Level note: This lesson uses simple English (A2–B1) where possible. Poker terms and Russian words may be new, but each one comes with help and a short cue.
The room is quiet. Chips click. A player to your right says, “Your turn.” The dealer looks at you. You hear Russian from the other side: “Твой хо́д.” Someone adds with a smile, “Сколько?” (How much?).
You breathe in. You want to play well. You also want to say one clear line in Russian, without fear. Today we do both. You will learn poker hand rankings, the odds, and real table talk in Russian that you can use at a live table or online.
Poker gives you words, numbers, and small talk all in one place. You count chips. You read people. You speak short lines. It is perfect for language practice.
In this lesson, you get a quick map of hand ranks, a simple pronunciation clinic, and small, real lines you can say from preflop to river. You will also see stress marks on Russian words, so you place the sound right.
We close with mini tasks to test yourself. Keep this page open while you play or watch a stream. It is your pocket guide.
What are poker hand rankings (in Russian)? Poker hands go from highest to lowest: Royal Flush (Роя́л‑флеш), Straight Flush (Стри́т‑флеш), Four of a Kind (Каре́), Full House (Фул‑ха́ус), Flush (Флеш), Straight (Стри́т), Three of a Kind (Сет/Три́пс), Two Pair (Две па́ры), One Pair (Па́ра), High Card (Ста́ршая ка́рта). Royal Flush beats all.
First, see the order from top to bottom. If you want a full list and formal names, check standard poker hand rankings on Wikipedia. We will keep it short here and go deeper in the table below.
Watch two classic traps for learners: “straight” (стри́т) and “flush” (флеш). They look like English loans, but the stress and the vowel are key. We mark stress with an accent (´) on the vowel.
Now use the table. It gives English and Russian names, a sample hand, base odds for 5‑card poker, a quick sound cue, a memory hint, and notes on slang. Odds use the classic 5‑card model, not Texas Hold’em equity. See sources under the table.
| 1 | Royal Flush | Роя́л‑флеш | A♠ K♠ Q♠ J♠ 10♠ | 0.000154% | ro-yal-flesh | Highest straight flush | Often said “роял” for short |
| 2 | Straight Flush (non‑royal) | Стри́т‑флеш | 9♥ 8♥ 7♥ 6♥ 5♥ | 0.00124% | street-flesh | Street + same suit | Royal is a special straight flush |
| 3 | Four of a Kind | Каре́ | Q♦ Q♣ Q♥ Q♠ 7♠ | 0.0240% | ka-re | Four equal ranks | French loan; stress on “‑ре́” |
| 4 | Full House | Фул‑ха́ус | J♣ J♦ J♥ 8♣ 8♦ | 0.1441% | ful-HA-us | Three + a pair | Also heard “ха́ус” loud and clear |
| 5 | Flush | Флеш | K♥ 10♥ 7♥ 4♥ 2♥ | 0.1965% | flesh | Five of same suit | Do not say “флаш”; it is “е”, not “а” |
| 6 | Straight | Стри́т | 9♣ 8♠ 7♦ 6♣ 5♥ | 0.3925% | STREET | Five in a row | Ace can be high or low (A‑2‑3‑4‑5) |
| 7 | Three of a Kind | Сет / Три́пс | 7♠ 7♥ 7♦ K♣ 4♠ | 2.1128% | set / TRIPS | Three equal ranks | “Сет” from pocket pair; “три́пс” from board |
| 8 | Two Pair | Две па́ры | Q♠ Q♥ 5♣ 5♦ 9♦ | 4.7539% | dve PA-ry | Two pairs + kicker | “Две” = two; stress on “па́‑” |
| 9 | One Pair | Па́ра | 10♣ 10♦ A♠ 7♥ 3♣ | 42.2569% | PA-ra | One pair + three kickers | Very common in 5‑card |
| 10 | High Card | Ста́ршая ка́рта | A♦ J♣ 9♥ 6♠ 2♦ | 50.1177% | STAR-sha-ya KAR-ta | No pair; top rank wins | Say both words; stress marks help |
Sources for probabilities: classic five‑card model from Wizard of Odds (exact five‑card probabilities), cross‑checked with Wolfram MathWorld. Texas Hold’em equity is different, because you see shared cards.
Good news: most poker words in Russian are short. The trick is stress and three sounds: ш (sh), ж (zh), ч (ch). Move slow and open the jaw a bit more than in English.
To listen to native speech, try Forvo: hear each term pronounced by natives. For a full sound map (IPA and rules), see this Russian pronunciation guide. Stress rules in Russian are tricky; this norm guide helps: stress rules and accent marks.
Say each line twice, slow then normal:
Use short, soft lines. Keep the game fair. Do not coach others during a hand.
EN: I check. — RU: Я чека́ю. (ya che-KA-yu)
EN: I raise to two hundred. — RU: Повыша́ю до дву́хсо́т. (pa-vy-SHA-yu da dvukh-SOT)
EN: Your turn. — RU: Твой хо́д. (tvoy khot)
EN: How much? — RU: Ско́лько? (SKOL-ka)
At the table, do not talk about live hands in a way that helps others. In many rooms there are rules. For formal events, see the Poker TDA rules on table talk.
EN: Nice flop for you. — RU: Хоро́ший фло́п для тебя́. (kha-RO-shiy flop dlya te-BYA)
EN: I bet small. — RU: Ста́влю ма́ло. (STAV-lyu MA-lo)
EN: Check to you. — RU: Чек тебе́. (chek te-BE)
Short phrases are best. If you need time, say so:
EN: Give me a moment, please. — RU: Мне ну́жна мину́та, пожа́луйста. (mnye nuzh-NA mi-NU-ta pa-ZHA-lus-ta)
EN: I fold. — RU: Сбра́сываю. (SBRA-sy-vayu)
EN: I call. — RU: Колли́рую. (ka-LEE-ru-yu)
Keep jokes light. No slowrolls. No need to sting people after a loss.
EN: Good game. — RU: Хоро́шая игра́. (kha-RO-sha-ya i-GRA)
EN: Nice hand. — RU: Краси́вая рука́. (kra-SEE-va-ya ru-KA)
EN: Show? — RU: Покажешь? (pa-KA-zhesh?)
For broad context and terms, see an easy overview of commonly used poker jargon.
Try these right now. Answers are below the fold.
Poker is a skill game with risk. Play only if you are 18+ (or legal age in your country). Set limits. If you ever feel stress from play, pause, talk to a friend, or use help lines like safer gambling advice.
Before you sit down, you may want plain, neutral info on rooms, games, and safety. One place to start is a clear, non‑pushy list of online gambling resources. Reviews are informational. Always check local laws and play responsibly.
Use one system and stick to it. For formal work, see the Library of Congress guide: ALA‑LC Romanization for Russian. For casual notes, our cues (e.g., “STAR-sha-ya”) are fine.
Both mean “three of a kind.” “Сет” is when your pocket pair hits a third card on the board. “Три́пс” is three of a kind made with two board cards. Many people mix them; all will understand you.
Search live streams on YouTube or Twitch with “poker Russian.” Then echo short lines: “Твой хо́д,” “Я чека́ю,” “Ста́влю ма́ло.” Also use Forvo to hear single words by natives.
Think “pairs are common, flush is rare, royal is tiny.” Keep three numbers in your head: Pair ≈ 42%, Straight ≈ 0.39%, Royal ≈ 0.00015%. The rest sit between.
My first game in Moscow, I said “фла́ш” with a long “а.” A man in seat 5 smiled and said, “Флеш.” One beat. I never forgot it. Small fixes like this make you sound clear and calm. People then talk back to you more, and that is how you learn fast.
Hand names follow common English and Russian table use and the standard list. Odds use Wizard of Odds as the main base and are checked with Wolfram MathWorld. For sound, we point to Forvo, the Wiktionary IPA guide, and stress norms from Gramota. Etiquette and policy links include the Poker TDA Rules and the WSOP code of conduct. For a broad look at poker terms, we use Britannica. For phonetics practice, try the Iowa “Sounds of Speech” tool. For help with safe play, see BeGambleAware.
Disclaimer: For adults only (18+ or legal age in your area). This lesson is for language learning and general info. It does not give legal advice or promise any result in gambling. Always follow local laws and house rules.
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