There is some more poker terms or slang.
-Slang name-5-Card Hand Straight flush, ace to five Steel wheel
-Four of a kind Book, Case, Quads (e.g., "Quad Kings")
-Four of a kind, aces Four Pips (Each ace has one pip)
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Full house Full boat, Boat, Full, Tight (Canadian usage)
-Flush of hearts or diamonds Pink, All Pink
-Flush of clubs or spades Blue, All Blue
-Flush of clubs Golf Bag, Puppy Feet, Puppy Toes, Pups
-Straight, ten to ace Broadway
-Straight, ace to five Wheel, Bicycle, Bike
-Three of a kind Trips, Set In Hold 'em the term "set" refers to when a player has a pair in the hole and one matching card on the board, with "trips" referring to a pair on the board and one in the hand or three of a kind on the board.
-Three of a kind, kings Alabama Night Riders, Three Wise Men
-Three of a kind, sevens
Slot Machine-Three of a kind, sixes Devil's hand, Mark of the Beast (referring to the Number of the Beast in the Book of Revelation)
-Three of a kind, deuces Huey, Dewey and Louie
-Two pair, aces and eights Dead man's hand (hand held by Wild Bill Hickok when he was shot and killed)
-Two pair Two pair is commonly shorthanded as Xs up or Xs over Ys, with the top pair as X and the bottom pair as Y. For example, KK998 would be "kings up" or "kings over nines".)
-One pair, aces Aces and spaces (a hand with one pair of aces, and nothing else. Used derogatorily, especially in games such as seven-card stud, where two pair is a typical winning hand)
-Outside straight draw Bobtail, Open-ended, up-and-down-
An outside straight draw: cards of two different ranks could complete the high or low end of the straight (e.g., _3456_)
-Outside straight flush draw Big Bobtail
-Inside straight draw Gut-shot, Belly buster
An inside straight draw: only cards of a single rank could complete the straight (e.g., 34_67)
-Double inside straight draw Double gut-shot, Double belly buster
Double inside straight draw: cards of two different ranks could fill gaps in the straight (e.g., 2_456_8)
-Four cards of one suit
Busted flush, Four-flush
Four cards of one suit: only another card of that suit could complete a flush.
Additional Slang:Advertise: Making a move intended at falsely exposing oneself as a weak or bluffing player.
Ante: A small forced bet sometimes placed by all players before each hand. Common in big tournaments to provoke aggressive play.
Back door: Making a hand other than the one intended, for example drawing for a straight and hitting a runner-runner flush.
Bad beat: A hand that is a huge favorite to win, but loses nonetheless.
B&M: Abbreviation for a real life "Brick and Mortar"
Poker Room or
Casino.
Bust: Losing your entire table stack or your entire bank roll.
Calling station: A player who passively calls with a lot of hands and doesn't fold or raise very often.
Cap: To max out the number of allowed raises, usually four, in a fixed limit poker game.
Coin Toss: An all-in situation where both players have a close to equal chance of winning.
Connectors: Pocket cards that connect in rank, for example 7-8 or Ace-King.
Cracked: To have the best Holdem starting hand there is, two aces, beaten.
Crap
Shoot: A table where the players are aggressive and the action is wild and crazy.
Crying Call: A call made by a player despite declaring that he is certain he will lose.
Drawing dead: A draw hand that will lose even if it hits its draw.
Draw hand: A hand that needs to improve on the turn or the river in order to win.
Edge: In the long run luck evens out and only skill remains as a deciding factor between players. Edge is the slight advantage one player has over another through more skill, larger stack or better position.
Freeroll: A multi-table tournament that is free to enter but still has a real money prize pool.
Grinder: A player that consistently plays for hours on low limits with the intent of slowly and carefully building a larger bank roll.
Heads up: A game or situation where players face each other one-on-one.
Kicker: If a player makes a pair with one of his hole cards, the other is called the kicker. If another players holds the same pair, the highest kicker wins the pot.
Nuts, the: The best possible hand a player can have at any given time.
Outs: The total number of possibilities a player has to win a pot based on the current situation. If he holds 99 and needs another 9 to win, then he would have a total of two outs.
On the Button: Being in the dealer's position and thus acting last.
Over cards: Pocket cards that have a value higher than the highest card currently on the board. An ace and a king are over cards to a 57J flop.
Over the top: Re-raising another player's raise with a substantial amount.
Pot odds: A strategic comparison between the amount of money needed to call a bet, the total amount in the pot and the chance of actually winning the hand.
Position: Where a player is seated in relation to the dealer, establishing that player's place in the betting order.
Rags: Low community cards that ought to have no effect on the outcome of a hand.
Read: The art of identifying another player's tells and analyzing his play in order to determine his pocket cards.
Runner-Runner: Improving your hand by hitting on both the turn card and the river card and thus winning the pot.
Sandbagging: Playing a very strong hand passively in the hope of inducing more action and provoke costly bluffs.
Satellite: A tournament where players can qualify for much bigger events.
Streak: To be "in the zone" and win with whatever cards you are dealt.
Suited: Starting hand in matching suit – hearts, clubs, spades or diamonds.
Tell: A clue, hint or mannerism that reveals the true strength of a player's hand. In live games often detected through body language. Online, clues are discovered by observing a player's betting patterns.
Tilt: Playing recklessly and badly due to frustration from having
lost.
Trap: To play a very strong hand weakly in order to induce costly raises from other players.
Under the Gun: The position to the immediate left of the big blind.