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The plastic case containing a coin that has been graded and encapsulated. [1] Spanish dollar. Also called a piece of eight. A coin issued in Spain and its colonies from 1497 to 1864, equal to eight reales. It was legal tender in the United States until 1857. spot price In numismatics quoted market value of one troy ounce of a precious metal in ...
An arc of cards so fanned. A spread of face-up cards. [57] In Patience, a small number of cards laid in an overlapping row, so that only one is exposed. [58] fatten To discard counting cards to one's partner's tricks. [55] Also smear. fat trick A trick that is rich in counting cards. [38] favourite, favourite suit See preference suit. fiche
The nine of diamonds playing card is often referred to as the Curse of Scotland [16] or the Scourge of Scotland, [17] there are a number of reasons given for this connection: It was the playing card used by Sir John Dalrymple, the Earl of Stair, to cryptically authorise the Glencoe Massacre.
Spread – flourishing a deck of cards onto a tabletop. Stack – (noun) a prearranged deck or part of the deck of cards. Stack – (verb) to arrange cards to the performer's need while shuffling them. Steal – a sleight used to obtain an object secretly. Stodare egg – a hollow egg used in vanish or production of a silk. Stooge – see ...
The full Spanish-suited pack contains 48 cards, organized into the 4 Spanish suits coins, cups, swords and clubs and 12 ranks. These decks usually include two jokers. The court cards are usually numbered. The role of the queen is played by the caballo (cavalier), visually distinct from the sota (jack) by riding a horse. The common ranking from ...
For coin collectors, it’s a chance to meet with dealers and expand their collection — Freeze recently went to a coin show in Las Vegas and saw a near-pristine Eisenhower dollar coin worth $14,000.
This rare coin is notable because it doesn’t contain a mint mark; the U.S. Mint deliberately didn’t include mint marks on coins produced from 1965 to 1967, to limit coin hoarding. The Mint ...
A page from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper depicting a fan-tan parlor in New York, a raid by the police, and cards and coins used in fan-tan, in December 1887. The game may have arisen during third and fourth centuries, during the period of the Northern and Southern dynasties. [1] It then spread through southern China during the Qing ...