翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Fan-beam antenna
・ Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King
・ Fan-funded music
・ Fan-gating
・ Fan-in
・ Fan-out
・ Fan-out (software)
・ Fan-tailed
・ Fan-tailed berrypecker
・ Fan-tailed cuckoo
・ Fan-tailed gerygone
・ Fan-tailed grassbird
・ Fan-tailed raven
・ Fan-tailed warbler
・ Fan-tailed widowbird
Fan-Tan
・ Fan-Tas-Tic (Vol. 1)
・ Fan-Taz
・ FAN1
・ Fana
・ Fana (disambiguation)
・ Fana (municipality)
・ Fana (Sufism)
・ Fana Ashby
・ Fana Church
・ Fana Hlongwane
・ Fana IL
・ Fana Kochovska
・ Fana Mokoena
・ Fana Stadion


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Fan-Tan : ウィキペディア英語版
Fan-Tan

Fan-Tan, or fantan (, literally "repeated divisions") is a form of gambling game long played in China. It has similarities to roulette.
==History==
Fan-tan is no longer as popular as it once was, having been replaced by modern casino games, and other traditional Chinese games such as Mah Jong and Pai Gow. However, it was once a favorite pastime of the Chinese in America. Jacob Riis, in his famous book about the underbelly of New York, How the Other Half Lives (1890), wrote of entering a Chinatown fan-tan parlor: "At the first foot-fall of leather soles on the steps the hum of talk ceases, and the group of celestials, crouching over their game of fan tan, stop playing and watch the comer with ugly looks. Fan tan is their ruling passion."
San Francisco's large Chinatown was also home to dozens of fan-tan houses in the 19th century. The city's former police commissioner Jesse B. Cook wrote that in 1889 Chinatown had 50 fan-tan games, and that "in the 50 fan tan gambling houses the tables numbered from one to 24, according to the size of the room."
Fan-tan is still played at some Macau casinos.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Fan-Tan」の詳細全文を読む



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