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  2. Beggar-my-neighbour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beggar-my-neighbour

    Battle • Egyptian Ratscrew. Beggar-my-neighbour, also known as strip jack naked, beat your neighbour out of doors, [1] or beat jack out of doors, [2] or beat your neighbour, [3] is a simple choice-free card game. It is somewhat similar in nature to the children's card game War, and has spawned a more complicated variant, Egyptian ratscrew.

  3. Ranter-Go-Round - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranter-Go-Round

    Ranter Go Round is a primitive, traditional, English gambling game and children's game using playing cards that also nowadays goes under the name of Chase the Ace. [1] [2]In America it is usually recorded in the literature as Ranter Go Round (rarely is it hyphenated), but is also sometimes called Screw Your Neighbor which, however, is an alternative name used for at least four other quite ...

  4. Oh hell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oh_hell

    Oh hell. Oh hell or contract whist is a trick-taking card game of British origin in which the object is to take exactly the number of tricks bid. [a] It was first described by B. C. Westall around 1930 and originally called oh! well. [1] It was said to have been introduced into America via the New York clubs in 1931. [2]

  5. Screw your neighbour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw_Your_Neighbour

    Screw Your Neighbour. Screw your neighbour is the alternative name of several entirely different card games: Ranter go round. Cuckoo (card game) Crazy eights. Oh hell. Contract rummy. Sergeant major (card game) It should not be confused with another card game called beggar-my-neighbour .

  6. Surprise Your Neighbors With These Gifts to Make Them ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-gifts-surprise-neighbors...

    For a personal touch they'll love coming home to each night, get this customized, solar house sign that'll light up their street number at night, giving them a beacon of light to come home to ...

  7. Spite and malice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spite_and_Malice

    Spite and malice, also known as cat and mouse, is a relatively modern American card game for two or more players. [1] It is a reworking of the late 19th-century Continental game crapette, [1] also known as Russian bank, and is a form of competitive solitaire, with a number of variations that can be played with two or three regular decks of cards.

  8. Euchre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euchre

    Euchre. Euchre or eucre (/ ˈjuːkər / YU-kər) is a trick-taking card game commonly played in Australia, Canada, Great Britain, New Zealand, and the Midwestern United States. It is played with a deck of 24, 25, 28, or 32 standard playing cards. There are normally four players, two on each team, although there are variations for two to nine ...

  9. Sheepshead (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheepshead_(card_game)

    Doppelkopf, Bavarian Schafkopf, German Schafkopf, Skat. Sheepshead is an American trick-taking card game derived from Bavaria's national card game, Schafkopf (lit. 'sheep's head'), hence it is sometimes called American Schafkopf. Sheepshead is most commonly played by five players, [1] but variants exist to allow for two to eight players.