High card by suit and low card by suit refer to assigning relative values to playing cards of equal rank based on their suit. When suit ranking is applied, the most common conventions from lowest to highest are:♣♦♥♠ English alphabetical orderclubs, followed by diamonds, hearts, and spades. This ranking is used in the game of bridge. This ranking is adopted in Unicode's Miscellaneous Symbols block and Playing Cards block ; see Playing cards in Unicode. ♠♥♦♣ American CardsMost Poker games avoid split pots by using the following order: spades, hearts, diamonds, and clubs. ♦♣♥♠ Alternating colorsDiamonds, followed by clubs, hearts, and spades. Similar to alphabetical ranking in that the two highest rankings are occupied by the same two suits in the same relative position to one another, but differing in the two lowest rankings, which while occupied by the same two suits have their relative position to one another swapped. This ranking is sometimes used in the Chinese card game Big Two. ♠♣♦♥ High redsSome Russian card games like Preference, 1000 etc. use the following order: spades, clubs, diamonds and hearts. 500 and the game Hearts also uses this ordering. ♦♥♠♣ Low redsSome German card games like Skat use the following order: diamonds, hearts, spades and clubs. ♣♥♦♠ Chinese-Japanese-Korean conventional orderclubs, followed by hearts, diamonds, and spades. This ranking is commonly used in China, Japan, and South Korea, in their variants of Poker games. ♥♦♣♠ Italian conventional orderHearts (Cuori), Diamonds (Quadri), Clubs (Fiori), Spades (Picche), remembered with the mnemonic “Come Quando Fuori Piove”. This ranking is commonly used in Italy in their variants of poker games.