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.
Three aces and two eights is a full house. Three Aces and two nines would win. As would three aces and two kickers 10 or higher.
Three eights. Just convert one fourth to the same denominator which equals two eights.
No.
It is: 3/8+2/8 = 5/8
It is ten eights, or one and two eights or one and a quarter or 1.25 as a decimal.
Three aces and two eights is a full house. Three Aces and two nines would win. As would three aces and two kickers 10 or higher.
No.
The three nines and two eights win, because the higher three of kind is stronger.
Aces over Eights; Full Hosue Wild Bill was holding a Full House, Aces and Eights. As a point of trivia, this is now referred to as the Dead Man's Hand. the hand was two pair, aces and eights
Three kings and two nines is a full house, three aces is a three of a kind. A full house always beats a three of a kind.
yes
Three aces in poker does not beat a small straight. A small straight beats three of a kind and two of a kind.
"Aces and Eights"; two pair of 2 aces and 2 eights. Wild Bill Hickok was accused of cheating after showing two pair, aces and eights, but nobody knows what the fifth card was.
Yes 3 of a kind always beats two pair.
No, a full house beats two pair
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
1 beat(=