By Lina Markel, editor and language researcher. I study how game words travel and change. Last updated: June 2026.
The room is loud. Chips click. A calm voice says, “Faites vos jeux.” The wheel spins.
Across an ocean, a sailor once said “hazard.” On a riverboat, a sharp says “poker.” Same thrill. New words.
These words have long lives. They cross borders. They shift in sound and meaning. We can trace many first uses with the Oxford English Dictionary. But the real story is how people used them at the table, in streets, and in print.
It was not only luck. For centuries, France had court life, salons, and print culture. French was a prestige language. French table games moved with travelers, soldiers, and writers. The words rode along.
Take roulette. In French, it means “little wheel.” You can see this in the CNRTL entry for roulette. The tool gave the game its name. The word then left France and kept its French feel.
French also guarded its terms with care. The Académie française dictionary notes older senses and formal use. This helps us see how a word moved from a court room to a casino floor, and then into global English.
Let’s start with the words you still hear on live tables. Roulette. Croupier. Mise. Banque. These came in early. They sounded smart and exact. They still sound that way now.
Roulette is both the device and the game name. It showed up in French first and then in English by the 18th–19th century. People liked the sound. The spin of the “r” and the light end note match the wheel feel.
For a clear word path, see Etymonline on ‘roulette’. You will spot how the literal “little wheel” became the brand of a full game. That jump, from object to game, is common in sports and gambling.
Note, too, the phrases that stayed French on many floors: “Faites vos jeux” (place your bets) and “Rien ne va plus” (no more bets). These lines carry mood and history.
Long ago, a croupier was not the dealer. It was the helper at the back of a gambler, near the “croup,” or rump, to spot or back the stake. Over time, the word slid to mean the table official who runs the game.
Now, in English, dealer is common in the US. Croupier still sounds French and is used in Europe and in formal settings. It marks a live table, not a machine. The tone is classy, but the job is exact: handle bets, spin, deal, pay, keep pace.
Do not confuse a croupier with a bookmaker. A bookie sets odds and takes bets on events. See the Cambridge Dictionary: bookmaker to compare roles. One runs a table. One runs a ledger.
Mise is the stake or size of a bet. You see it in rules and on old placards. In US rooms, you hear “bet” more. In French rooms, mise is still alive.
Banque, and the shout “Banco!,” show the idea of a bank in play. In baccarat and chemin de fer, the banker role is key. These terms show how money words and game words meet.
“Hazard” came from Old French hasard, a word for chance, risk, and also a dice game. English took it in the Middle Ages. It kept both the game sense and the general risk sense.
In the US, the street and riverboat dice scene gave us “craps.” The base may be “crabs,” slang for a bad roll of twos. See Merriam‑Webster on ‘craps’ for the main theories and dates. Once slang, it became the standard game name.
The class note here is sharp. “Hazard” sounds refined in 18th‑century texts. “Craps” sounds raw and bright in 19th‑century America. The same cubes picked up two very different coats.
If you want a deep file on US game rise and rules, the UNLV Center for Gaming Research has papers and archives. They map how games, words, and laws grew side by side.
Try a quick scan in the Google Ngram Viewer. You will see “roulette” climb in the 19th century, and “poker” spike fast in the early 20th. Word curves match social curves: travel, print, and new money.
Vingt‑et‑un means “twenty‑one.” The game moved from French and Spanish circles into US halls. At first, people still said “twenty‑one.”
Then houses ran a lure: a bonus if you had an ace of spades plus a black jack. The promo name stuck. “Blackjack” beat “twenty‑one.” The rule set changed too. The name froze with the modern table.
For a wide view of game roots and shifts, see Britannica on gambling. It shows how names and rules shape each other across borders.
Many say the word comes from Italian baccarà, linked to “zero” value for tens and face cards. The French form, baccarat, took hold with high‑society play. It kept the banker idea at center.
For the Italian link and usage, see Treccani on baccarà. The path from Italian to French to global English is a neat chain here.
Faro ruled the 19th‑century US. The word likely comes from “pharaoh,” a card image that marked the deck once used. The game faded, but the word lives on in Old West books and films. You also hear “Faro bank,” which again ties play to money terms.
Some key terms are not French at all. They show finance roots and street slang.
Vigorish, or vig, comes through Yiddish and Russian paths into US slang. It means the cut the bookmaker takes. See Investopedia: vigorish (vig) for a clear, simple note. It is a money word first, a betting word next.
Bankroll is just your roll of money, but it also means the plan for how you use it. Book and bookmaker reach back to ledgers. Again, we see how bets and books share a spine.
Card words carry art and travel in them. Suits, court cards, and even the idea of a “deck” changed across lands. The story of cards helps explain why some game words spread fast and others did not.
For a lively read on card history, see Smithsonian Magazine: history of playing cards. It shows how small design choices can shape big language shifts.
This table sums up each term. It lists the source, the first known use, the literal sense, how the meaning moved, how we use it now, and a cultural note.
| roulette | French | little wheel | 18th–19th c. | object name → game name | global casino staple | Calls like “Faites vos jeux” stay in French |
| croupier | French | person at the back | 18th c. | helper/backer → dealer | live tables; formal tone | Often kept in French to add style |
| mise | French | stake | 18th c. | general stake → exact bet size | seen in rules; less in US speech | Shows in baccarat guides |
| banque / banco | French / Italian | bank | 18th–19th c. | money holder → game role | baccarat, chemin de fer | Shouted “Banco!” in play |
| hazard | Old French → English | chance, risk | Middle Ages | dice game term → general risk | everyday English; also game history | Kept moral shade of “risk” |
| craps | US English (from “crabs”?) | losing roll (origin debated) | 19th c. | slang → formal game name | iconic US dice game | Street and casino forms differ in slang |
| poker | Disputed (US with German/French input) | n/a | early 19th c. | blend of games → new brand | cardrooms worldwide | Not an acronym; myths abound |
| vingt‑et‑un → blackjack | French → US English | twenty‑one | 19th–20th c. | promo bonus name beat old name | dominant term today | Name from early house bonus |
| faro | French via Italian | pharaoh (card motif) | 18th–19th c. | card art → game label | historic; Old West vibe | Now a museum and film word |
| vig / vigorish | Yiddish/Russian → US slang | winnings/percentage | 20th c. | street term → mainstream | bookmaking and finance talk | Shows the money cut, not the bet |
| bankroll | English | roll of banknotes | 19th c. | cash roll → play fund | player money plan | Core to poker life and stories |
| book / bookmaker | English | ledger / odds setter | 18th–19th c. | record → market maker | sports betting core | Shows math and market roots |
In the last century, English became the main world language for travel, trade, and media. Casinos chased the same paths. So the house rules, the signs, and the books went into English.
Still, the table keeps French for taste and speed. Two words can share the same space. Dealer in the rulebook. Croupier on the felt. Bet in your say. Mise on the placard. The mix works.
Live streams keep “croupier” and “banco” in daily use. US shows lean on “dealer” and “bet.” Esports books borrow “book,” “line,” and “vig” from old ledgers. Social apps trim terms down to fit chat. The old words still signal trust and pace.
If you want to see how modern sites describe stakes, bonuses, and table rules in plain text, you can scan glossaries and reviews. One helpful place to compare tone and terms is a guide to the best casinos for Book of Ra. Read with care, and always check the license and the rules page for each site.
Yes. It means “little wheel.” It began as the device name, then the game took the name and spread worldwide.
The likely root is “crabs,” slang for a losing roll of twos. It grew in 19th‑century US play. See standard notes in major dictionaries such as Merriam‑Webster.
In French, a croupier was first a backer at the player’s rear. The role slid to mean the table official. English kept the French term for live games, often to keep the style and the link to Europe.
They share roots. In the US, a promo bonus made the new name “blackjack” win. Rules were set in that era, and the name stuck.
It is the house or bookmaker’s cut. It came through Yiddish and Russian into US slang and then into common betting English.
To check early dates and senses, the gold standard is the Oxford English Dictionary. For French use and literal senses, see the CNRTL entry for roulette and the Académie française dictionary. For concise English etymologies, see Etymonline on ‘roulette’. For role words around betting, the Cambridge Dictionary: bookmaker gives a clear frame. Dice terms and US spread are mapped in Merriam‑Webster on ‘craps’ and in papers at the UNLV Center for Gaming Research. For trends in print, try the Google Ngram Viewer. For broad game history, see Britannica on gambling. On baccarat’s Italian root, consult Treccani on baccarà. Money terms like “vig” are explained well by Investopedia: vigorish (vig). For card culture, read Smithsonian Magazine: history of playing cards.
Gambling carries financial and personal risk. If you choose to play, set clear limits. Know the rules, the odds, and the terms. If play stops being fun, pause. Seek local help lines if you need support.
Some games fade. Words travel on. A French whisper at a table becomes a global cue. A street shout becomes a rule term. The language of play shows how people move, meet, and make new rules for old urges. Track the words, and you track us.