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A top, or spinning top, is a children's toy that can be spun on an axis, balancing on a point. The top is one of the oldest recognizable toys found on archaeological sites. Besides toys, tops have also historically been used for gambling and prophesy. Some role-playing gamers still use tops to augment dice in generating randomized results.
The action of a top relies on the gyroscopic effect for its operation. Typically the top will at first wobble until the shape of the tip and its interaction with the surface force it upright. After spinning upright for an extended period, the angular momentum, and therefore the gyroscopic effect will gradually lessen, leading to ever increasing precession, finally causing the top to topple in a frequently violent last thrash.
The dreidel is associated with Chanukah. It has four sides: נ (Nun), ג (Gimel), ה (Hey), ש (Shin), and is usually played with coins, chips, or gelt (chocolate coins). Collectively, these letters are interpreted as, "a great miracle happened there," or, without the nikkud,
Before beginning, each player starts with 10 or 15 coins, and then each player puts one in the pot. The dreidel stops and lands with one of the symbols facing up and the appropriate action is taken:
The game may last until one person has won everything.
This is a 6-sided top, very similar to the dreidel, that is used for a similar game in most Latin American countries. The top and the game are called Perinola. Rules for the game can be found on some web sites, notable from Mexico. (Note that the Venezuelans use this name for a different toy/game, which is a skill game rather than a gambling game.)
This gambling top may have been the focus of some Renaissance discussions of probability theory. There is a journal at the University of Navarra in Spain called "La Perinola".