Honneur (card game)
As honors or engl. Hono (u) rs is used in the card game to denote the highest trumps or, more generally, the highest cards of a suit .
The possession of honors is rewarded with special points in many games; For example, in Écarté, the player who has the king of trumps in his hand may report it and mark a point.
There are also prizes for honors at whist - a forerunner of this game even carries the Nanen Ruff and Honors ; The following rules apply to bridge , more precisely rubber bridge :
- With a contract in a trump suit, the five highest trumps, i.e. ace, king, queen, jack and ten, count as honors. If a player holds four or even all five honors in his hand, he receives a bonus of 100 or 150 points.
- In the case of a contract without a trump ( sans atout or no trump ), the four aces count as honors; If a player holds all four aces in his hand, this is rewarded with a credit of 150 points.
However, awards for honors are no longer credited to the modern tournament bridge.
In a broader sense, the red threes at Canasta , the report of a mariage at sixty-six or Bézique , the report of certain combinations at Piquet or the possession of flower or season tiles at Mah-Jongg are among the honors.
literature
- David Parlett : The Oxford Dictionary of Card Games , Oxford University Press Oxford, New York 1992/96, Terms used in card play
- David Parlett: The Oxford Guide to Card Games , Oxford University Press Oxford, New York 1990