v. i. To search; to feel one's way, as in the dark; to grope;
A man must have poked into Latin and Greek. Prior. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. (Bot.) A large North American herb of the genus
n.
Poke bonnet,
n. [ AS. poca, poha, pohha; akin to Icel. poki, OD. poke, and perh. to E. pock; cf. also Gael. poca, and OF. poque. Cf. Pock, Pocket, Pouch. ]
They wallowed as pigs in a poke. Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ]
To boy a pig a poke
v. t.
He poked John, and said “Sleepest thou ?” Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ]
To poke fun,
To poke fun at,
n. [ So called in allusion to its baglike nest. ] (Zool.) The European long-tailed titmouse; -- called also
n. [ Cf. Dan. pokker the deuce, devil, also W. pwci, a hobgoblin, bugbear, and E. puck. ] Any imagined frightful object, especially one supposed to haunt the darkness; a bugbear. [ Colloq. U. S. ] [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Of uncertain etymol. ] A game at cards derived from brag, and first played about 1835 in the Southwestern United States. Johnson's Cyc. [ 1913 Webster ]
A poker hand is played with a poker deck, composed of fifty-two cards, of thirteeen values, each card value being represented once in each of four "suits", namely spades, hearts, diamonds, and clubs. The game is played in many variations, but almost invariably the stage of decision as to who wins occurs when each player has five cards (or chooses five cards from some larger number available to him). The winner usually is the player with the highest-valued hand, but, in some variations, the winner may be the player with the lowest-valued hand. The value of a hand is ranked by hand types, representing the relationships of the cards to each other. [ The hand types are ranked by the probability of receiving such a hand when dealt five cards. ] Within each hand type the value is also ranked by the values of the cards. The hand types are labeled, in decreasing value: five of a kind; royal flush; straight flush; four of a kind; full house (coll. full boat, or boat); flush; straight; three of a kind; two pairs; one pair; and, when the contending players have no hands of any of the above types, the player with the highest-valued card wins -- if there is a tie, the next-highest-valued card of the tied players determines the winner, and so on. If two players have the same type of hand, the value of the cards within each type determines the winner; thus, if two players both have three of a kind (and no other player has a higher type of hand), the player whose three matched cards have the highest card value is the winner.
n. [ From Poke to push. ]
Poker picture,
a. Infested by pokers; adapted to excite fear;
There is something pokerish about a deserted dwelling. Lowell. [ 1913 Webster ]