- Refers to the
total amount of money bet in a specific period of time. Five bets of five
dollars each is $25 of action.
- Any playing
strategy that minimizes the house edge as much as possible without card
counting, shuffle tracking, or dealer tells. Basic strategy offers a foundation
for card counting, but many non-counters use it as well.
- One or more
cards from a full deck that are discarded after the deck has been shuffled
by the dealer and cut by one of the players. Burn cards are never revealed
to the players.
- A player "busts"
after "hitting" if the new card causes the player's total to
exceed 21.
- A system
used to improve the player's edge. The player assigns "weights"
to each card face, and then sums the card weights as each new card is
turned face up. The "count" indicates when the game is favorable
for the player. The player acts on the count by placing larger bets and/or
make changes in playing strategy. Although card counting is legal, in
Nevada, casinos can run players of the game if caught.
- A typically
colored plastic card used to cut the cards after the dealer has shuffled.
- Doubling
the initial bet and receiving exactly one more card. The double-option
is often restricted to the player's first two cards. However, some casinos
allow players to double after splitting a pair. Many Northern Nevada casinos
require a two-card total of 10 or 11 in order to double. It is the rare
game that allows doubling of hands that have more than two cards.
- Doubling
down with less than two times the original bet. Typically, when doubling
is permitted, the player is not required to literally double his bet,
but may raise it by any amount up to (but not more than) the original
bet.
- A surrender
technique allowed regardless of whether the dealer has a natural. Early
surrender is extremely valuable to the player, however, it is rarely offered
by casinos.
- Simultaneously
holding blackjack and taking insurance results in a net gain of one bet.
Some casinos do not require the player to actually place the insurance
bet in order to get paid. This is referred to as "taking even money".
(See "insurance")
- At a table,
it is the first player to act on his/her hand.
- The same value
bet on each subsequent hand.
- A hand
in which the Ace must be counted as a one, not an eleven.
- Refers to playing at a table that has
no other players.
- The command used
to draw/request a new card that will be added to the player's or the dealer's
hand.
- The dealer's
card that is placed face down.
- When
the dealer's upcard is an ace, the player has an option to make a side
bet of up to 1/2 the original bet. Insurance pays 2:1 if the dealer has
a natural 21. (See "even money")
- This form
of surrender is allowed only when the dealer does not have a natural.
If the dealer has a natural 21 (blackjack), the player's bet still loses
in its entirety. If the dealer does not have a blackjack, the player loses
half the bet and does not play the rest of the hand.
- When
the first two cards dealt to a player total 21.
- A rare bet
made when the player's first two cards total over 13, or under 13 - when
aces are counted as one.
- Shuffling when the deck
is favorable to the players; not shuffling when the deck is unfavorable
to the players.
- A hand with a total from 17
to 21.
- Another word for
"tie"; the original bet is returned to the player.
- A device that holds
up to eight decks and allows the dealer to slide out one card at a time;
typical for multi-deck games.
- Any hand in
which the ace can be counted as 11.
- A hand that starts with two cards of
the same rank and can be split to form two independent hands. Players
add a new bet to the second hand; both hands are played independently.
- Placing more than
one bet before the cards are dealt.
- The decision not
to hit/draw more cards.
- A hand that
holds a small chance of winning regardless of how the hand is played (typically
12 - 16).
- The player's
rare option to exchange the first two cards for a refund of 1/2 the original
bet. Player's 16 vs. dealer's 10 is an example of hand bad enough to warrant
a surrender. In this unfortunate case, surrendering would prove less costly
than playing the hand.
- At a table,
the last player to act on his/her hand.
- The dealer's first
card; dealt face up. Players typically figure the dealer's upcard into
choosing the correct playing decision.
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