Dictionary Workbench Ondict

wager

Dictionary entry view. Switch to definition mode above when you know the meaning but not the word.

wager

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Gambling
wa·ger1 /ˈweɪdʒə $ -ər/ noun [countable] old-fashioned  DGGan agreement in which you win or lose money according to the result of something such as a race 打赌 SYN bet
Examples from the Corpus
wagerHe also happened to have a wager on the outcome of the football game.Volunteering a wager was unprecedented, therefore highly suspicious.It did not matter that her wager was only five dollars.Hours before the announcement, large wagers were placed in favour of his son William becoming next king.For instance, on a question involving the law of wagers, there is generally no need to discuss what is a wager.Sherlock explained the wager, and the answer Summerlee had given us.Wednesday midnight the wager is up.Say you made your wager at odds of 40-1.
Related topics: Gambling
wager2 verb [transitive] old-fashioned  1 DGGto agree to win or lose an amount of money on the result of something such as a race 押〔赌注〕,打赌 SYN gamblewager something on something Stipes wagered all his money on an unknown horse. 斯蒂普斯把他所有的钱都押在一匹不出名的马上。2. I’ll wager old-fashioned SUREused to say that you are confident that something is true 我敢打赌
→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
wagerAnd estimates are that players wager $ 8 billion a year at the tables, although no one knows for sure.Some one up there must have wagered a few bob on them for another Grand Slam.There may be considerable scepticism about Pascal's case for always wagering on the outsider if the odds are high enough.Every year, a staggering £80m is wagered on this spectacular racing phenomenon.I'd wager that, if anything, people's tastes are getting more diverse these days than they used to be.
Origin wager1 (1300-1400) Anglo-French wageure, from Old North French wagier; → WAGE2
wa·ger1 nounwager2 verbChineseSyllable
you win or lose money an agreement in which Corpus


wager
I
wager1 /ˈweɪdʒə $ -ər/ noun [countable] old-fashioned
 Date: 1300-1400
 Language: Anglo-French
 Origin: wageure, from Old North French wagier; wage2
an agreement in which you win or lose money according to the result of something such as a race
   SYN  bet

II
wager2 verb [transitive] old-fashioned
1. to agree to win or lose an amount of money on the result of something such as a race
   SYN  gamble
    wager something on something
    Stipes wagered all his money on an unknown horse.
2. I’ll wager used to say that you are confident that something is true


wagerBrE /ˈweɪdʒə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈweɪdʒər/ 🔊 noun(old-fashioned or formal) an arrangement to risk money on the result of a particular event 打赌 SYN bet
wagerBrE /ˈweɪdʒə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈweɪdʒər/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they wager BrE /ˈweɪdʒə(r)/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈweɪdʒər/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it wagers BrE /ˈweɪdʒəz/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈweɪdʒərz/ 🔊past simple wagered BrE /ˈweɪdʒəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈweɪdʒərd/ 🔊past participle wagered BrE /ˈweɪdʒəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈweɪdʒərd/ 🔊 -ing form wagering BrE /ˈweɪdʒərɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈweɪdʒərɪŋ/ 🔊(old-fashioned or formal) [intransitive, transitive] to bet money 打赌;押(赌注) SYN bet ~ on sth She always wagered on an outsider. 她总是把赌注押在不大可能获胜的马上。🔊🔊~ sth (on sth) to wager £50 on a horse在一匹马上押 50 英镑的赌注~ sth/sb that… I had wagered a great deal of money that I would beat him. 我下了大赌注打赌,这次比赛我会赢他的。🔊🔊 [transitive] ~ (that) used to say that you are so confident that sth is true or will happen that you would be willing to bet money on it 打赌;打包票 SYN bet I'll wager that she knows more about it than she's saying. 我敢打赌,她知道的比她说的要多。🔊🔊