- Vegas Terms Lingo Words
- Vegas Terms Lingo Practice
- Vegas Terms Lingo Dictionary
- Vegas Terms Lingo Crossword
LAS VEGAS
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Glossary A B C D E F G H I L M N P Q R S T U V Z -A- Adaptive Delta Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM) A. Bandwidth When discussing audio equalization, each frequency band. While this can happen anywhere that there are tourists, Las Vegas has its own slang for when a cab driver takes you on a longer route to your destination. When you've been long hauled, you're taken a longer distance, so the cab driver can charge you more money. The term Vegas Rules comes from the saying 'What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.' When used in a meeting, the rule says that whatever is said in the meeting must be kept private to the people who were in the room and should never be repeated to others.
86'd (eighty-sixed): The act of getting booted from a casino for cheating.Action: Sum total of your winnings.
All in: In poker, to put your last remaining chips into the pot.
Ante: In poker, a small portion of the minimum bet that each player is required to put into the pot before a new hand starts.
Any craps: A one roll bet in craps totaling 2, 3, or 12.
Any seven: A one roll bet in craps totaling any 7.
Baccarat: A card game where the winning hand totals closest to 9 discounting all units of 10.
Bankroll: Amount of money an individual or a casino has to gamble with.
Basic strategy: In blackjack, the set of plays that you should make to maximize your advantage.
Betting limits: In a table game, the minimum and maximum amounts of money that you can wager on one bet. You cannot wager less than the minimum or more than the maximum amount posted.
Black: $100 casino chip.
Blackjack: A card game where players try to beat the dealer by getting closest to 21 without going over.
Blind: A bet that certain poker players are required to make because of their betting positions.
Bluff: In poker, players bluff when raising with a weak hand in hopes of driving out players with stronger hands.
Board: In poker, the community cards dealt face-up in the center of the table are referred to as on the “board.”
Boat: In poker, another term for a full house, a pair and three of a kind.
Book: The room where sports and race bets are made.
Boxcars: Rolling two sixes (12) in craps.
Boxman: The craps dealer who sits over the drop box and supervises bets and payoffs.
Bring-in: In seven-card stud, the bring-in is a mandatory bet made by the player with the lowest upcard in the first round of betting.
Burn card: In card games, the card temporarily removed from play. After a shuffle and cut, one card is placed on the bottom of the deck or in the discard tray, which is called burning the card.
Bust: To exceed a card total of 21 in Blackjack.
Call: In poker, when a player matches the current bet on the table.
Card counting: Keeping track of all cards that have been played since the shuffle.
Caribbean Stud: A five-card poker game where all the players are playing against the house.
Carpet joint: A casino catering to high rollers.
Casino advantage: The edge that the house has over the players.
Check: In casino gambling, a check is another term for a chip. In poker, a player can check in order to stay in the game but not bet.
Chips: Round tokens that are used on casino gaming tables in lieu of cash.
Color up: When a player leaving a game exchanges smaller denomination chips for larger denomination chips.
Come Bet: In Craps A wager placed on the come line.
Come-Out Roll: In Craps, the first roll of the dice or the first roll after a point has been made. This roll establishes the point.
Comp: Short for free or complimentary.
Coupons: Redeemable for nearly everything from a free meal to a free pull on a slot machine. (Ask the hotel whether it has a coupon book.)
Cover: A wager where the point spread is met for a win.
Craps: A game involving dice and the establishing of points to wager on. or, Dice term for a roll totaling 2, 3, and 12.
Crossroader: A casino cheat.
Croupier: The French word for dealer, used in the games of baccarat, craps, and roulette.
Cut card: A card of different color that is used to cut a deck of cards.
Cut: When the dealer divides a deck into two parts and inverts them after they have been well shuffled.
Dark: No show; as in Dark Sundays means no shows on Sunday.
Deal: To give out the cards during a hand in blackjack and poker.
Designated dealer: In poker games like Texas hold ‘em, the player to the left of the dealer bets first. In a poker room where each game has a resident dealer, a different player serves as the designated dealer for each hand.
Deuce: A two card or on a die.
Dice: Two identical numbered cubes.
Discard tray: A tray on the dealer’s right side that holds all the cards that have been played or discarded.
Double down: In blackjack, it is the player’s option to double their original bet in exchange for receiving only one more card. To do this the player turns over their first two cards and places an equal bet alongside the original bet. Some casinos limit this to card totals of 10 or 11, others allow it on any first two cards.
Draw: In draw poker, the second round of cards that are dealt.
Drop box: A locked box located on live gambling tables where dealers deposit paper money.
Drop: Total cash traded for chips at the gambling table.
Edge: The casino's advantage often referred to as the house advantage. An advantage over an opponent.
Even money: A bet that pays you back the same amount that you wagered, plus your original wager. Shown as a ratio of 1:1.
Exotic wager: Any wager other than a straight bet or parlay (also referred to as a proposition or prop).
Expected win rate: A percentage of the total amount of money wagered that you can expect to win or lose over time.
Eye in the Sky: One-way mirror surveillance in the casino area.
Face cards: The jack, queen, and king of any suit of cards
. First base: At the blackjack table, the position on the far left of the dealer is considered to be first base and is the first position dealt with.
Fishing: A player who stays in a poker game longer than advisable generally is fishing for the card or two that will make the hand a winner.
Flat top: A slot machine whose jackpot is always a fixed amount, as opposed to a progressive.
Fold: In poker, when a player declines a bet and drops out of the hand.
Folding money: Greenbacks, dollars, dineros.
Form: A tabloid used for horse racing data.
Front money: Cash or bank checks deposited with the casino to establish credit for a player who bets against that money.
George: A casino patron who is a big tipper. Antonym: Stiff.
Getting down: Placing a bet.
Green chips, Greens, Greenys: $25 casino chip.
Grind joint: Casino that caters to low rollers . See also Sawdust Joint.
Grinder: Low roller.
Hand: Refers to the cards that you hold, or to everything that happens in a card game between shuffles of the deck.
Hard count: Counting the change from slot machines.
High roller: A customer with the reputation of wagering large sums of money in the casino.
Hit me: A phrase used by blackjack players who want another card from the dealer. Usually used in connection with a hand signal.
Hold: House profit from all the wagers.
House advantage: Mathematical edge for winning that the casino gives itself.
In red: A comped customer's name usually appears 'in red' on a maitre d's reservation chart.
Juice: Refers to the amount of money you pay over and above your sports bet, insuring that the casino makes money whether you win or lose.
Vegas Terms Lingo Words
Junket: A group of high rollers flown in on a chartered plane by the casino.
Ladderman: A baccarat supervisor.
Laying a price: Playing a favorite.
Layoff: Money bet by a house with another bookmaker to reduce its liability.
Limit: The least or maximum bet accepted at a gaming table.
Line: The odds on a game (also referred to as price).
Lock: A surefire winner (there really is no such proposition).
Loose: Slot machines are loose when they are paying off and giving the house only a small advantage over the player.
Low roller: A player who makes small bets; a grinder.
Marker: An IOU owed the casino by a gambler allowed by the hotel to play on credit.
Marryin' Sam: Wedding chapel minister.
Matador: A cover that occurs in the waning moments of a game (also referred to as a back door cover)
Mush: A bettor who is bad luck.
Odds: Ratio of probabilities. Chances of winning expressed in terms of currency.
Off the board: A game on which bookmakers are not accepting wagers (generally because of injuries).
One-Roll Bets: Wagers that will win or lose depending on the very next roll.
Open: In poker, the player who bets first.
Pair: Any two cards that have the same rank.
Pallette: The flat paddle used on baccarat tables to scoop the cards.
Parlay: One bet ticket written with at least two wagers (all must win for the ticket to cash).
Pass Line: The area where a pass line bet is placed.
Pass: To not bet, to fold.
Pastposting: The act of increasing or decreasing your bet after the hand/roll/spin has completed. Cheating.
Payoff: Your payback; the return you see on a wager.
Pigeon: A gambler who chases his/her losses. See also Plunger and Steamer.
Pit boss: A casino boss who oversees numerous table dealers.
Pit: The casino employee area behind the table games.
Plunger: A gambler who chases his/her losses. See also Pigeon and Steamer.
Pot: In a poker game, the amount of money that accumulates in the middle of the table as each player antes, bets, and raises. The pot goes to the winner of the hand.
Punter: One who gambles in the casino – the player.
Puppy: The underdog.
Rack: Simply the device that holds the chips on gaming tables.
Raise: In poker, a player raises by matching the previous bet and then betting more, to increase the stake for remaining players.
Rake: The money that the casino charges for each hand of poker. It is usually a percentage (5-10%) or flat fee that is taken from the pot after each round of betting.
RFB Comp: Room, Food and Beverage complimentary from the hotel.
Roulette: The roulette wheel features the numbers 1 through 36 in alternating red and black, and two green spaces including “0” and “00.” Players can be on a single number, a row or column of numbers, red or black, odd or even, or 1 through 18 or 19 through 36. Players place their chips on the betting layout. Betting continues until the dealer signals, “No more bets.” When the ball comes to rest on a number, all wagers are settled. Odds range from even money to 35 to 1.
Rundown: A list of odds on a particular day's games.
Runner: One who places bets for another.
Sawdust Joint: Casino catering to low roller. See also Grind Joint.
Scalper: Someone who bets both sides of a game.
Vegas Terms Lingo Practice
Score: A big win.
Sharp: A sophisticated or professional sports bettor.
Shill: An employee of the gaming establishment that starts a game.
Shoe: A container from which several decks of cards are dealt on the Baccarat and blackjack tables which prevents the dealer from holding cards.
Shooter: A gambler who is rolling the dice on a craps table.
Shuffle: Before each hand the dealer mixes up the order of the cards.
Soft Count: Counting the folding money.
Spoon: A device used by slot machine cheaters.
Square: A novice sports bettor.
Steal: In poker, to win the pot by bluffing.
Steamer: A gambler who chases his/her losses. See also Pigeon and Plunger.
Stickman: The dealer who moves the dice around on a craps table with a hook-shaped stick.
Stiff: A casino player who never tips or tokes regardless of how much they win.
The Cage: Where a casino keeps its money.
The Pencil: Authority. For example, pit bosses have the pencil to grant players free rooms and authorize markers.
Tip: Same as a toke.
Toke: Gratuity or tip.
Turkey: A gambler who is unpleasant to the dealer.
Underlay: A bad bet; an event that has more money bet on its happening than can be justified by the probability of it happening.
Vigorish: The fee, or commission taken by the house.
Whales: Gamblers who are so wealthy that they routinely lose millions without batting an eye. There are an estimated 250 whales in the world.
Wise guy: A professional sports bettor.
The world of Las Vegas strip clubs is full of colorful terminology. Here’s some of our favorite strip club slang.
Air Dance. An “air dance” is used to describe a lap dance without contact. It’s not a compliment to the dancer.
Rock. A “rock” is an unflattering description of a customer who nurses his drinks, doesn’t tip dancers onstage and doesn’t get lap dances. Rocks are also referred to as “gawkers.”
Extras. “Extras” describes acts related to prostitution in a strip club. By the way, prostitution is illegal in Las Vegas. Which is why it never happens here. Ever.
About 10,000 exotic dancers make their living in Las Vegas. We’re generous like that.
Raincoater. A “raincoater” is stripper slang for a customer that’s not particularly discerning about a dancer’s looks. He’s more into lots of physical contact.
George. A generous tipper.
Off-Stage Fee. The “off-stage fee” is the fee a dancer pays the strip club to skip dancing onstage (lap dances and VIP rooms are more profitable).
McDance. A perfunctory dance done with an extreme lack of enthusiasm or imagination.
Whale. The term “whale” in a strip club has the same meaning it does in a casino. It’s slang for a customer who spends big and takes advantage of a club’s VIP room, often for long periods of time.
ATF. “ATF” stands for “all-time favorite,” meaning a customer’s preferred dancer.
Game Boy. What strippers sometimes call a customer’s manhood.
Vegas Terms Lingo Dictionary
Vulture. A stripper who hovers near the door of a strip club waiting to pounce on new arrivals.
Tip Rail. The “tip rail,” also known as “pervert row” or “sniffer’s row,” is the row of seats around a strip club’s stage. If you sit in those seats, you’re expected to tip frequently.
Bird Dog. A “bird dog” is strip club slang for the bouncer who monitors the private dance room, often called the Champagne Room.
Zoned. This term describes the trance-like state some dancers go into when they’re working. It typically results from drugs or boredom.
Peeler. “Peeler” is another term for stripper.
7-Up Factory. A “7-Up Factory” is a strip club where all the dancers are particularly attractive, in other words, they rank seven or better on a 1-10 scale.
Beater. A “beater” is a dancer who, while onstage, can’t keep to the beat of the music.
Stripper pole moves include the Crucifix, Fireman Spin, Pencil, Cupid, Gemini, Angel and Carousel.
Bolt-Ons. Breast implants.
Snaking. “Snaking” is the practice of watching a lap dance someone else is getting. Not popular with dancers, as you can imagine.
House Fee. A “house fee” is the fee dancers have to pay to work in a strip club on a given night.
Chum the Waters. The strategy of tipping generously onto a stage to receive more attention from dancers for the rest of the evening.
Juice Bar. “Juice bars” are strip clubs that serve no alcohol, just soft drinks.
White Knight. This is a pejorative slang term used by dancers when a customer thinks they can “save” the dancer from their life as a stripper.
Civilian. A “civilian” is a woman at a strip club who doesn’t work there.
Hurl Story. An obviously manufactured sob story told by a stripper to elicit a more generous tip, sometimes called a “mercy tip.”
Spiff. A “spiff” is the fee a cabbie gets for delivering a customer to a strip club. (This is why cab or limo driver recommendations are always suspect.)
Vegas Terms Lingo Crossword
Blind Lap. Getting a lap dance before seeing the dancer give someone else a lap dance.
Mileage. In strip clubs, “mileage” refers to how much bang you get for your buck. If you get a great lap dance for $20, and another guy gets a terrible lap dance for his $20, you got more “mileage.”
If you’re as endlessly fascinated by this subject as we appear to be, check out our Five Things We Never Knew About Las Vegas Strippers.