Another Word For Gambling Stake

  1. countable businessthe part of a business that you own because you have investedmoney in it
    stake in:

    They took a 40% stake in the company last year.

    a majority/minority stake (=more/less than half):

    Coca-Cola has a majority stake in the company.

    majority
    ...
    ...
    1. usually singularthe degree to which you are involved in something and want it to succeed
      have a stake in (doing) something:

      He has a huge stake in making the peaceprocesswork.

      ...
  2. countable an amount of money that you risklosing when you try to guess the result of a race or competition
    ...
    1. plural the things that you can gain or lose by taking a risk, for example in business or politics
      high stakes (=a lot that could be won or lost):

      With such highstakes, the atmosphere was tense.

      raise the stakes (=risk gaining or losing more):

      The Americans have raised the stakes in a bitterfight over imports.

      ...
  3. countable a wooden or metalpost with a pointedend that is used for supporting or marking something
    ...
    1. a thick woodenpole that someone was tied to and burnt in the past as a punishment
      be burnt at the stake:

      Joan of Arc was burnt at the stake in 1431.

      ...
  4. plural used in the names of some horseraces

    the Queen Mary Stakes at Royal Ascot

    ...
    1. used for talking about a competition or comparison that seems like a race

      Who are the maincontenders in the partyleadershipstakes?

      in the popularity/fitness/beauty etc stakes:

      They’re runningneck and neck in the popularitystakes.

      ...

Stake definition, a stick or post pointed at one end for driving into the ground as a boundary mark, part of a fence, support for a plant, etc. Stake synonyms, stake pronunciation, stake translation, English dictionary definition of stake. A stick or post; wager; bet: I have a stake in that race. Another word for gambling. Find more ways to say gambling, along with related words, antonyms and example phrases at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus.

This is the British English definition of stake.View American English definition of stake.

intransitive verb

  • He liked gambling, but only for small stakes. Synonyms and related words +-Money involved in gambling. Definition and synonyms of stake from the online English dictionary from Macmillan Education. This is the British English definition of stake.
  • Definition and synonyms of stake from the online English dictionary from Macmillan Education. This is the British English definition of stake.View American English definition of stake. Change your default dictionary to American English. View the pronunciation for stake.

Word For Gambling Stake

[no object]
  • 1Play games of chance for money; bet.

    • ‘This book offers a concise and to-the-point directory for anyone who gambles on the Internet or is interested in gambling on the Internet.’
    • ‘Appropriately for the son of a bookie, his career has often been about gambling on a long game.’
    • ‘Gambling does, and any player who gambles on baseball or sits with those who conspire to do so risks destroying the very foundation on which the game is built.’
    • ‘The probability of winning lottery prizes are the basic risk dimensions that may help determine whether a person gambles on a particular activity in the first place.’
    • ‘Lisa accurately predicts the winners of sporting events that Homer gambles on so she can be closer to her father.’
    • ‘The sunny forecast came as spread betting firm Cantor Index offered the chance to gamble on the number of hours of sunshine and inches of rainfall in individual months.’
    • ‘Like a participant in a high-stakes poker game, she gambled big and she lost big.’
    • ‘Her eldest of three sons had died in a motorcycle accident, and she'd started gambling on the pokies.’
    • ‘An exhaustive study convinced everyone except he that he had gambled on the game, gambled on the Reds and violated the only unbreakable moral code of the sport.’
    • ‘One aspect of gambling that few people are aware of is that about one in five New Zealanders who regularly gamble on gaming machines have a gambling problem.’
    • ‘In the simpler game, the player gambles with a coin that's been loaded to make the probability of winning less than 50 percent.’
    • ‘They milled about, some slept, some ate, others played cards or gambled on games of dice.’
    • ‘The lottery comes as the Cabinet plans for a new lottery for gambling on professional baseball and billiards.’
    • ‘Police were also aware that the victim was addicted to gambling on football, and there was an extra issue of a love affair.’
    • ‘Cricket Australia has banned gambling on all types of cricket matches by its players, officials and other employees.’
    • ‘The number of Americans who gambled online doubled to about 4% of the population in 2005.’
    • ‘Kids and teenagers have always gambled, whether at marbles or flipping baseball cards.’
    • ‘A woman accused of leaving her five-year-old child alone in a car overnight Monday while she gambled at a Placer County casino is being booked on felony child endangerment charges.’
    • ‘It is easy to gamble impulsively online.’
    • ‘Approximately 85 percent of American adults report having gambled at some point in their lives, and about 60 percent say they've gambled at least once in the past year.’
    bet, wager, place a bet, lay a bet, stake money on something, back the horses, try one's luck on the horses
    View synonyms
    1. 1.1with objectBet (a sum of money) on a game of chance.
      ‘he was gambling every penny he had on the spin of a wheel’
      • ‘He usually gambled sums of money between five and one hundred dollars, bottles of champagne, pairs of boots, or new hats.’
      • ‘Its annual budget was too modest and its financial future too uncertain to gamble big sums on expensive, start-from-scratch studies.’
      • ‘Instead firms are cutting the money they put into pension funds and telling workers to gamble their savings on the stockmarket through private schemes.’
      • ‘Ideally the money men want to be able to gamble the pension fund, without being responsible for a fixed pension payment.’
      • ‘While most newcomers who gain admittance to the NBA's lucrative members club pay their dues on court, he instead gambled vast sums that he had yet to earn in the hope of greater long-term fulfilment across the Atlantic.’
      • ‘In the mid-1980s, he gambled his export-quota profits on property and stock.’
      • ‘This raises the criticism that he is privatising social security, forcing people to gamble their pensions on the stock market.’
      • ‘I was told they came to gamble their pension checks away every month.’
      • ‘It is this strong belief in luck that leads many to gamble their meagre savings in the hope of becoming rich.’
      • ‘At the last one, he went so far as to say that if people are allowed to gamble their money away at casinos they should be allowed to spend their own money on health care.’
      • ‘Find out plans to create a new investment fund that literally wants to gamble your money.’
      • ‘It was suggested to him that he had gambled the money away on poker machines at the hotel.’
      • ‘Lenore was very upset as she saw Herbert gambling away money she knew wasn't his.’
      • ‘A family friend, trusted to administer the estates of a widow and her son after they died, stole more than £38,000 and gambled the money away, a court heard.’
      • ‘Themes at the heart of the proposed reforms are greater competition, more public involvement and emphasising the link between the money gambled by players and the projects that benefit.’
      • ‘When he entices her to elope with him she steals the money necessary for the elopement, only to find that he does not keep his appointment, having gambled the money away.’
      • ‘A Braintree chef claimed he was robbed of £300 takings by three men to hide the fact that he had gambled the money away, a court heard.’
      • ‘If they want to gamble their hard earned money away, then they should feel free to do so.’
      • ‘As a result, Herman takes all his money and gambles it on one final hand of cards.’
      • ‘A Prime Minister widely recognised as the most powerful in living memory has gambled his reputation, ultimately his leadership of the country and his party, on a bet which is far from the odds-on wagers he is used to.’
  • 2Take risky action in the hope of a desired result.

    with clause‘the British could only gamble that something would turn up’
    • ‘There are no glamorous high-tech stocks, even though it is always tempting as an investor to gamble on risky firms, he writes.’
    • ‘Investors began gambling on future returns and more patterns emerged.’
    • ‘Contending teams with high picks and clubs with multiple first-round picks willing to gamble on him hope that's not all he is.’
    • ‘He has gambled on a team that he hopes will result in his third general election win.’
    • ‘Investing in CFDs is a highly leveraged way to gamble on stock markets.’
    • ‘Partly it is to do with Britain's curious housing market, where people gamble in property futures as a form of investment.’
    • ‘In the first race he gambled on dry tyres on a damp track in the hope that conditions would improve.’
    • ‘Many a small device company has been created because of a momentous idea that may seem too risky for a large or established firm to gamble on.’
    • ‘We chose to gamble with the more direct train to Pavonia-Newport, hoping the rain would let up before we got there.’
    • ‘Both, he reckons, are houses where we gamble for high stakes, and with high hopes.’
    • ‘However, the very success of the risky blitzkrieg approach led the Germans to gamble even more heavily on their next major operation - the invasion of Russia.’
    • ‘He also invested millions in a new headquarters, and gambled that the party could mount a challenge to the GOP's three decades of dominating fundraising.’
    • ‘But in practice we wouldn't be able to gamble with the chance that it might not work.’
    • ‘A crushing conquest imposes the attacker's will; limited coercion gambles on the target's weakness of will.’
    • ‘At the same time, the guy in charge of your mortgage was gambling on growth every year, too.’
    • ‘Peter is gambling on the fact that he will head straight on up the track.’
    • ‘He briefly held the lead after gambling on his final pit stop taking only two tires - but he didn't have enough grip to hold on.’
    • ‘Squeezed by rivals in their own market, British media moguls are gambling on winning new sales here.’
    • ‘The German government was thus gambling on British neutrality, and in July 1914 this seemed a reasonable bet.’
    take a chance, take a risk, take a leap in the dark, leave things to chance, speculate, venture, buy a pig in a poke
    act in the hope of, trust in, take a chance on, bank on
    View synonyms

Another Word For Gambling Stake Winnings

noun

Another Word For Gambling Stakes

Another word for gambling stake card gameusually in singularGamblingGambling
  • An act of gambling; an enterprise undertaken or attempted with a risk of loss and a chance of profit or success.

    ‘He paused and thought about doubling down, but seemed afraid to put out the extra money on such an insecure gamble.’
    • ‘Though many see the stock market as a casino, shares are not a gamble.’
    • ‘He's extremely talented and has good drive and business sense, but this is a gamble and could leave me in a bit of financial trouble if it fails.’
    • ‘Spread betting is about taking a genuine gamble, and backing your judgement against that of the bookie.’
    • ‘I had a bit of a gamble, and ended up willing about $30, which was a nice change as the machines had been taking my money the last few times I had used them.’
    • ‘For one, the gambling game at the end of each stage is made more of a gamble by being able to wager the coins you've collected through a level.’
    • ‘He is risk-neutral if he is indifferent between a gamble and certain pay-off equalling the expected value of the gamble.’
    • ‘Then again, the biggest gamble in the UK is, of course, the Lotto.’
    • ‘On the Friday he landed a major gamble when taking more than £130,000 out of the betting ring.’
    • ‘Long-shot gambles that may tempt you, rarely work out.’
    • ‘But even with the short payback, such games are almost always a better gamble than the reel slots.’

Another Word For Gambling Stake Signs

Origin

Stake

Early 18th century from obsolete gamel ‘play games’, or from the verb game.

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