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
A
Aces Full: A full house with three aces and any pair.
Ace-High: A five card hand that contains one Ace, with no straight
or flush or a hand with no pair in it.
Aces Up: A hand that contains two pairs, one of which is Aces.
Action: Checking/Betting/Raising. A game in which players are
playing a lot of pots is considered an "action" game.
Active Player: Any player who is still in the hand.
Add-on: A purchase of more chips (optional) at the end of the re-buy
period in a tournament.
All-In: When a player bets all his/her chips. (In online poker, you
may be deemed "All-in" when you are disconnected - even if you have chips
remaining.)
American Airlines: Two Aces.
Ante: Money placed in the pot before the hand is begun.
B
Bad Beat: When a hand is beaten by a lucky draw.
Belly Buster: A draw and/or catch to an Inside Straight.
Bet: To place chips into the pot.
Bet the Pot: When a player bets the amount of the pot.
Bicycle: A straight that is A-2-3-4-5.
Big Blind: A designated amount that is placed by the player sitting
in the second position, clockwise from the dealer, before any cards are dealt.
(Players joining a game in progress must post a Big Blind, but may do so from
any position.)
Big Slick: A hand that contains an A-K.
Blind: The bet(s) that must be made by the two players sitting
directly to the dealer's left which will start the action on the first round
of betting. The blinds are posted before any cards are dealt. (A "Blind" bet
is one that is made in the dark without looking at your cards.)
Blind Raise: When a player raises without looking at his hand.
Bluff: To make other players believe that one has a better hand than
he/she might otherwise have by betting or raising when they do not have the
best hand.
Boardcards: The cards that are dealt face-up in a poker game for all
players to see. In flop games, five cards are dealt face-up in the center of
the table. In Seven Card Stud, four cards are dealt face-up in front of each
player.
Bottom Pair: When a player uses the lowest card on the flop to make
a pair with one of his own cards.
Broadway: An Ace high straight (A-K-Q-J-10).
Bring-In: The forced bet made on the first round of betting by the
player who is dealt the lowest card showing in Seven Card Stud and Stud 8 or
Better. In Razz (Lowball) it is the highest card showing.
Bring It In: To start the betting on the first round.
Broomcorn's Uncle: A player who antes himself broke.
Bullets: A pair of Aces.
Bump: To raise.
Button: Also known as the dealer button, it is a small round disk
that is moved from player to player in a clockwise direction following each
hand, to theoretically indicate the dealer of each hand.
Buy-In: The minimum amount of money required by a player to sit down
in a particular poker game.
C
Call: When a player chooses to match the previous bet.
Call Cold: To call both a bet and raise(s).
Cap: To take the last of the maximum amount of raises allowed per
round of betting.
Cardroom: The room or space in a casino where poker is played.
Case Chips: A player's last chips.
Cash Out: To leave a game and convert your chips to cash.
Check: When it's a player's turn to act and there has been no action
in front of them and he opts not to bet, he "checks."
Check-Raise: When a player first checks and then raises in a betting
round.
Chop: To return the blinds to the players who posted them and move
on to the next hand if no other players call. It also means to "split the
pot".
Collusion: When two or more players conspire to cheat in a poker
game.
Community Cards: Cards that are face-up and used by all players.
Cowboys: Two Kings.
D
Dead Man's Hand: Two pair - Aces and Eights (Wild Bill Hickock was shot
in the back while playing this hand).
Door Card: This is the first exposed card, or "up" card, in a
player's hand in Stud games.
Down Card: Hole cards. Cards that are dealt face down.
Doyle Brunson: It's a Holdem hand consisting of a 10-2 (Brunson won
the world championship two years in a row on the final hand with these cards).
Draw Lowball: form of poker where each player is dealt five cards
with the option of discarding one or more and replacing them with new ones and
the low hand wins.
Draw Poker: Form of poker where each player is dealt five cards down
with the option of discarding one or more and replacing them with new ones to
attempt to make a better hand.
Drop: Fold.
Ducks: A pair of Twos.
Deuces: A pair of Twos.
E
Early Position: Position on a round of betting where the player must
act before most of the other players at the table. (It's considered the two
positions located to the left of the Blinds.)
F
Fifth Street: Also known as the "river" card. In flop games, this
represents the fifth community card on the table and the final round of
betting. In Stud games, this is the fifth card dealt to each player and
represents the third round of betting.
Five-card Draw: A poker game in which the player is dealt five cards
down. They have one draw to replace them and the best high hand wins the pot.
Five-card Stud: A poker game in which each player is dealt five
cards, one down and four up, with betting after 2, 3, 4, & 5 cards.
Flat Call: Calling a bet without raising.
Flop: In Hold'em and Omaha, the first three community cards that are
dealt face-up in the center of the table all at one time. The "flop" also
indicates the second round of betting.
Flop Games: Poker games (Hold 'em and Omaha) that are played using
community cards that are dealt face up in the center of the table.
Floorman: An employee of the cardroom who makes rulings and
decisions.
Flush: Any five cards of the same suit.
Flush Draw: When a player has four cards in his hand of the same
suit and is hoping to draw a fifth to make a flush.
Fold: To throw your hand away when it's your turn to act.
Forced Bet: A required bet that starts the action on the first round
of a poker hand.
Four of a Kind: Four cards of the same number or face value
("quads").
Fourth Street: In flop games, it is the fourth community card dealt
(also known as "the turn") and represents the third round of betting. In Stud
games, it is the fourth card dealt to each player and represents the second
round of betting.
Full House: Any three cards of the same number or face value, plus
any other two cards of the same number or face value.
G
Gut Shot: To draw to and/or hit an inside straight.
H
Hand: A player's best five cards.
High-Card: To decide the first dealer in the flop tournaments each
user is dealt a single card and the player with the highest card (based on the
card and the suit order - of spades, hearts, diamonds & clubs) becomes the
theoretical dealer.
High-Low: Split pot games.
Hold 'em: Also known as Texas Hold 'em, where the players get two
down cards and five community cards.
Hole Cards: These are the Down Cards in front of the players.
House: The casino or cardroom that is hosting the poker game.
I
Inside Straight: Four cards which require another between the top and
the bottom card to complete a straight.\ Players who catch this card make an
Inside Straight.
J
Jackpot Poker: A form of poker in which the cardroom or casino offers a
jackpot to a player who has lost with a really big hand (usually Aces full or
better).
Jacks-or-Better: A form of poker in which a player needs to have at
least a pair of jacks to open the betting.
K
Kansas City Lowball: Form of lowball poker in which the worst poker
hand (2, 3, 4, 5, 7 of different suits) is the best hand. It's also known as
Deuce to Seven.
Keep Them Honest: To call at the end of a hand to prevent someone
from bluffing.
Key Card: A card that gives you a big draw or makes your hand.
Key Hand: In a session or tournament, the one hand that ends up
being a turning point for the player, either for better or worse.
Kicker: The highest unpaired side card in a players' hand.
Kick It: Raise.
Kill Pot: A method to stimulate action. It is a forced bet by
someone who has just won a pot(s).
Knock: Check.
Kojak: A hand that contains a K-J.
L
Ladies: Two Queens.
Late Position: Position on a round of betting where the player must
act after most of the other players have acted (usually considered to be the
two positions next to the button).
Lay Down Your Hand: When a player folds.
Lead: The first player to bet into a pot.
Limit Poker: A game that has fixed minimum and maximum betting
intervals along with a prescribed number of raises.
Limper: The first player who calls a bet.
Limp In: To enter the pot by calling rather than raising. (The usual
concept of "Limp In" is when the first person to speak just calls the Big
Blind.)
Live Blind: An instance where the player puts in a dark bet and is
allowed to raise, even if no other player raises. It's also known as an
"option".
Live Card(s): In Stud Games, cards that have not yet been seen and
are presumed to still be in play.
Live Hand: A hand that could still win the pot.
Live One: A not so knowledgeable player who plays a lot of hands.
Look: When a player calls the final bet before the showdown.
Loose: Is a player who plays a lot hands.
Lowball: Is a form of draw poker in which the lowest hand wins the
pot.
M
Main Pot: The center pot. Any other bets are placed in a side pot(s)
and are contested among the remaining players. This occurs when a player(s)
goes all-in.
Make: To make the deck is to shuffle the deck.
Maniac: A very aggressive player who plays a lot of hands.
Middle Pair: In flop games, when a player makes a pair with one of
his/her down cards and the middle card on the flop.
Middle Position: Somewhere between the early and late positions on a
round of betting (the fifth, sixth and seventh seats to the left of the
button).
Muck: To discard or throw away your hand. It's also a pile of cards
that are no longer in play.
Minimum Buy-In: The least amount you can start a game with.
Monster: A very big hand. In a tournament, a player who begins to
accumulate chips after having a small stack is considered to be a monster.
Motown: A hand containing a pair of Jacks and a pair of fives -
Jacks and Fives (Jackson Five)
N
No Limit: A game where players can bet as much as they like (as long as
they have it in front of them) on any round of betting.
Nuts: The best possible hand at any point of the game. A hand that
cannot be beat.
O
Odds: The probability of making a hand vs. the probability of not
making a hand.
Offsuit: Cards of a different suit.
Omaha: A game in which each player is dealt four down cards with
five community cards. To make your hand, you must play two cards from your
hand and three from the board.
Open: To make the first bet.
Open-ended Straight: Four consecutive cards whereby one additional
(consecutive) card is needed at either end to make a straight.
Open Card: A card that is dealt face-up.
Open Pair: A pair that has been dealt face-up.
Option: An option is a Live Blind made in the dark before the cards
are dealt. If no one raises, the "option" player may raise the pot.
Out Button: A disc placed in front of a player who wishes to sit out
a hand(s) but remain in the game.
P
Paints: Face or picture cards (Jack, Queen and King).
Pair: Two cards of the same face or number value.
Pass: To fold.
Pay Off: To call on the final round of betting when you may or may
not think you have the best hand.
Picture Cards: Face cards (Jack, Queen and King).
Play Back: To raise or re-raise another player's bet.
Playing the Board: In flop games when your best five card hand is
all five of the community cards.
Pocket: The down cards or hole cards.
Pocket Rockets: A pair of Aces in the pocket or hole.
Position: Where a player is seated in relation to the dealer,
therefore establishing that player's place in the betting order.
Post: When you post a bet, you place your chips in the pot. (You
must post the Blinds.)
Pot: The money or chips in the center of a table that players try to
win.
Pot Limit: This is a game where the maximum bet can equal the pot.
Prop: A person hired by the cardroom to work as a shill.
Push: When the dealer pushes the chips to the winning player at the
end of a hand. It's also when dealers rotate to other tables.
Put Down: To fold a hand.
Q
Quads: Four of a kind.
Qualifier: In High-Low games, it is a requirement the Low hand must
meet to win the pot.
R
Rack: A tray that holds 100 poker chips in five stacks of twenty chips
each.
Rail: The rim of a poker table or a barrier outside a poker area.
Railbird: Someone who hangs around a poker room who watches the
games and/or is looking to get into action.
Raise: To increase the previous bet.
Rake: Chips taken from the pot by the cardroom for compensation for
hosting the game.
Rank: The value of each card and hand.
Rap: When a player knocks on the table indicating that he has
checked.
Razz: Seven Card Stud where the lowest five cards win the pot.
Re-buy: The amount of money a player pays to add a fixed number of
chips to his/her stack in a tournament.
Re-raise: To raise a raise.
Ring Game: A "live" game that is not a tournament.
River: This is the last card given in all games. In Hold'em and
Omaha, it is also known as 5th street. In Stud games, it is also known as 7th
street.
Round of Betting: This is when players have the opportunity to bet,
check or raise. Each round of betting ends when the last bet or raise has been
called.
Rounders: Guys who hustle for a living. This is also the name of a
popular poker movie starring Matt Damon and Ed Norton.
Royal Flush: This is an Ace high straight (A-K-Q-J-10) of the same
suit. It is the best possible hand in poker.
S
Satellite: A mini-tournament to gain an entry into a larger tournament.
Scoop: To win the entire pot.
Seating List: A waiting list. A player would put his or her name on
this list if there were no seats at the table at which they wish to play.
Second Pair: In flop games, when you pair the second highest card on
the board.
See: To call.
Seven-card Stud: A well-known poker game in which players get three
down cards and four up cards. You play the best five of those seven cards.
Seventh Street: This is the final round of betting in Seven Card
Stud and Stud 8 or Better.
Shills: Paid props who help start and maintain poker games.
Showdown: At the end of the final betting round, it's when all
active players turn their cards face-up to see who has won the pot.
Side Pot: A separate pot(s) which is contested by remaining active
players when one or more players are all-in.
Sixth Street: In Seven-card Stud, this is the fourth "up" card dealt
to the player (their 6th card). It is also the 4th round of betting.
Solid: A fairly tight player (and reasonably good).
Small Blind: The amount put in the pot by the person immediately to
the left of the dealer "button" prior to the cards being dealt.
Speed Limit: A pair of fives.
Split: Tie.
Stack: A pile of chips.
Stay: When a player remains in the game by calling rather than
raising.
Steel Wheel: A five high straight (A-2-3-4-5) of the same suit.
Straddle: A Blind bet (usually double the size of the Big Blind)
which allows the bettor to raise when the action gets to him.
Straight: Five consecutive cards of any suit.
Straight Flush: Five consecutive cards of the same suit.
Structure: The limits put on the blinds/ante, bets, and raises in
any particular game.
Stud Games: Games in which players get down cards and up cards.
Stuck: A player who is losing in a game.
T
Texas Hold'em: This is also the name for Hold'em, the most popular form
of poker.
Third Street: In Seven Card Stud and Seven Card Stud 8 or Better,
this is the first betting round on the first three cards.
Thirty Miles: Three tens.
Three of a Kind: Three cards of the same number or face value
("trips").
Tight: A player who doesn't play many pots. A tight game is one that
doesn't have much action.
TOC: Tournament of Champions.
Top Pair: In flop games, when the player pairs one of his down cards
with the highest card on board.
Treys: A pair of threes.
Trips: Three of a kind.
Turn: In flop games, this is the fourth card dealt. It is the third
round of betting.
Two Pair: A hand consisting of two different pairs.
U
Up Card: A card that is dealt face-up.
V-Z
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Walking Sticks: A pair of sevens.
Wild Card: A card that can be played as any value.
Worst Hand: A losing hand.
WSOP: World Series of Poker.
WPT: World Poker Tour.