Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pedro is an American trick-taking card game of the all fours family based on auction pitch.Its most popular variant is known as cinch, double Pedro or high five which was developed in Denver, Colorado, around 1885 [1] and soon regarded as the most important American member of the all fours family.
The website also uses a scale, known as the PEDro scale, to assess the quality of randomized trials included in the database. [2] Trials with higher PEDro scores are displayed first in PEDro search results. [3] A 2010 study found preliminary evidence that this scale, as well as eight of its ten individual items, had validity. [4]
However, a "game" is always triggered when 100 contract points are reached, a "partial game" or "part-score" refers to 10 to 90 contract points, and once either side reaches a game, both sides' part-scores, while still valid to be counted as part of the final score of the entire match, are reset to 0 for the purpose of the next game or rubber ...
Full-time: Chelsea 1-1 Arsenal. 18:38, Lawrence Ostlere. It felt like a fair result overall. Both teams had good spells in the game and both sides tried to be positive and create openings.
The modern game involving a bidding phase and setting back a party's score if the bid is not reached came up in the middle of the 19th century and is more precisely known as auction pitch or setback. Whereas all fours began as a two-player game, pitch is most popular for three to five players. [ 2 ]
International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP) 799,000 Public domain music scores (720,000) and recordings (79,000), including some contemporary composers. International Music Score Library Project: Inventions of Note: popular music, technology: 50 Sheet music for popular songs and piano compositions, mostly 1890–1920. Lewis Music Library ...
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
It was originally known as Don Pedro, not to be confused with the related American game of Dom Pedro. An 1864 English dictionary of slang relates that "five fingers" is the five of trumps in game of "five-cards or Don" and that "Don Pedro" is "a low game at cards [that] is a compound of all fours, and the Irish game variously termed all fives ...