pull-through

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Deverbal from pull through.

Noun[edit]

pull-through (plural pull-throughs)

  1. An exercise in which weight is pulled via a cable passed between the legs.
  2. A length of cord about a metre long with a narrow cylindrical weight at one end and loops at the other. Used for cleaning rifle barrels, by pulling through a piece of cloth.
  3. (gambling) The trick of apparently cutting the cards while leaving the deck in the same sequence as before.
    • 1942, Yank, volume 1, numbers 1-45, page 8:
      THE PULL-THROUGH is used for a crooked shuffle to keep the cards stacked.
    • 1961, John Scarne, Complete Guide to Gambling, page 547:
      The most popular and most deceptive of the false shuffles is the Pull Through [sic], a dazzling and completely crooked shuffle which doesn't alter the position of a single card.