Poker Icon Queen

Playing Cards
RangeU+1F0A0..U+1F0FF
(96 code points)
PlaneSMP
ScriptsCommon
Assigned82 code points
Unused14 reserved code points
Unicode version history
6.059 (+59)
7.082 (+23)
Note: [1][2]
  1. Poker Icon Queen Snare
  2. Poker Queen Icon
  3. Queen Poker Card Icon Free

Unicode is a computing industry standard for the handling of fonts and symbols. Within it is a set of images depicting playing cards, and another depicting the French card suits.

  1. IStock Poker Queen Stock Illustration - Download Image Now Download this Poker Queen vector illustration now. And search more of iStock's library of royalty-free vector art that features Ace graphics available for quick and easy download. Product #: gm96612582 $ 33.00 iStock In stock.
  2. Poker Hand Combinations Explained. Poker hands fall into one of ten categories. The highest is a royal flush, followed by a straight flush, then four of a kind, a full house, a flush, a straight.
  3. Records: Gaga is the first artist in digital history to have three singles (“Poker Face”, “Just Dance” and “Bad Romance”) pass the four million mark in digital sales. She also has Guinness World.

The queen is a playing card with a picture of a Queen on it. In many European languages, the king and queen begin with the same letter so the latter is often called dame (lady) or variations thereof. In French playing cards, the usual rank of a queen is between the king and the jack. In tarot decks, it outranks the knight which in turn outranks. Standard seven card stud with Queens wild. Throughout the course of the deal, if a Queen is dealt face-up to a player, then the card that is dealt face-up after that Queen is called the “trailer” and it is also wild as well as Queens.

Poker Icon Queen Snare

Card suits[edit]

Queen

The Miscellaneous Symbols block contains the following, at U+2660–2667:

Queen
U+2660U+2665U+2666U+2663
Black Spade SuitBlack Heart SuitBlack Diamond SuitBlack Club Suit
♠♥♦♣
U+2664U+2661U+2662U+2667
White Spade SuitWhite Heart SuitWhite Diamond SuitWhite Club Suit

Playing cards deck[edit]

Poker Queen Icon

Unicode 6.0 added images for: the 52 cards of the standard French deck, 4 Knights of the Tarot deck, a back of a card, and two for black and white (or red) jokers in the block U+1F0A0–1F0FF. Unicode 7.0 added a specific red joker and twenty-two generic trump cards with the reference description being not the Italian-suited Tarot de Marseille or its derivatives (which are often used in cartomancy) but the French Tarot Nouveau used to play Jeu de tarot.

U+1F0A1U+1F0B1U+1F0C1U+1F0D1
🂡🂱🃁🃑
Ace of SpadesAce of HeartsAce of DiamondsAce of Clubs
U+1F0A2U+1F0B2U+1F0C2U+1F0D2
🂢🂲🃂🃒
Two of SpadesTwo of HeartsTwo of DiamondsTwo of Clubs
U+1F0A3U+1F0B3U+1F0C3U+1F0D3
🂣🂳🃃🃓
Three of SpadesThree of HeartsThree of DiamondsThree of Clubs
U+1F0A4U+1F0B4U+1F0C4U+1F0D4
🂤🂴🃄🃔
Four of SpadesFour of HeartsFour of DiamondsFour of Clubs
U+1F0A5U+1F0B5U+1F0C5U+1F0D5
🂥🂵🃅🃕
Five of SpadesFive of HeartsFive of DiamondsFive of Clubs
U+1F0A6U+1F0B6U+1F0C6U+1F0D6
🂦🂶🃆🃖
Six of SpadesSix of HeartsSix of DiamondsSix of Clubs
U+1F0A7U+1F0B7U+1F0C7U+1F0D7
🂧🂷🃇🃗
Seven of SpadesSeven of HeartsSeven of DiamondsSeven of Clubs
U+1F0A8U+1F0B8U+1F0C8U+1F0D8
🂨🂸🃈🃘
Eight of SpadesEight of HeartsEight of DiamondsEight of Clubs
U+1F0A9U+1F0B9U+1F0C9U+1F0D9
🂩🂹🃉🃙
Nine of SpadesNine of HeartsNine of DiamondsNine of Clubs
U+1F0AAU+1F0BAU+1F0CAU+1F0DA
🂪🂺🃊🃚
Ten of SpadesTen of HeartsTen of DiamondsTen of Clubs
U+1F0ABU+1F0BBU+1F0CBU+1F0DB
🂫🂻🃋🃛
Jack of SpadesJack of HeartsJack of DiamondsJack of Clubs
U+1F0ACU+1F0BCU+1F0CCU+1F0DC
🂬🂼🃌🃜
Knight of SpadesKnight of HeartsKnight of DiamondsKnight of Clubs
U+1F0ADU+1F0BDU+1F0CDU+1F0DD
🂭🂽🃍🃝
Queen of SpadesQueen of HeartsQueen of DiamondsQueen of Clubs
U+1F0AEU+1F0BEU+1F0CEU+1F0DE
🂮🂾🃎🃞
King of SpadesKing of HeartsKing of DiamondsKing of Clubs
U+1F0A0U+1F0BFU+1F0CFU+1F0DF
🂠🂿🃏🃟
Playing Card BackRed JokerBlack JokerWhite Joker

Queen Poker Card Icon Free

U+1F0E0U+1F0E1U+1F0E2U+1F0E3
🃠🃡🃢🃣
FoolTrump-1 (individual)Trump-2 (childhood)Trump-3 (youth)
U+1F0E4U+1F0E5U+1F0E6U+1F0E7
🃤🃥🃦🃧
Trump-4 (maturity)Trump-5 (old age)Trump-6 (morning)Trump-7 (afternoon)
U+1F0E8U+1F0E9U+1F0EAU+1F0EB
🃨🃩🃪🃫
Trump-8 (evening)Trump-9 (night)Trump-10 (earth and air)Trump-11 (water and fire)
U+1F0ECU+1F0EDU+1F0EEU+1F0EF
🃬🃭🃮🃯
Trump-12 (dance)Trump-13 (shopping)Trump-14 (open air)Trump-15 (visual arts)
U+1F0F0U+1F0F1U+1F0F2U+1F0F3
🃰🃱🃲🃳
Trump-16 (spring)Trump-17 (summer)Trump-18 (autumn)Trump-19 (winter)
U+1F0F4U+1F0F5
🃴🃵
Trump-20 (the game)Trump-21 (collective)

Block[edit]

Playing Cards[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
0123456789ABCDEF
U+1F0Ax🂠🂡🂢🂣🂤🂥🂦🂧🂨🂩🂪🂫🂬🂭🂮
U+1F0Bx🂱🂲🂳🂴🂵🂶🂷🂸🂹🂺🂻🂼🂽🂾🂿
U+1F0Cx🃁🃂🃃🃄🃅🃆🃇🃈🃉🃊🃋🃌🃍🃎🃏
U+1F0Dx🃑🃒🃓🃔🃕🃖🃗🃘🃙🃚🃛🃜🃝🃞🃟
U+1F0Ex🃠🃡🃢🃣🃤🃥🃦🃧🃨🃩🃪🃫🃬🃭🃮🃯
U+1F0Fx🃰🃱🃲🃳🃴🃵
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 13.0
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

Emoji[edit]

The Playing Cards block contains one emoji:U+1F0CF.[3][4]

History[edit]

The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Playing Cards block:

VersionFinal code points[a]CountL2 IDWG2 IDDocument
6.0U+1F0A0..1F0AE, 1F0B1..1F0BE, 1F0C1..1F0CF, 1F0D1..1F0DF[b]59L2/04-163N2760Everson, Michael (2004-05-18), Proposal to encode dominoes and other game symbols in the UCS
L2/06-288Pentzlin, Karl (2006-08-06), Comments on L2/04-163 - Domino tiles and other game symbols
L2/09-025R2N3582[c]Scherer, Markus; Davis, Mark; Momoi, Kat; Tong, Darick; Kida, Yasuo; Edberg, Peter (2009-03-05), Proposal for Encoding Emoji Symbols
L2/09-026RN3583Scherer, Markus; Davis, Mark; Momoi, Kat; Tong, Darick; Kida, Yasuo; Edberg, Peter (2009-02-06), Emoji Symbols Proposed for New Encoding
L2/09-027R2N3681Scherer, Markus (2009-09-17), Emoji Symbols: Background Data
L2/09-114N3607Towards an encoding of symbol characters used as emoji, 2009-04-06
L2/10-089N3777KDDI Input on Emoji, 2010-03-08
L2/10-132Scherer, Markus; Davis, Mark; Momoi, Kat; Tong, Darick; Kida, Yasuo; Edberg, Peter (2010-04-27), Emoji Symbols: Background Data
7.0U+1F0BF, 1F0E0..1F0F523L2/11-095N4012Everson, Michael; Pentzlin, Karl (2011-04-01), Proposal to encode additional playing card characters in the UCS
L2/11-102 (pdf,txt)Davis, Mark (2011-04-06), Clarification of Tarot cards
L2/11-216N4089Everson, Michael; Pentzlin, Karl (2011-05-31), Proposal to disunify playing card and tarot card characters in the UCS
L2/11-261R2Moore, Lisa (2011-08-16), 'Motion 128-M2', UTC #128 / L2 #225 Minutes
N4253 (pdf,doc)'M59.12', Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 59, 2012-09-12
  1. ^Proposed code points and characters names may differ from final code points and names
  2. ^Refer to the history section of the Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs block for additional emoji-related documents
  3. ^Japanese translation of N3582 is available as N3621

References[edit]

  1. ^'Unicode character database'. The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
  2. ^'Enumerated Versions of The Unicode Standard'. The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
  3. ^'UTR #51: Unicode Emoji'. Unicode Consortium. 2020-02-11.
  4. ^'UCD: Emoji Data for UTR #51'. Unicode Consortium. 2020-01-28.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Playing_cards_in_Unicode&oldid=965503836'
Queen cards of all four suits in the English pattern

The queen is a playing card with a picture of a Queen on it. In many European languages, the king and queen begin with the same letter so the latter is often called dame (lady) or variations thereof. In French playing cards, the usual rank of a queen is between the king and the jack. In tarot decks, it outranks the knight which in turn outranks the jack.

In several card games, including the middle eastern Trex and French Barbu, the queen is a major card to avoid taking, with each queen taken inflicting a penalty on the player. Similarly, in Hearts, the queen of spades is to be avoided, and is called a variety of unsavoury names.

In the Paris pattern, each court card is identified as a particular historical or mythological personage as follows:[1][2]

Queen
Queens in the Paris pattern (portrait officiel)
HeartsDiamondsSpadesClubs
Judith,
Biblical figure
Rachel,
Biblical figure
Pallas,
an epithet of the goddess Athena
Argine,
an anagram of Regina (Latin for 'queen')

Cultural references[edit]

Icon

Regarding the anonymous nursery rhyme, 'The Queen of Hearts' (published 1782), Katherine Elwes Thomas claims, in The Real Personage of Mother Goose, that the Queen of Hearts[clarification needed] was based on Elizabeth of Bohemia.[3] Benham, in his book Playing Cards: History of the Pack and Explanations of its Many Secrets, notes that French playing cards from the mid-17th century have Judith from the Hebrew Bible as the Queen of Hearts.[4] See also: Queen of Hearts (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland).

Poker

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queens (playing cards).
  1. ^'The Four King Truth' at the Urban Legends Reference Pages
  2. ^Who are the court figures? at the International Playing-Card Society. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  3. ^Thomas, Katherine Elwes (1930). The Real Personage of Mother Goose. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co. [ISBN unspecified].
  4. ^'Eclipse :: Mother Goose'. School of Communication, Information and Library Studies, Rutgers University. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Queen_(playing_card)&oldid=987880750'