Pip poker
One of the suit spots (spade, heart, diamond, club) on the
face of a card. Each face card has four pips: one at each end,
outside the border, under the K, Q, or J representing the card's
rank and one more at each end, within the border, next to each
head. Each ace has three pips, one in the center and one under
the A at each end. Each card, 2-10, has two more pips than the
number that represents its rank, the rank total in the central
area, plus one more pip under the number at each end. (Some
say that the smaller symbol beneath the number or letter designating
the rank of the card is not a pip, but is part of the index,
which is that number or letter plus the smaller suit symbol
beneath it. In that reckoning, each face card has two pips,
each ace has one, and each card, 2-10, has as many pips as the
number that represents its rank.) Also called spot.