Blck Jack

Free Blackjack Game Overview. Welcome to this online blackjack page where you can play the best free blackjack games. The benefits of playing online are that you can learn blackjack rules. Blackjack is played with a conventional deck of 52 playing cards and suits don’t matter. 2 through 10 count at face value, i.e. A 2 counts as two, a 9 counts as nine. Face cards (J,Q,K) count as 10. Ace can count as a 1 or an 11 depending on which value helps the hand the most. The rules of online blackjack are quite simple: you have to try to score twenty-one points. More precisely, 21 is an ideal option, and it is best to collect the number of points as close as possible to this number. However, you have to be careful, since a player who scores 22 or more points automatically loses.

'As a professional fishing guide, I've owned a number of boats, but the BlackJack 256 is my all-time favorite! The layout allows for great room, so even with four clients onboard no one is crowded. The waters I fish are inland saltwater and flats, and accessing shallow waters is never an issue. Clients and fellow captains are always amazed about the skinny, shallow waters we can access in my BlackJack 256.'

Capt. D. Bourgeois
Barataria, Lousiana

'BlackJack is truly a great dry ride and takes the rough water better than any other bay boat I have ridden in. The BlackJack gets me to the big fish no matter the weather, keeping me and my customers dry. Their comfort with a smooth ride keeps me focused on what I'm here for: Leading them to the big one.'

Capt. D. Goyen
Victoria, Texas

'The ride is fantastic. It's dry and maneuvers in open water and close quarters like no other outboard. Because we fish a lot in North Carolina, its ability to plane quickly and stay on plane at slow speeds gives us an edge crossing wide, sometime choppy expanses of rough water to get to skinny water areas to fish. The layout is terrific. Good dry storage. Nice illuminated live wells. Plenty of rod storage. Easy to move around the boat. The fit and finish is at the top of the class. I get excited every time I run this boat and cannot imagine not having a BlackJack for fishing and just overall fun on the water.'

T. Young
Smithfield, North Carolina

'I've been guiding for 25 years in the coastal marshes of south Louisiana. I've been guiding out of BlackJack boats the last 13, and there is not a finer boat on the market. You won't see me guiding out of any other boat!'

Capt. N. Roberts IV
Metairie, Louisiana

'BlackJacks are made with backcountry and near-shore fishing in mind. These boats ride better than many larger offshore boats I've owned. They hold the water like they’re on rails, and also float and run extremely shallow for a boat of their stature. I tell people that ride is everything, and you should always take a test ride in less than ideal conditions before purchasing. I always say if you test ride a BlackJack today, you'll be listing your boat tomorrow.'

Blck Jack
Capt. T. Godwin
Naples, Florida

“You’ll never ride a drier boat. After 20 years on the water, that is one thing that stands out above all. My BlackJack keeps me dry in conditions where most boats would have my customers soaked.”

Capt. J. LeVine
Charleston, South Carolina

“The stunningly beautiful lines of the BlackJack first caught my eye, and then I was blown away by its performance — especially in rough water.”

R. Kaiser
Dulac, Louisiana

Also found in: Thesaurus, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.

black·jack

(blăk′jăk′)n.
1. A leather-covered bludgeon with a short, flexible shaft or strap, used as a hand weapon.
2. Games A card game in which the object is to accumulate cards with a higher count than that of the dealer but not exceeding 21. Also called twenty-one, vingt-et-un.
tr.v.black·jacked, black·jack·ing, black·jacks
2. To coerce by threats.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

blackjack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk) n
a truncheon of leather-covered lead with a flexible shaft
vb
2. (tr) to compel (a person) by threats

blackjack

Blackjack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk) n
1. (Card Games) pontoon or any of various similar card games
Blck Jack
[C20: from black + jack1 (the knave)]

blackjack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk) n
(Minerals) a dark iron-rich variety of the mineral sphalerite
[C18: from black + jack1 (originally a miner's name for this useless ore)]

blackjack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk) n
(Plants) a small oak tree, Quercus marilandica, of the southeastern US, with blackish bark and fan-shaped leaves. Also called: blackjack oak
[C19: from black + jack1 (from the proper name, popularly used in many plant names)]

blackjack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk)
n
[C16: from black + jack3]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

black•jack

(ˈblækˌdʒæk)
n.
1. a short, leather-covered club, consisting of a heavy head on a flexible handle, used as a weapon.
2.
a. Also called twenty-one. a gambling game at cards, in which a player needs to get more points than the dealer to win, but not more than 21.
b. an ace together with a ten or a face card as the first two cards dealt in a hand of this game.
3. a small oak, Quercus marilandica, of the eastern U.S., having a nearly black bark.
4. a large drinking cup or jug for beer, ale, etc., orig. made of leather coated externally with tar.
v.t.
6. to strike or beat with a blackjack.
[1505–15]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

blackjack

Blackjack chart
Past participle: blackjacked
Gerund: blackjacking
Imperative
blackjack
blackjack
Present
I blackjack
you blackjack
he/she/it blackjacks
we blackjack
you blackjack
they blackjack
Preterite
I blackjacked
you blackjacked
he/she/it blackjacked
we blackjacked
you blackjacked
they blackjacked
Present Continuous
I am blackjacking
you are blackjacking
he/she/it is blackjacking
we are blackjacking
you are blackjacking
they are blackjacking
Present Perfect
I have blackjacked
you have blackjacked
he/she/it has blackjacked
we have blackjacked
you have blackjacked
they have blackjacked
Past Continuous
I was blackjacking
you were blackjacking
he/she/it was blackjacking
we were blackjacking
you were blackjacking
they were blackjacking
Past Perfect
I had blackjacked
you had blackjacked
he/she/it had blackjacked
we had blackjacked
you had blackjacked
they had blackjacked
Future
I will blackjack
you will blackjack
he/she/it will blackjack
we will blackjack
you will blackjack
they will blackjack
Future Perfect
I will have blackjacked
you will have blackjacked
he/she/it will have blackjacked
we will have blackjacked
you will have blackjacked
they will have blackjacked
Future Continuous
I will be blackjacking
you will be blackjacking
he/she/it will be blackjacking
we will be blackjacking
you will be blackjacking
they will be blackjacking
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been blackjacking
you have been blackjacking
he/she/it has been blackjacking
we have been blackjacking
you have been blackjacking
they have been blackjacking
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been blackjacking
you will have been blackjacking
he/she/it will have been blackjacking
we will have been blackjacking
you will have been blackjacking
they will have been blackjacking
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been blackjacking
you had been blackjacking
he/she/it had been blackjacking
we had been blackjacking
you had been blackjacking
they had been blackjacking
Conditional
I would blackjack
you would blackjack
he/she/it would blackjack
we would blackjack
you would blackjack
they would blackjack
Past Conditional
I would have blackjacked
you would have blackjacked
he/she/it would have blackjacked
we would have blackjacked
you would have blackjacked
they would have blackjacked
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
Noun1.blackjack - a common scrubby deciduous tree of central and southeastern United States having dark bark and broad three-lobed (club-shaped) leaves; tends to form dense thickets
blackjack oak, jack oak, Quercus marilandica
scrub oak - any of various chiefly American small shrubby oaks often a dominant form on thin dry soils sometimes forming dense thickets
2.blackjack - a piece of metal covered by leather with a flexible handle; used for hitting people
bludgeon - a club used as a weapon
3.blackjack - a flag usually bearing a white skull and crossbones on a black background; indicates a pirate ship
flag - emblem usually consisting of a rectangular piece of cloth of distinctive design
skull and crossbones - emblem warning of danger or death
4.blackjack - a gambling game using cards; the object is to hold cards having a higher count than those dealt to the banker up to but not exceeding 21
card game, cards - a game played with playing cards
Verb1.blackjack - exert pressure on someone through threats
act upon, influence, work - have and exert influence or effect; 'The artist's work influenced the young painter'; 'She worked on her friends to support the political candidate'
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

blackjack

verbTo compel by pressure or threats:
Informal: hijack, strong-arm.
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

blackjack

[ˈblækdʒæk]N (esp US)
2. (= flag) → banderafpirata
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

247 Easter Blackjack

blackjack

Black Jack Cement

[ˈblækdʒæk]n
(US) (= truncheon) → matraquef
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

blackjack

[ˈblækˌdʒæk]

Blackjack 21 Free

n

Black Jacket

(

Black Jack Poker Roulette

Cards) → ventuno; (at casino) → blackjack m inv (Am) (truncheon) → manganello
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

Blackjack Mulligan

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