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full house
noun
- a hand consisting of three of a kind and a pair, as three queens and two tens.
full house
noun
- poker a hand with three cards of the same value and another pair
- a theatre, etc, filled to capacity
- (in bingo, etc) the set of numbers needed to win
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Word History and Origins
Origin of full house1
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Example Sentences
With juries, admissions tend to trump other evidence as much as a full house beats two of a kind.
From 'Full House' to cuddling lessons with Uncle Jesse, watch John Stamos's greatest moments.
Jodie Sweetin Morty Coyle Perhaps the former Full House star should have kept her promise.
And you had a sister [Candace Cameron] who was on Full House.
That evening, Paul spoke to a full house at the Exeter Town Hall.
This crude amendment was negatived by an overwhelming majority: only twenty-three in a full house voted for it.
On a division the resolution was lost by a majority of four only in a very full house.
He had a full house, but played with as little nervousness as if he had been playing at home.
And it will be strange if someone cannot think of something to say, with the first full house this planet has afforded.
It was a full house at all times, and especially so during fairs, and at the season of the military draft.
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