Return to Home Page

December 19, 2005

One man’s diamond is another man’s paving tile…

In the United States and England, the four suits in playing cards are ‘diamonds’, ‘hearts’, ‘clubs’ and ’spades’. According to an entry on Adam Jacot de Boinod’s blog, however, other languages interpret these symbols differently.

The French for clubs, for example, is “trèfles”, meaning ‘clover’ (which makes more sense to me than ‘clubs’). In Italian, spades are known as “picche”, or pikes. In Malay, clubs are given the name “kelawar”, which means (of all things) ‘cave bat’.

A reader adds the following Cantonese equivalents, which I found interesting:

Posted by |  
Category: Weird word of the week
Related Posts: Longfellow on the importance of the present moment, Fishing kills, Pico Iyer on quitting


2 Responses to “One man’s diamond is another man’s paving tile…”

  1. Andrea Anko Says:

    For what it’s worth, there is also the beleif that the playing card suits were derived from the 4 suits of the tarot, which is supposed to be much older.
    Evidence suggests it originated in northern Italy in the mid 15th century.

    Hearts were cups, and correspond the the element of water which relates to emotions.

    Diamonds were pentacles and correspond to the element of earth (hence the paving tiles?) which relates to resources–i.e. money.

    Clubs were wands or staves and correspond to the element of fire which relates to action, movement, creativity.

    Spades were swords and correspond to the element of air wich relates to mental activity (words and thoughts)

    Just thought some of your readers would find that interesting!

  2. Suzanne Delaney Says:

    That is very interesting about the playing cards.
    I am enjoying this feature about words.
    Thanks for sharing.

Leave a Reply

Main

Bio

Stories

Essays

Interviews

Books

Images

Writers

Guide

News

Paris

Vagabonding.net

Contact

Marco Polo Didnt Go There
Rolf's new book!


Vagabonding
   Vagabonding


RECENT COMMENTS

Mike Melton: I think it would be great! It would slow the world down a little, and I...

brian: It would be a disaster not only for travelers, but the economies dependent on...

Roger: If things do get that bad, will employers grant generous amounts of leave time...

joshua: I think it would be a shame if prices soared so dramatically that people were...

Kevin Lockette PT: www.parkinsonsmoveit.com

Kevin Lockette PT: New Breakthrough DVD & Book! (www.parkinsonsmoveit.com) Written...

Mark Evans: Scott, If you get a chance, check out PlanetEye.com - a travel planning...

Anderson Fleming: I would recommend writing down in handwriting each and every word you...

AwesomeGuy: Hey, maybe he DID make a deal with the devil. We Dont know. That is what...

Troy: The quote from Twain contrasts wonderfully with her closed-minded world view....

SPONSORED BY :



CATEGORIES

TRAVEL LINKS

ARCHIVES

RECENT ENTRIES

Is the age of cheap air travel coming to an end?
Restless Legs and World Hum reading series
Fit on the road
Rolf’s book tour diary now appearing at Gadling
Special October fares for multi-stop tickets on BootsnAll
What travel mistakes do you repeat?
Traveling to a place vs. reading about it
Travel Urban Legends
Win fame and fortune with your travel writing
You don’t need an ice axe to be an explorer (but it couldn’t hurt)


Subscribe to this blog's feed
Counter