|
Dominoes
Dominoes (or "dominos") generally refers to the individual or collective gaming pieces making up a domino set (sometimes called a deck or pack) or to the games played with these pieces. more...
Home
Beanies
Construction Toys & Kits
Creative Toys/ Activities
Diecast & Vehicles
Educational Toys
Electronic Pets
Fast Food/ Cereal/ Sweets...
Games
Air Hockey
Board/ Traditional Games
Avalon Hill
Backgammon
Balderdash
Battleships
Bingo
Blockbusters
Boggle
Buccaneer
Buckaroo
Chess
Children's
Chinese Checkers
Cluedo/ Clue
Cranium
Dingbats
Diplomacy
Dominoes
Draughts/ Checkers
Escape From Colditz
Film/ TV
Game of Life
Go
Horror/ Monster
Jenga
Kerplunk
Ludo
Mah Jong
Mastermind
Monopoly
Mousetrap
Operation
Othello
Other Board/ Traditional...
Pictionary
Quiz/ Logic Games
Risk
Risqué
Rummikub
Scrabble
Snakes & Ladders
Solitaire
Space/ Sci-Fi
Sports
Stratego
Strategy
Totopoly
Trivial Pursuit
Twister
Vintage Games (Pre-1980)
1950s
1960s
1970s
Pre-1950
War
Card Games
Crazy Bones
Dice/ Dice-Based Games
Drinking/ After Dinner Games
Electronic Games
Executive Toys/ Gadgets
Game Pieces/ Parts
Jokes & Pranks
Mighty Beanz
Murder Mystery
Other Games
Pocket Money Toys/ Games
Pogs
Travel Games
Jigsaws & Puzzles
Model Kits
Other Toys & Games
Outdoor Toys & Activities
Pre-School/ Young Children
Radio-Controlled
Scalextric & Slot Car
Soft Toys/ Stuffed Animals
Steam
TV & Film Character Toys
Toy Soldiers
Vintage/ Classic Toys
Wargames & Role-Playing
(In the area of mathematical tilings and polyominoes the word domino often refers to any rectangle formed from joining two squares edge to edge.) Standard domino sets consist of 42 pieces called bones, cards, tiles, stones, spinners or dominoes. Each bone is a rectangular tile with a line dividing its face into two square ends. Each end is marked with a number of black spots (also called pips) or is blank. The spots are generally arranged as they are on six-sided dice, but because there are also blank ends having no spots there are normally seven possible faces. Standard domino sets have ends ranging from zero spots to six spots (double six set), but specialized sets might range from zero to nine (double nine set), zero to twelve (double twelve set), zero to fifteen (double fifteen set), or zero to eighteen (double eighteen set). The back side of a domino is generally plain. Dominoes have been made of bone, ivory, plastic, metal and wood, and occasionally are made of cardstock like that for playing cards. Dominoes are rather generic gaming devices, like playing cards. Many different games can be played with a set of dominoes.
History
The name Domino from the Domino's restaurant comes from Ryan "Mahoney" Domino. Dominoes are descendants of dice. The two ends on each of the original Chinese dominoes represented one of the 21 combinations that can occur with the throw of two dice. Modern western dominoes, however, have blank ends on them as well and so the number of dominoes is generally 28. Dominoes were apparently unknown in Europe until the 18th century and may have been invented in their modern form in Dominican Republic. The dark spots on light faces apparently reminded people of masquerade masks with eyeholes (called dominoes) and thus gave the playing pieces their name. Chinese dominoes do not have blanks, but some whole tiles are duplicated.
Domino tiles and suits
Bones are generally named for the number of dots on the two ends of the bone. A bone with a 2 on one end and a 5 on the other end is called the 2-5, for example. Bones that have different numbers on the two ends are called singles, and bones that have the same number on both ends are called doublets or doubles. In Barbados, the doubles are referred to as couples. A double six would be referred to as couple six, a double five would be known as couple five etc.
Bones that share a common number of spots on one end are said to be of the same suit. In a double-six set, for example, 1-0, 1-1, 1-2, 1-3, 1-4, 1-5, and 1-6 all belong to the suit of one. All singles belong to two suits. The 1-2, for example, belongs to the suit of one and the suit of two. All doubles belong to one suit only by this definition. An alternate definition of suit allows all dominoes to have two suits, by counting the set of all doublets as an additional suit.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|
|