- TREYS
- Low cards
- Beaters of deuces
- Deuce toppers
- Three-spots
- Long baskets, in NBA lingo
- Small clubs or spades
- Playing cards
- Deuce beaters
- Poker pair
- Small clubs
- They usually lose at war
- Small diamonds
- Low Hold 'em pair
- Low pair
- Long shots, in hoops lingo
- Part of a full house, maybe
- Three-pointers, in hoops lingo
- Poker cards
- Low poker pair
- Probable war losers
- Minor pair
- Puny poker pair
- They beat twos
- They beat deuces
- Shots from downtown
- At Canasta 100 each, if red.
- Toppers of deuces.
- Cards.
- Good Canasta cards.
- Better than deuces.
- Part of a deck.
- Parts of the deck.
- Small pair.
- Canasta cards.
- Some cards.
- Certain cards
- Four of 52
- Canasta pair
- Bridge cards
- These beat deuces
- Three-spot cards
- Deuces' betters
- Three-pipped sides of dice
- Cards in a Yarborough
- Deuces' neighbors
- Dice throws
- Poker hand
- Certain canasta cards
- Deuce takers
- Poker holding
- Low-value playing cards
- Unexciting bridge holdings
- Half sixes
- They're usually not good with tricks
- Cards above deuces
- Small diamonds, say
- They don't take many tricks
- Some small clubs
- Low poker holdings
- Baskets made from beyond the arc, informally
- Long hoops shots
- Hearts that don't beat very much?
- Low pocket pair in Texas hold 'em
- Three-point shots, informally
- Components of a hard six, in craps
- Shots from behind the arc, casually
- Low playing cards
- Three-pointers, in basketballese
- Some playing cards
- Deuces plus one
- Three-pointers
- Two toppers
- Slangy three-pointers
- Cards that beat deuces
- They're in the pack
- Long baskets, in basketballese
- Deuce beaters, in cards
- Fairly insignificant cards
- They rarely take tricks
- Unlikely trick takers
- War losers, almost always
- Deck quartet
- Shots from behind the arc