Common No-Limit Texas Hold’em Poker Terms
Besides the terms listed here, there are thousands of common and uncommon poker terms. This is not meant to be a formal dictionary, just some common terms to familiarize the game of Texas Hold’em.
Act – To make a play (bet, call, raise, or fold) at
the required time. It is Ted's turn to act.
Action – a) A player's turn to act.
b) A willingness to gamble. c) A bet, along with all the calls of that bet.
For example, if one player makes a $5 bet and three other players call, he
is said to have $5 "in action", and to have received $15 worth
of action on his bet. Usually this term comes into play when figuring side
pots when one or more players is all in.
All in – Betting all of your chips on the hand in
play.
Bet – a) Any money wagered during the play of a hand.
b) More specifically, the opening bet of a betting round.
Big Slick – An Ace and a King in the pocket or hole.
Blind – A type of forced bet to induce action.
Bluff – A bet or raise with an inferior
hand.
Board – The set of community cards (also called "shared
cards"), which are cards dealt face up in the center of the table and
shared by all players. The board is made up of “the flop”, “the
turn”, and “the river” cards.
Broadway - A 10 through ace straight.
Burn card - A card dealt from the top of a deck, and discarded
("burned"), unused by the players. Burn cards are placed face down
next to the discard pile without being revealed to the players.
Busted - Out of chips. To "bust out" is to lose
all of one's chips.
Call - To match a bet or a raise.
Chase – a) To call a bet to see the next card when
holding a drawing hand when the pot odds do not merit it. b) To continue
to play a drawing hand over multiple betting rounds, especially one unlikely
to succeed. c) To continue playing with a hand that is not likely the best
because one has already invested money in the pot.
Check - To bet nothing. If no one has yet opened the betting
round, a player may pass or check, which is equivalent to calling
the current bet of zero. When checking, a player declines to make a bet;
this indicates that he does not wish to open, but does wish to keep his cards
and retain the right to call or raise later in the same round if an opponent
opens.
Check out - To fold, in turn, even though there is no bet
facing the player. In some games this is considered a breach of etiquette
equivalent to folding out of turn. In others it is permitted, but frowned
upon.
Check-raise - a common deceptive play in which a player
checks early in a betting round, hoping someone else will open. The player
who checked then raises in the same round.
Chip leader - The player currently holding the most chips
in a tournament.
Chip up - To exchange lower-denomination chips for higher-denomination
chips. In tournament play, the term means to remove all the small chips from
play by rounding up any odd small chips to the nearest large denomination,
rather than using a chip race. Also called “color up”.
Chop - To split a pot because of a tie.
Connectors - Two or more cards of consecutive rank.
Cut card - A distinctive card, usually stiff solid-colored
plastic, held against the bottom of the deck during the deal to prevent observation
of the bottom card.
Deal – a) To distribute cards to players in accordance
with the rules of the game being played. b) A single instance of a game of
poker, begun by shuffling the cards and ending with the award of a pot. Also
called a "hand" (though both terms are ambiguous).
Dealer – a) The person dealing the cards. b) The person
who assumes that role for the purposes of betting order in a game, even though
someone else might be physically dealing. Also called "button".
Declare - To verbally indicate an action or intention.
Dirty stack - A stack of chips apparently of a single denomination,
but with one or more chips of another. Usually the result of inattention
while stacking a pot, but may also be an intentional deception.
Discard - To take a previously dealt card(s) out of play.
The set of all discards for a deal is called the "muck".
Drawing dead - Playing a drawing hand that will lose even
if successful (a state of affairs usually only discovered after the fact
or in a tournament when two or more players are "all in" and they
show their cards).
Exposed card - A card whose face has been deliberately or
accidentally revealed to players normally not entitled to that information
during the play of the game.
Family pot - A deal in which every (or almost every) seated
player called the first opening bet.
Final table - The last table in a multi-table poker tournament.
The final table is set when a sufficient amount of people have been eliminated
from the tournament leaving an exact amount of players to occupy one table
(typically no more than ten players).
Flop – Refers to the dealing of the first three face-up
cards to the board, or to those three cards themselves.
Flush - A hand comprising five cards of the same suit.
Fold – To discard one's hand and forfeit interest
in the current pot. No further bets are required by the folding player, but
the player cannot win. Also called “muck”.
Four of a kind - A hand containing four cards of equal rank.
Also called "quads".
Full house - A hand with three cards of one rank and two
of a second rank. Also called "boat".
Gut shot - A hand with four of the five cards needed for
a straight, but missing one in the middle.
Heads up - Playing against a single opponent.
High card – a) A no pair hand, ranked according to
its highest-ranking cards. b) To randomly select a player for some purpose
by having each draw one card, the highest of which is selected (for example,
to decide who deals first).
Hole cards - Face-down cards. Also called "pocket cards".
Kicker - A card that does not itself take part in determining
the rank of the hand, but that may be used to break ties between hands of
the same rank.
Limp in - To enter a pot by simply calling the bet to them
instead of raising, called so because a player with a marginal hand may be
willing to pay the minimum to see more cards, but would likely fold if the
bet increased further.
Misdeal - A deal which is ruined for some reason and must
be redealt.
Muck – a) To fold. b) To discard one's hand without
revealing the cards. Often done after winning without a showdown or at a
showdown when a better hand has already been revealed. c) The discard pile.
No-limit - Rules designating players are allowed to wager
any or all of their chips in a single bet.
Nuts - The best possible hand in a given situation.
Offsuit - Cards that are not of the same suit.
One-chip rule - A call of a previous bet using a chip of
higher denomination than necessary is considered a call unless it is verbally
announced as a raise.
Open - To bet first.
Open ended - a hand with four of the five needed cards in
sequence (and could be completed on either end) that may improve to a straight.
Option - The right to raise possessed by the big blind if
there have been no raises.
Out(s) - Any unseen card that, if drawn, will improve a
player's hand to one that is likely to win.
Play the board - In Texas hold 'em, where 5 community cards
are dealt, if your best hand is on the board and you go to the showdown you
are said to "play the board".
Pocket pair - When two of a player's hole cards make a pair.
Poker face - A blank expression that does not reveal anything
about the cards being held. Often used outside the world of poker.
Position - the order in which players are seated around
the table and the related poker strategy implications.
Position bet - A bet that is made more due to the strength
of the bettor's position than the strength of the bettor's cards.
Post - To make the required small or big blind bet.
Pot – a) The sum of money that players wager during
a single hand or game. b) The money won by the winner at the end of a hand.
Pot-committed - The situation where you can no longer fold
because the size of the pot is so large compared to the size of your stack.
Pot Odds - the ratio of the current size of the pot to the
cost of a contemplated call.
Pre-flop - The time when players already have their pocket
cards but no flop has been dealt yet. It's also the first round of bets.
Rabbit hunt - After a hand is complete, to reveal cards
that would have been dealt later in the hand had it continued. This is prohibited
because it slows the game and may reveal information about concealed hands.
Raise - to increase the size of the bet required to stay
in the pot, forcing all subsequent players to call the new amount.
Reraise - Raise after one has been raised. Also called coming "over
the top".
River - The final card dealt in a poker hand, to be followed
by a final round of betting and, if necessary, a showdown.
Set - Three of a kind situation where two of the cards are
the player's hole cards.
Showdown - When more than one player remains after the last
betting round and the remaining players expose and compare their hands to
determine the winner or winners.
Side pot - A separate pot created to deal with the situation
of one player going "all in".
Splash the pot - To throw one's chips in the pot in a disorderly
fashion. Not allowed, because the dealer can't tell how much has been bet.
String bet - A call with one motion and a later raise with
another, or a reach for more chips without stating the intended amount. String
bets are prohibited. A player can (and should) defend himself against string
bet complaints by declaring his intention before moving any chips. Note
that the "I call, and raise..." cliche is a string bet.
Tilt - Emotional upset, mental confusion, or frustration
in which a player adopts a less than optimal strategy, usually resulting
in poor play and poor performance.
Trips - Three of a kind situation where two of the cards
are on the board.
Turn - The fourth of five cards dealt to the board.