tarot

Etymology
Borrowed from, from. Compare, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  A card game played in various different variations.
 * 2) * 1987, Hans Hahn, “Logic, Mathematics, and Knowledge,” in Unified Science, Brian McGuiness ed.
 * it is not that I cannot convince him, but that I must refuse to go on talking with him, just as I shall refuse to go on playing tarot with a partner who insists on taking my fool with the moon.
 * 1) * 1996, Jan Potocki, The Manuscript Found in Saragossa
 * They took me to her and then we all came back to the portal, where we started playing tarot.
 * As we were engrossed in this game, which requires quite a lot of attention, a well-dressed man appeared and seemed to examine us all closely, first one then another.
 * 1) * 2001, Donald Davidson, Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation
 * In explaining what it is to play tarot we could not leave out of account the rules that define the game;
 * 1) Any of the set of 78 playing cards (divided into five suits, including one of permanent trumps), often used for mystical divination.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: таро
 * Catalan: tarot
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:, , 意大利紙牌
 * Czech: taroky
 * Danish: tarot
 * Esperanto: tarokoj
 * Finnish:, tarokki
 * French:
 * Friulian: taroc
 * Georgian: ტარო
 * German: Tarot
 * Greek: ταρό
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: タロット
 * Korean: 타로
 * Persian:, تاروت
 * Polish:, tarok
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian: тарот,
 * Turkish:


 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: ,
 * Esperanto: taroko
 * Finnish: tarot-kortti
 * French: carte de tarot,
 * German: Tarotkarte
 * Greek: ταρό
 * Hungarian: tarotkártya
 * Japanese: タロット, タロットカード
 * Russian: ка́рта таро́,

Etymology
.

Etymology
, from.

Etymology
.

Etymology
From, from.

Noun

 * 1)  card game