doh yea sure it does
the hand rankings go as followed:
-high card
-pair
-two pairs
-3 of a kind
-straight
-flush
-full house
-4 of a kind
-straight flush
-royal flush
happy gamblin' ;)
Yes, any 3 of a kind know as a set or trips beats ant two pairs.
No.................. -_-
all together yes but, separately no.
Yes for sure
yes
Three pairs isn't possible. you have to play 5 cards. so you would play the highest two pairs. So yes, a full house would win.
3 pairs It is not possible to have 3 pairs when only a five card hand counts in poker.
Yes, a Flush beats Two Pairs.(edit)card rank1,royal flush /straight flush2,quad/four of a kind3,full house4,flush5,straight6, 3 of a kind/triplets7, 2 pairs8, pair9,high cardvisit acepokersolutions for more articles,free book and HUDs
NO the order is (from lowest to highest) 1 pair 2 two pair 3 three of a kind 4 straight 5 flush 6 full house 7 four of a kind 8 straight flush 9 royal flush
Yes 3 of a kind always beats two pair.
If you refer to poker, you cannot get three-pair; that would require 6 cards where you only have use of 5. Do not confuse three-pair with a full house. In any other game, it depends on whatever the rulebase is.
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
Yes always. e.g. three sevens (777) beats a pair of kings and a pair of aces (KKAA)
No it does not
If you are referring to Poker, the first thing to consider is not the specific cards, but the special combinations they make. For example, two pairs beats one pair - no matter what cards the pairs are made of. Or in this case, 4 of a kind beats full house (3 + 2), no matter what cards. Only if two or more players have the same combinations will the highest cards in each combination be compared.
No
Here are three shapes that have two pairs of parallel lines: square parallelogram rectangle There are many polygons with at least two pairs of parallel lines. hexagon (has 3 pairs of parallel lines) octagon (has 4 pairs) decagon (has 5 pairs)