Diamonds (suit) explained

Native Name:French: Carreau
Deck:French-suited playing cards

Diamonds (French: Carreau) is one of the four playing card suits in the standard French-suited playing cards. It is the only French suit to not have been adapted from the German deck, taking the place of the suit of Bells.

Name

The original French name of the suit is French: Carreau; in German and Polish it is known as German: Karo.

In older German-language accounts of card games, Diamonds are frequently referred to as German: Eckstein ("cornerstone"). In Switzerland, the suit is still called Egge (Ecke i.e. "corner") today. The term "Karo" went into the German language in the 18th century from the French French: carreau, which goes back to the Latin word, Latin: quadrum, meaning "square" or "rectangle".[1]

Characteristics

The diamond typically has a lozenge shape, a parallelogram with four equal sides, placed on one of its points. The sides are sometimes slightly rounded and the four vertices placed in a square, making the sign look like an astroid.

Normally, diamonds are red in colour so they can be used in some games as a pair with Hearts (suit), like Klondike (solitaire). They can however be depicted in blue,[2] [3] which is the case for example in bridge (where it is one of the two minor suits along with Clubs). In the official Skat tournament deck, diamonds are yellow or orange, assuming the color of their German-deck equivalent, which are usually golden.

The following gallery shows the diamonds from a standard 52-card deck of French-suited playing cards. Not shown is the Knight of Diamonds used in the tarot card games:

Four-colour packs

Four-color decks are sometimes used in tournaments or online.[4] In such packs Diamonds may be:

Coding

The symbol

is already in the CP437 and therefore also part of Windows WGL4. In Unicode a black and a white ♢ diamond have been defined:
SymbolUnicodeEntity in HTML
U+2666 BLACK DIAMOND SUIT♦ or ♦
U+2662 WHITE DIAMOND SUIT♢

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Wolfgang Pfeifer: Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Deutschen. 8. Auflage. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, Munich, 2005, .
  2. Sfetou, Nicholas. The Bridge Game.
  3. https://www.pokerstars.com/en/blog/tournaments/ept/2015/ept12-malta-trialling-the-four-colour-de-158758.shtml Trialling the four-colour deck
  4. Allan & Mackay (2007), p. 155.
  5. http://a_pollett.tripod.com/cards19.htm Gallery 3 - Sizes, Shapes and Colours
  6. https://www.pokernews.com/pokerterms/four-color-deck.htm Four-Color Deck