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Re: turning hand into bluff meaning
This can have various meanings in various situations:
1. You are a poker journalist writing an article about a hand from a tournament. In this case, 'bluff' should be capitalized (as in Bluff Magazine), but then so should 'what.' 2. You stick your hand into a running snow blower. Here we have an example of a typo - the 'b' in 'bluff' is supposed to be an 'f'. (Similar to the 's' in 'appreciates', which should be a 'd'.) 3. 'Turn my hand into bluff' is an expression based on the old English word 'bluffe' - from which we get the modern definition "a steep headland, promontory, riverbank, or cliff." The expression means to steer in the wrong direction, such as a ship into a cliff. For example: The poker player turned his hand into bluff when he flipped up his pocket aces and said "All In." (He was on the bubble in a 10K tournament and forgot that exposing his cards in a tournament caused his hand to be dead, thus losing all his chips to the lucky donkey chip leader who raised first with 72 offsuit.) |
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