Type of question format in which respondents are asked to communicate a response in their own words.
A type of question (also known as an open question) where it is left up to the respondent to volunteer an answer.
Applies to a straight draw when you are looking for the outside cards to make the straight. i.e. You are holding A8, the flop comes 679 then you have and open-ended draw. You are therefore looking to hit a 5 or a ten to make a straight.
a task or inquiry without a single answer. The student is not seeking what the teacher has decided is the 'right' answer, but a justifiable one within the assignments purview. Open-ended questions usually require higher order thinking, such as comparison, analysis, synthesis, evaluation.
This is a draw in which you have four consecutive cards such as 7, 8, 9, 10. In this case the higher or lower cards would fill the straight. A six or a Jack makes that straight.
Straight Four consecutive cards whereby one additional (consecutive) card is needed at either end to make a straight.
this is a straight draw which can be completed in two ways.
A 4-card straight draw that can be completed at either end (such as a 6-7-8-9). As opposed to an inside straight draw (such as 6-7-9-10).
Term referring to investment funds, such as unit trusts, that have a variable number of units in issue each day. An investment trust, on the other hand, is closed-ended, meaning that it has a fixed number of shares in issue at any one time.
When a player has a hand such as 3456, it could be completed for a straight draw on either end with a 2 or 7.
Adjective to describe a straight draw that can be filled at either end. Twice as easy to complete as a gutshot straight draw.
If you have a possibility of a 4-card straight draw that can be completed at either end such as a 5-6-7-8 as opposed to 5-6-8-9 that can be completed only from inside, it is called an open-ended hand.
Open-ended refers to a situation in poker where the player has four of five cards needed for a straight that can be completed at either end. For example, a player with 3♥ 4♥ 5♣ 6♠ is open-ended, because a deuce or a seven would give the player a straight. This situation is also called an outside straight draw, as the cards needed to complete the straight are cards which are on the outside of the current hand, as opposed to an inside draw such as 2♦ 3♠ 5♠ 6♥, which can only be completed by a four.
In computer and video games, the term open-ended refers to a game that does not have a specific, predefined ending, or set of endings. The terms non-linear and freeform are also used to refer to this type of game. Open-ended games should not be confused with sandbox games, where the specific flow of the game is not constrained, but the game may still end once a predetermined objective is achieved.