Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun A children's card game, sometimes played with a special deck, where the object of the game is for each player to find matches for all the cards in his hand, without being stuck with the single unmatchable card.
  • noun The unmatchable card itself.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Old Maid.

Examples

  • I have used traditional playing cards such as Old Maid, Slap Jack, and War as well as a stash of travel games like Crocodile Dentist and Perfection to peak interests.

    The Life Without School Community Blog 2008

  • The satisfaction on her face from winning another round of Go Fish, Slapjack, or, appropriately, Old Maid, was hard to miss.

    mauvais perdant - French Word-A-Day 2010

  • The satisfaction on her face from winning another round of Go Fish, Slapjack, or, appropriately, Old Maid, was hard to miss.

    French Word-A-Day: 2010

  • Investment isn't a matter of rational calculus but a manic process that Keynes described as "a game of Snap, of Old Maid, of Musical Chairs, the object of which to pass on the Old Maid — the toxic debt — to one's neighbor before the music stops."

    Walden Bello: Keynes: A Man for This Season? 2009

  • When we were little, our dad liked to play card games with us: Go Fish, Old Maid, Crazy Eights.

    A Losing Hand 2009

  • When we were little, our dad liked to play card games with us: Go Fish, Old Maid, Crazy Eights.

    A Losing Hand Art Taylor 2009

  • The satisfaction on her face from winning another round of Go Fish, Slapjack, or, appropriately, Old Maid, was hard to miss.

    French Word-A-Day: 2009

  • The satisfaction on her face from winning another round of Go Fish, Slapjack, or, appropriately, Old Maid, was hard to miss.

    mauvais perdant - French Word-A-Day 2009

  • Simple melding games include Old Maid, where you need only pairs, and Go Fish, where you need only fours of a kind.

    Archive 2007-03-01 2007

  • The reader will remember those two words — Old Maid.

    The Last Chronicle of Barset 2004

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.