalas, who was himself a poker player and occasional participant in WSOP Main Events[32] | |
Ralph Perry | 2002 World Series of Poker Main Event finalist berated by Antanas Guoga for overplaying the hand | |
Starsky and Hutch[36] | Named after the crime fighting duo from the series of the same name| | |
Tucson Monster[11] | No explanation found | |
KT | Big Al | A reference to Wisconsin poker player "Big Al" Emerson[27] |
Katie | Imitation of K-T[8] | |
Ken[33] | A portmanteau of "King" and "Ten" | |
Ike Turner | Beats QT (Tina Turner – see below) | |
Woodcutter (offsuit) | Possibly from the legend of King Edward and the Woodcutter[8] | |
K9 | Bow-wow[11] | From canine |
Canine | "K"-nine[8] | |
Dogs | From canine[8] | |
Fido | A derivative of canine[8] | |
Mongrel (offsuit) | From canine[8] | |
Mutt (offsuit) | From canine[8] | |
Pedigree (suited) | From canine[8] | |
Michael Vick | From canine, in reference to the former NFL QB's dog fighting conviction | |
Rin Tin Tin[33] | From Rin Tin Tin K9 cop | |
The Doctor Who | K-9, the Robotic Dog from the British Television Series Doctor Who | |
Sawmill | Byron 'Cowboy' Wolford says:
| |
K8 | Kate | A portmanteau of "King" and "Eight"[30] |
Feast | What the 'King ate'[8] | |
Cheeseburger | What the 'King ate' the King being Elvis Presley | |
Kokomo | Imitative[8] | |
K7 | Columbia River | The Columbia River is famous for its salmon runs. "King Seven" sounds like "King Salmon"[27] |
Kevin | Sounds like Kevin[38] | |
K6 | Kicks | Nicknamed "Kicks" (if Pig Latin is used) for phonetic reasons[30] |
K5 | Knives[33] | A combination of "King" and "Five" |
Seattle Special/The Home Team | The nickname refers to Seattle's NBC affiliate, channel 5 with call letters KING Seattle TV channel 5 based in King County, Washington, United States. Their news team's slogan is "The Home Team"[30] | |
K4 | Core[33] | A portmanteau of "King" and "Four" |
Fork | 4K sounds like "Fork"[27] | |
Fork Off (offsuit)[33] | 4K sounds like "Fork" plus "Off" for offsuit | |
Forking Idiot[33] | From "Fork". Probably a suggestion that you would have to be an idiot to play the hand | |
Oppression of the Masses | The answer to the question: "What is a king for?" | |
K3 | Alaska Hand | From Alaskan King Crab[8] |
Commander Crab | A derivative of King Crab[8] | |
Swedish Meatballs | SWEDES[8] | |
King Crab | 3 looks like a crab[8] | |
Mortans Hand | Best hand he played [8] | |
Sizzler | The home of all-you-can-eat King Crab[8] | |
K2 | Big Fritz (suited) | An unconfirmed reference to German poker player Andreas Fritz[30] |
Donald | A reference to Donald Duck,[30] the "King" of ducks (since twos are also known as "ducks") | |
The Tracey | Originated by a 1-2 no limit crusher at Parks poker room | |
Hand of the Night | A reference created by Chris Hinst during his weekly poker night. Named because he kept getting this same hand. | |
King Gnu (offsuit) | A reference to King Gnu. |
Queen higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
Lady Gaga | Queen of music & Queen of pop culture. | |
Calamity Jane[11] | No explanation found, but the nickname is likely to come from Cowgirls the female equivalent of Cowboys (KK). Calamity Jane was also a friend of Wild Bill Hickok, a gunfighter who died during a poker game. | |
P-CO | The last two queens of England | |
Canadian Aces | Because Canadians revere the Queen[26] | |
Canadian Rockets | Because Canadians revere the Queen[26] | |
Four Tits | Vulgar[8] | |
Hilton Sisters | Paris and Nicky Hilton[8] | |
Anna Kournikova | Very pretty but seldom wins.[8] | |
Ladies[3] | Because they're the only female cards. Queens tend to have derogatory names, especially when they lose, so Ladies is more likely to be used when they win. | |
Pair of Wire Cutters | Dykes[8] | |
Pocket Tubmans ( | )Reference to Harriet Tubman[8] | |
Quiggities | Reference to Jiggities (see JJ below) | |
San Francisco Wedding | A gay reference[8] | |
Siegfried & Roy | Two Queens[8] | |
Snowshoes[3] | Probably because they're the shape of a traditional snowshoe | |
QJ | Quack[3] | Combination of Queen and Jack |
Maverick | From the Maverick TV show theme song, "Livin' on jacks and queens. Maverick is a legend of the west"[8] | |
Hawaii | According to the pros if you don't play QJ for a year you'll save enough money to go there. | |
Oedipus | an allusion to Sophocles' Oedipus the King, the ancient Greek tragedy in which Oedipus (the "J" in this pairing) unwittingly kills his father and marries his mother, Jocasta (the "Q")[32] | |
Pinochle ( | )The big hand in the game Pinochle[8] | |
JQuery | JQuery never loses | |
QT | Cutie[39] | For phonetic reasons |
Goolsby | Named for Everett Goolsby, well known Texas gambler. Crony of Doyle Brunson, Cowboy Wolford and Benny Binion[8] | |
Tarantino | Quentin Tarantino, a famous movie maker[32] | |
Q-Tip[40] | A backronym of QT. A Q-tip is a cotton swab. | |
Tina Turner | It always gets beat.[41] | |
Quint | Imitative[8] | |
Robert Varkonyi | In the 2002 WSOP, Varkonyi knocked out Phil Hellmuth and eventually won the final event with this hand[8] | |
Q9 | Quinine | "Queen Nine" sounds like "Quinine", an early anti malarial drug,[27] from lowball[8] |
Q8 | ||
Snow and a Ho | 8 is a snowman, Q is a ho | |
Frigid Bitch | From "Snow and a Ho" | |
Face Sitter | A vulgar reference to analingus, what the 'queen ate'[8] | |
Bitch Called Hope | Tempting to try for a straight, but rarely succeeds | |
Kuwait | Nicknamed "Kuwait" for phonetic reasons[27] | |
Q7 | Computer Hand (offsuit) | From an apocryphal story that a computer proved that these were the most commonly occurring cards on the Flop.[42]
There is also a story of an early computer simulation in which Q7 was a break-even hand[8][2] Nickname for the IBM Q7 (AN/FSQ-7) SAGE computer. This type of vacuum tube computer was physically the world's largest computer ever built. |
Dike | a lady with a mullet | |
Q6 | Arnold Palmer's ex-wife | Palmer was nicknamed the King. |
Nesquik | From "quix" | |
Quix | Phonetic similarity. | |
Sad Ole Bess | A play on Queen Elizabeth I's other nickname, "The Virgin Queen," AKA the Cherry Queen | |
Q5 | Granny Mae | If both spades, an old-time player, Granny=Queen, Mae=5th Month, some say Q5 spades was her favorite[8] |
Q4 | Housework | A joking response to the question, "What's a queen for?" |
Prince Maker | A joking response to the question, "What's a queen for?" | |
Shuli | Popularized in the notorious underground "Emergency Poker League" or "EPL", frequented by elite players of the Canadian circuit | |
Q3 | Gay Waiter | 'Queen' with a 'tray'[8] |
San Francisco Busboy | 'Queen' with a 'tray'[8] | |
Windsor Waiter | 'Queen' with a 'tray'[8] | |
Q2 | Daisy | A reference to Daisy Duck,[30] the "Queen" of ducks (since twos are also known as "ducks"). See also "Donald" – K2 |
Queen Liz | A reference to Queen Elizabeth II |
Jack higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
JJ | Brothers[25] | Two similar looking males, i.e. brothers |
Jiggities | Popularized by YouTuber Brad Owen. Likely a reference to Family Guy's Quagmire's catchphrase. | |
Fishhooks | They look like them, and because fish get beat with overpairs[8] | |
Jar Jars | Jar Jar Binks is one of the most hated Star Wars characters, just as JJ is for many experienced poker players | |
Ice-JJ-Fish | Like the rapper, they rock[8] | |
Jaybirds | Starts with J[8] | |
Bowers | Named after the Jacks from the card game Euchre where jacks are the highest trumps and are called bowers, in turn from the German Bauer (literally, farmer) | |
Jonatan Johansson | An alliteration, former Finnish footballer and Charlton Athletic forward, nicknamed 'JJ' by the fans | |
John Juanda[11] | An alliteration, John Juanda is an American professional poker player | |
Colostomy Bag | Vulgar, from "Pocket Jacks", 'Jacks' being a UK/Irish slang term for a toilet | |
Rentboys | Two young men, similar to pocket queen's "Prostitutes" nickname | |
Knaves Aplenty | Literally, a plethora of Jacks, a Knave being an alternative term for a Jack. | |
Kid Dy-no-mite | Signature expression of the character JJ from the TV show Good Times[19] | |
One Eyed Jacks ( ) | Both side views[8] | |
JT | Justin Timberlake | Justin Timberlake's initials |
The Two Jakes | The movie sequel to Chinatown starring Jack Nicholson and Harvey Keitel[8] | |
Greek Passport | A Greek immigrant won with this to buy an Australian Residency | |
John Terry | Named after the England Football Captain. | |
T.J. Hooker | After the '80s action drama starring William Shatner[32] | |
J9 | Braggars | Jacks and nines are wild in the game of braggars[8] |
T. J. Cloutier ( | )T.J. flopped three straight flushes with this hand in one year[40] | |
J8 | Jeffrey Dahmer | He 'ate Jack', serial killer who ate his victims[8] |
Jacket | Sounds like jacket[8] | |
J7 | Jack Daniels[40] | Named after Jack Daniel's Old No. 7 Tennessee whiskey |
J6 | Coop Deville | [8] Named after the legend of Houston, TX |
Kevin Cusick | Famous callout of J-6 and predicting a two pair before being dealt | |
Insurrection | J6 short hand for January 6 United States Capitol attack. | |
J5 | Jackson Five | Michael Jackson's childhood group[8] |
Motown | Record label for Jackson Five[8] | |
J4 | The Robbi | Named after Robbi Jade Lew, who improbably called Garrett Adelstein with this hand on "Hustler Casino Live" to take down a $269,000 pot[43] |
The New Motown | Motown was named for the Jackson Five, but now there's only four | |
Austin Squatty | Named after John "Austin Squatty" Jenkins due to his penchant for raising and reraising with this hand[8] | |
Flat tire | What's a 'jack for'?[8] | |
Kid Grenade | After a poker dealer who when he played was "liable to go off at any moment"[44] | |
J3 | J Lo | As in "J-lo", "lo" meaning "low card" or perhaps the resemblance the 3 has to a derrière[45] |
Lumberjack | A Tree and a Jack | |
Minus Michael and Jermaine | Jackson 5 without two members, preferably clubs to resemble Afros. | |
J2 | The Prince and the Pauper (suited) | After Mark Twain's novel set in 1547, which tells the story of two young boys who are identical in appearance: Tom Canty, a pauper who lives with his abusive father in Offal Court off Pudding Lane in London, and Prince Edward, son of King Henry VIII. They end up changing places. |
Heckle and Jeckle | Nicknamed Heckle and Jeckle after twin cartoon jaybirds (2 Jays) that first appeared on television in 1946 (Heckle and Jeckle were, in fact, magpies).[30] | |
Jack Shit | Popular English phrase referring to "nothing", in this context referring to the fact there is a Jack with the worst possible kicker and also something widely regarded among poker players as a "nothing" hand. |
Ten higher card
[edit]Card Initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
TT | Audi[13] | Named after the famous Audi TT car |
Binary[40] | In Binary, 1010 equals 10 (in decimal notation) | |
Bo Derek | Actress from movie 10[19] | |
Dimes[30] | A dime is a coin worth ten cents or one tenth of a United States dollar | |
Dynamite[46] | Comes from T and T sounding like the explosive TNT | |
McDonald's | Named after the ten piece McNugget | |
Potatoes | The zero (0) in 10 looks like a potato, and potatoes are sometimes called Taytos. Alliteratively, Pocket Potatoes. | |
Tension | Imitative[8] | |
TNT[46] | Comes from T and T sounding like the explosive TNT | |
Train Tracks | An alliteration | |
T9 | Mobile Hand | Named after the "Text on 9 Keys" mode on mobile phones |
Countdown | Countdowns usually start at ten, nine...[27] | |
T8 | Tetris | Imitative[8] |
T7 | Bowling Hand | The difficult Seven-ten split[8] |
Daniel Negreanu ( ) | His favorite hand [3] | |
Split | A bowling reference, a seven-ten split[8] | |
T6 | Sweet Sixteen | Six and Ten. Should be mumbled with sarcasm as you fold it[47] |
Filet-O-Fish | This hand looks good but in reality has no value | |
T5 | Dime Store | From 5 & dime[8] |
Homosexual | A gay reference, as you cannot make a straight with a ten and a five in your hand. | |
Five and Dime[48] | From nickname "Dimes" as a dime is a United States coin worth 10 cents. A Five and Dime is a type of variety store. | |
Merfs | A draw poker game where tens and fives are wild[30] | |
Woolworths | The Five and Dime store chain[8] | |
T4 | Ex-Girlfriend | Named after a Las Vegas local's highschool girlfriend, because it sounds like the last name "fortin" |
Broderick Crawford | From 50s "Highway Patrol", who said "10-4" into radio[8] | |
CB Hand | Ten-four is CB radio language for OK[8] | |
Convoy | From the old trucker song, ten-four good buddy[8] | |
Good Buddy | Old trucker radio language, ten-four is CB language for OK[8] | |
Over and Out | Two-way radio language for end of conversation, ten-four is radio language for OK[8] | |
Roger That | Two-way radio language for OK, ten-four is also radio language for OK[8] | |
Truckers' Hand | Following the CB radio craze of the '70s, for the same reasons as "Broderick Crawford"[32] | |
The Trucker[49] | From CB radio[8] | |
T3 | Kitchies | The T3 must be offsuit; refer to Dipthrong's kitchen for origin |
Fast Connection | Refers to the T3 telecommunications connection[30] | |
Alexisdg8 | A famous Canadian player from Quebec won his first tournament with this hand | |
Hot Waitress | Ten with a tray (trey)[30] | |
T2 | Terminator 2 | T2 is abbreviation for Terminator II[8] |
Whirlygig | Contemporary[8] | |
Doyle Brunson (a.k.a. Texas Dolly) | Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson twice won the WSOP in 1976 and 1977 turning these hole cards into full [houses][8] |
Nine higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
99 | Barbara Feldon | Played Agent 99 on Get Smart[8] |
Hitlers | Nein, nein! | |
German Virgin | What a German Virgin would say: "Nein, nein!" | |
Phil Hellmuth ( ) | He won the 1989 WSOP with this hand[8] | |
Red Balloons ( | )From the 1980s song 99 Red Balloons by Nena | |
Popeyes | Look like Popeye's arm muscles[19] | |
Pothooks[50] | The 9 looks like a traditional pothook | |
Wayne Gretzky | Hockey player's uniform number[8] | |
98 | Oldsmobile | The Olds 98 car[8] |
97 | Persian Carpet Ride | A term Antonio Esfandiari coined for his favorite hand, making joking reference to his Persian heritage. He used the term on Poker After Dark, apparently after his friends teased him about the hand, no further explanation given.[51] However, Esfandiari also used the term on the commentary track of the World Poker Tour Season 2 DVD set, so the term dates back to at least 2004. |
96 | The Dirty | 69, sexual reference[8] |
Big Lick | 69, sexual reference to Big Slick[8] | |
Breakfast of Champions | 69, sexual reference[8] | |
Dinner For Two | 69, sexual reference[8] | |
Good Lover | 69, sexual reference[8] | |
Happy Meal | 69, sexual reference[8] | |
Mighty Meal | 69, sexual reference, 96 suited, stronger than a Happy Meal (see above) | |
Big Love | 69, sexual reference | |
Joe Bernstein | A gambler from the 30s, a sharp road gambler. Joe was known as a dapper dresser at the poker table[8] | |
Jaka Šubic | Famous Slovenian improv comedian and poker player. | |
Percy (offsuit) | 69, sexual reference[8] | |
Prom Night (suited) | If suited because they wear a tux on prom night, 69 sexual reference[8] | |
Burger and a Grape Snow Cone | Reference to Alan Jackson's "Chattahoochee" | |
95 | Betty Hutton | From a version of stud with nines & fives wild[8] |
Dolly Parton | From the movie 9 to 5[8] | |
Hard Working Man | Works 9 to 5[8] | |
94 | Joe Montana | 49ers quarterback, borrowed from 92 Montana Banana; when he was benched, the joke was 49 unsuited[8] |
Lost World Series | Refers to the lost baseball World Series of 1994. Could also refer to the fate of a player who plays these cards incorrectly.[3] | |
San Francisco | 49 refers to San Francisco's Football team, the 49ers, which in turn refers to men of the 1849 gold rush in the Sierra Nevada mountains east of San Francisco[27] | |
93 | Jack Benny | For years Jack Benny claimed to be 39 years old[30] |
The Sandy | Sandy Dunlop became 2013 champion of the Black Cat Poker tournament with these hole cards | |
92 | Montana Banana | It is a widely asserted myth that this nickname originates from the legalization of poker in Montana by Proposition 92. However, poker was legalized in Montana by the Card Games Act, 23-5-311.[52] The nickname is referring to how it is more likely that bananas will grow in chilly Montana than that this hand will make money.[42]
Other sources suggest it is Joe Montana's quarterback rating[19] |
Twiggy | From the 70s model's top measurement of 29[8] |
Eight higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
88 | Dawg Balls/Doggie Balls | Looks like them[8] |
Piano Keys | There are 88 keys on a piano[40] | |
Rocket 88 | Big car was Olds 98, smaller car called Olds 88[8] | |
Racetracks | Goes round and round like a race track[8] | |
Snowmen | Looks like two snowmen[8] | |
Lindros | Eric Lindros wore Jersey #88 | |
Dale Jr. | Dale Earnhardt Jr. drove the #88 car in NASCAR | |
Two Fat Ladies[53] | Looks like two fat ladies[8] taken from bingo[54] | |
Lacey | Looks like shoelaces tied in a bow | |
Octopuses/Octopi | An octopus has eight tentacles | |
Pretzels | Looks like two pretzels[8] | |
Wurlitzer | The number of keys on the Wurlitzer electric piano[8] | |
Time Travel | The time travel speed (88 mph) used in the Back to the Future trilogy[8] | |
Infinity on the Side | Looks like two infinity symbols on their side | |
Ovechkin | A reference to the hockey player Alexander Ovechkin, who wears jersey #8. | |
87 | RPM | The very first record format was a 10-inch disc that spun 78 revolutions per minute[30] |
Tahoe | From the seven/8 variation of holdem[8] | |
Crosby | A reference to the hockey player, #87 Sidney Crosby. | |
86 | Pooch | Bill Puccio swears these cards win every time |
Jagr | Named after hockey player Jaromír Jágr, who wore number 68 his entire career. | |
Rick James | Named after Singer/Celeb Rick James, who died on 8/6. | |
Eubie | If you play these, you be broke[8] | |
Henry Bowen | A Texas gambler[8] | |
Maxwell Smart | From TV show Get Smart, Agent 86, see also 99[8] | |
Pacheco Nuts (offsuit)[55] | The California Grand, in Pacheco is right alongside Highway 680. | |
85 | The Hamilton | This hand is so named after a well known Scottish player. It is of course not a powerful hand but can on occasion make a well disguised straight. Its main function, though, is to tilt other players.[8] |
Chad | Football player Chad Ochocinco wears uniform number 85. Ochocinco, translated literally from Spanish, means "Eight Five." | |
84 | Big Brother | From George Orwell's book titled 1984[8] |
Boris Backhand | From boris89 winning 217,752.13 on this hand [8] | |
Orwell | Author of the book titled 1984[8] | |
83 | Most Feared Hand in Hold'em[8] | A tongue in cheek reference to it being the third worst hand in poker |
Raquel Welch | Raquel Welch still claims to be 38[27] | |
The Octocrab | Looks like a crab, which has 8 legs. Popularized by YouTuber Ben Deach.[56] | |
Luigi | The closest hand to the Mario hand | |
82 | Tadpole | An answer to the statement, "What the duck ate." |
The Ball Buster | This hand is not technically the worst but it is still horrible. | |
Mario | A reference to the ball buster |
Seven higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
77 | Axes | Looks like them |
Scythes | A seven looks like a scythe | |
Len Goodman | Renowned judge from Strictly Come Dancing, known for his famous catchphrase, "Seven!" | |
Candy Canes | Looks like them[40] | |
Hockey Sticks | Looks like them[8] | |
Mullets | Because of the hair style, flat in front, long in back[8] | |
Saturn | Saturn VII rocket[8] | |
Sunset Strip | From the title of the television series 77 Sunset Strip[8] | |
Walking Sticks[40] | Looks like them | |
76 | Trombones | From the song 76 Trombones, from the musical The Music Man and its film adaptation[8] |
Union Oil | Union 76 gas stations[8] | |
75 | 007 ( | )Reference to James Bond's winning hand in the 2006 movie Casino Royale |
Vietnamese Slick | Year the Vietnam War ended | |
Heinz | The H. J. Heinz Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has 57 varieties of condiments, the most famous being ketchup[27] | |
Pickle Man | A reference to Heinz of 57 sauces fame[8] | |
The Corrigan | A reference to the one and only Josh Corrigan, an icon of the Newcastle poker community, also coined the “Newcastle Nuts” by Novocastrian locals | |
Pistol | A reference to the famous pistol made by Fabrique Nationale the FN Five-seven | |
74 | Double Down[57] | A Double Down is a player decision in Blackjack, in which you are betting that your hand can be won with one more card. A player may only double down on his first two cards dealt. When a player doubles down, the original bet is automatically doubled (a second chip appears) and the player receives one more card.[58] Since there are more 10 point cards than any other, doubling down is most worthwhile on an 11-point hand, 7-4 being worth 11 points. |
Ghost Dog[25] | Almost undoubtedley from the film Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai starring Forest Whitaker, but no explanation found | |
Kalashnikov | Most likely refers to the famous AK-47 and AK-74 assault rifles designed by Mikhail Kalashnikov | |
73 | Dutch Waiter | Sven with a Tray |
Joe Hachem | Joseph Hachem won the 2005 World Series main event holding [27] | when the flop came|
Swedish Busboy | Sven with a Tray, see also San Francisco Busboy and Dutch Waiter[8] | |
72 | Beer Hand (offsuit) | It's called the Beer Hand because it's either time for a beer; or if you win with this you need to get other players a beer; or only a person full of beers would play this hand.[27]
The beer hand has the worst chance of winning of all possible pocket cards in a full table playing Texas Hold'em. It is slightly better in short-handed games because the fact that it is not possible to make a straight or flush without hitting four appropriate community cards is less important in short-handed games.[59] |
Hammer (offsuit)[53] | The Hammer isn't specifically the 72 hand. At least not officially. In poker, the hammer is defined as the last position (the cut-off), particularly when you're heads-up. The 72 offsuit got the nickname as a result of a competition to play "The Hammer" on "The Hammer" and has been adopted into legitimate Oxford Dictionary poker parlance[60] | |
W.H.I.P. (offsuit) | Worst Hand In Poker[38] |
Six higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
66 | Boots | Looks like them[8] |
Cherries | Nicknamed because of similarity to the shape of the number 6[30] | |
Kicks | Get your kicks on Route 66[8] | |
Route 66 | The road from Chicago to LA[8] | |
65 | Bus Pass[13] | UK bus passes are often available to citizens over the age of 65 (although this age varies)[61] |
Ken Warren | Won with this hand at World Series of Poker[8] | |
64 | Billion Dollar Hand[13] | In reference to The $64,000 Question |
Gilchrist | Named after the Australian cricketer Adam Gilchrist for his ability to always hit 6's and 4's[30] | |
Arlo | Royal Arlo if suited, named after Arlo Payne, a long time regular poster to the usenet newsgroup rec.gambling.poker[citation needed] | |
63 | Blocky | Another nickname of Broomcorn from the story in Doyle Brunson's Super/System. He used to play 63 as an ambush hand[8] |
Jimmy Summerfield (offsuit) | Kevin Larsen says:
| |
Spanish Inquisition | Nickname given to this starting hand by Iron Men of Poker. Refers to the fact that "Nobody Expects the Spanish Inquisition", a reference to the classic Monty Python quote.[63] | |
62 | Aimsworth | Byron 'Cowboy' Wolford says:
|
Five higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
55 | Sammy Hagar | After Hagar's song, "I Can't Drive 55"[8] |
Nickels | Five cents per nickel[8] | |
Presto | There is debate as to where this term originated. The most commonly accepted source of the nickname is that many years ago, before Rec.gambling[64] was split into several groups, followers of the group who were blackjack players were fond of saying "Presto!" as they turned up a 21. This became a sign of recognition of fellow travelers. Around this time (circa 1991), the World Rec Gambling Poker Tournament(WRGPT), of which the first few were played slowly over email, came into being. During WRGPT2(92-93), the attribution of pocket fives as the "Presto Hand" was made by the player Howard Simonson, after using pocket fives to knock out several players from the tournament some number of times. [If a copy of the table-talk from WRGPT2 can be found and cited, this can be absolutely confirmed] Consequently, the term stuck among the rec.gambling minions, and has become a common poker term today.[65] There is also suggestion that the hand won more often than it should due to a computer glitch.[19]
However, there is a counter-argument that there used to be a club in London called the Presto Club. The address was 55 Victoria Street, London. Therefore, whenever someone was dealt 55 in hold'em, they'd say they were dealt "Presto", because of the club's street address. When English players played events worldwide, the word spread, and it caught on everywhere.[66] | |
Snakes[19] | Looks like two snakes | |
Speed Limit | 55 MPH,[8] the maximum speed limit in the US in the National Maximum Speed Law era | |
54 | Colt 45 | The gun, and the beer[8] |
Jesse James | Because the outlaw was rumored to have been shot by a .45[8] | |
Moneymaker | Winning hand of Chris Moneymaker, 2003 World Series of Poker Main Event champion[27] | |
53 | Bully Johnson | A poker player that Doyle Brunson described as being "laid back and quiet". He played this hand after being raised preflop and caught a straight on the flop to beat another guy's trip aces[30] |
Juggernaut | Well-known Magic: The Gathering artifact card with power of five and toughness of three. | |
52 | Bomber | B-52 bomber[27] |
Pick-up | As in 52 card pick up[27] | |
Quarter | 25 cents[8] | |
Two Bits | 25 cents[8] | |
Ivey | Named for one of the greatest bluffs on High Stakes Poker, when Phil Ivey raised pre-flop with a five-deuce offsuit, was re-raised by Lex Veldhuis with KJ suited, and then went all in causing Lex to fold his hand. |
Four higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
44 | ||
Sailboats | The fours look like sails on a boat. | |
Obama | Barack Obama is the 44th President of the United States | |
Dark Force ( | )Dark Side Of The Fours[27] | |
Darth Vader ( | )The two black fours are the "Dark Side of the Fours"[8] | |
Diana Dors | Her top measurement[8] | |
The Harley ( | )Favorite hand of BCP pro Harley Quin after flopping quads with these hole cards: "The Fours are strong with this one..." | |
Luke Skywalker | "May the Fours be with you." Usually referenced with one black four, and one red four.[40] | |
Princess Leia ( | )An extension of the Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader reference[8] | |
Fourtale | n/a | |
Magnum | The .44 cal gun[8] | |
Midlife Crisis[67] | Likely to be named after the approximate age of the average midlife crisis (actually given as 46)[68] | |
43 | Waltz | In music, waltzes are always in 3/4 meter[27] |
Books | "What's a tree for ?" | |
42 | Jack Bauer[27] | The main character in 24 |
Lumberman's Hand | A common piece of lumber is a two by four[27] | |
The Principle[27] | Canadian Politician, Steven Hicks Favorite hand. He always said he played it On Principle | |
The Answer | In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the computer decided that the answer to everything in the universe was 42[8] |
Three higher card
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
33 | Crabs | Because a 3 looks like it has pincers[8] |
Lucky Dragon | Favorite Chinese hand that "never loses" | |
Treys | "Trey" dates back to the 14th century, and is a name for a card or a die showing three points; originally from Old French treis.[69] | |
32 | Can of Corn[8] | This nickname likely comes from baseball where a "Can of Corn" is an easily caught fly ball. Supposedly comes from a general store clerk reaching up and dropping a can from a high shelf.[70] Likely to be analogized due to the ease in which 32 is caught since it is the lowest possible non-hand (22 being a pair). |
Little Pete[8] | No explanation found | |
The Diaper | "The Dirty Diaper" if offsuit. As made famous by Nick Rigby in the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event | |
Michael Jordan | From his jersey number (23)[32] | |
Polish Big Slick | A bad Polish joke mimicking AK Big Slick[8] | |
The Nut Low[71] | In this instance 'nut' meaning 'most' rather than 'best', low hand (i.e., the lowest hand) | |
Hooter Hand (suited) | Named after famous poker dealer Houth "Hooter" Houn who played this hand as aggressively as AK. | |
Crubs (if clubs) | From the card game Hearts[8] |
Pocket Twos
[edit]Card initials | Alternative name | Explanation |
---|---|---|
22 | Desmond[13] | Named after Archbishop Desmond Tutu |
Ducks[72] | From deux, the French word for two, also a two looks like a duck,[8] also used in bingo[54] | |
Deuces | From Old French for two[73] | |
Quack Quack[40] | From two little ducks, also bingo reference to the number 22[54] | |
Swans/Swarovskis | Looks like Swarovski Crystal swans[8] | |
Richard Nixon | From the famous photo of Nixon getting on a helicopter giving two victory signs |
One-eyed royals
[edit]The phrase one-eyed royals is jargon referring to the three face cards showing only one eye: the Jack of Spades (draw poker. Other such phrases include "Suicide King", denoting the King of Hearts ( ) bearing a sword through his head, and 'Bedside Queen', denoting the Queen of Spades ( ) bearing a staff that resembles a wooden bedpost. The name "Allergic Queen" also refers to the Queens facing away from the flowers they hold.
), Jack of Hearts ( ) and King of Diamonds ( ). The faces depicted on these three cards are shown in profile, resulting in only one eye being visible. The variant form "one-eyed Jacks" excludes the King of Diamonds. The cards are also sometimes referred to as "one-eyed Jacks and the Man with the Axe", which relates to the King of Diamonds being the only one to bear an axe instead of a sword. These cards are frequently designated as wildcards in home games ofSee also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of Oldsmobile". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- ^ a b "PartyPoker.com". Premier League Poker. Episode 6. 2009-02-25.
- ^ a b c d e f g yourpokerhands.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-02-15. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ^ Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of Kansas City". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- ^ "The World Trade Center Poker Hand - A Memorial To The World Trade Center". Shea Lectures. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- ^ a b c d Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of Nits and Lice". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- ^ a b c welike-poker.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-04-25. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj McComas, Richard (2004-12-05). "400+ Hole Card Hand Names". Retrieved 2008-10-11.
- ^ clevelandrounder (2004-03-25). "looking for new Poker Slang". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
- ^ Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of American Airlines". Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n 1800-sports.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2008-12-02.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Phillips, Gary (2002-02-01). "Pocket rockets". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
- ^ a b c d e killerpoker.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-04-25. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ Stacks, Dirty (2005-06-12). "ALL IN from the Porch: Poker Catch Phrases". Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ a b Weisenberg, Michael (2000-03-01). The Official Dictionary of Poker. MGI/Mike Caro University. p. 278. ISBN 978-1-880069-52-3. Archived from the original on 2007-07-01.
- ^ Phillips, Gary (1999-05-17). "Nicknames for hands". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
- ^ a b c d e Songplayer (2008-09-24). "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on January 8, 2009. Retrieved 2008-10-16.
- ^ Jakobsen, Peder (2004-03-24). "Big Slick of spades = an Exxon Valdez". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i pokerxanadu.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-07.
- ^ a b drneau.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2008-12-21.
- ^ Hodges, Jim (2012). Texas Hold 'em Fish 'n' Chips. Trafford Publishing. p. 96. ISBN 9781466957138.
- ^ ukpokerrooms.com. "Online Poker Lingo". Archived from the original on 2009-08-11. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ "PartyPoker.com Premier League Poker". Premier League Poker. Episode 5. 2009-02-25.
- ^ pokercasinofan.com. "Cards and Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ a b c tellpoker.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2006-05-02. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ a b c d darkcitypokerleague.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y flapokertours.com. "The Hands – Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ^ holdem-wiki.com. "Nicknames". Archived from the original on April 25, 2009. Retrieved 2008-12-23.
- ^ "World Series of Poker Europe 2008". World Series of Poker Europe. Season 2008. Episode 5. 2009-02-28.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q texasholdem-poker.com. "Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-01-19. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ^ b_add9 (2004-05-12). "Slang terms for hole cards". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-19.
{{cite newsgroup}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e f g Harris, Martin (2009-03-03). "Poker & Pop Culture: Hold'em Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ a b c d e f g h donkiedup.com. "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2008-10-03. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ^ "Celebrity Poker Showdown". 2004–2006 Series. Episode Vince Van Patten. 2004-01-13.
- ^ Kevin Bowen, Phil Hellmuth (2006). Phil Hellmuth: Bill vs Phil – Signature Hand (video). ultimatebet.com. Archived from the original on 2008-11-19. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
- ^ pokerstrip2.com. "Card and Poker Hand Nickname". Retrieved 2008-12-31.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b 'Cowboy' Wolford, Byron (2002-11-22). "Aimsworth, Sawmill, and Everett". Card Player Magazine. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ^ a b Supe (2004-03-24). "looking for new Poker Slang". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
- ^ Dan (1995-07-09). "Suggestions for improving memory". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i learntowinholdem.com (2007). "Poker Nicknames". Retrieved 2009-01-11.
- ^ Card Player News Team. "The Poker Ten -- Hand Nicknames". Cardplayer.com. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
- ^ a b The OPG. "Official Poker Guide – Hold 'em Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on May 2, 2008.
- ^ Chang, Andrea. "The poker cheating investigation is over. Here's what it uncovered — and questions that remain". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
- ^ Badger, Steve. "Poker Hand Nicknames – Texas Holdem Hand Names". Archived from the original on 2008-05-11. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
- ^ Serton, Richard (2004-04-07). "Hole card slang... what's your favorite?". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-10-19.
- ^ a b welike-poker.com (2008). "Poker Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-04-25. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
- ^ Lindon, M (2004-04-08). "Hole card slang... what's your favorite?". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- ^ IGN Entertainment INC (2009). "Hand Nicknames". Archived from the original on 2009-03-17. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
- ^ Supe (2004-03-24). "looking for new Poker Slang". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-11-13.
- ^ Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of Pothooks". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- ^ "Poker After Dark". Poker After Dark. Season 2. Episode 6. 2007-09-24.
- ^ Casino City (2009-01-01). "Definition of Montana Banana". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
- ^ a b "Pokerstars.com EPT London Highrollers". European Poker Tour. Season 5. Episode 1. 2008-12-27.
- ^ a b c il dado. "Bingo Number-calling Nicknames". Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ^ VegasPokerPro.com (2008). "Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2009-03-06.
- ^ The origin of the OCTO CRAB | Poker Vlog 78, retrieved 2021-07-05
- ^ pokerpotspoker.com. "Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2008-12-21.
- ^ bwin.com. "Lucky 7 Blackjack". Archived from the original on 2009-01-24. Retrieved 2008-12-02.
- ^ Casino City. "Definition of Beer Hand". Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ^ Grubby (2004-04-09). "Poker Grub". Retrieved 2009-01-14.
- ^ DirectGov. "Bus passes and coach travel for over 60s". Archived from the original on 2009-03-10. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ Larsen, Kevin. "Poker Slang". Retrieved 2009-01-03.
- ^ allvegaspoker.com. "Poker Slang". Retrieved 2011-06-03.
- ^ "Google Groups".
- ^ foldem (2003-05-14). "Presto!". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
- ^ Lacey, Andrew (2003-05-14). "Presto!". Newsgroup: rec.gambling.poker. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
- ^ offshorepokerroom.com (2006). "Poker Hand Nicknames". Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ Greg (2006-06-10). "More On The Midlife Crisis You May Never Have". Archived from the original on 2009-02-19. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ "Definition of TREY".
- ^ Jim (2001-11-01). "The Phrase Finder: Re: Can of corn". Retrieved 2009-03-17.
- ^ "Poker Nations Cup 2008". Poker Nations Cup. Episode 5. 2008-10-07.
- ^ "Pokerstars.com EPT London Highrollers". European Poker Tour. Season 5. Episode 2. 2008-12-30.
- ^ "deuce". American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. 2011. Retrieved 2023-04-28.