bid
For the verb: "to bid"
| Simple Past: | bade, bid |
| Past Participle: | bidden, bid |
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
bid1
▶verb (bids, bidding; past and past part. bid)
- 1 offer (a certain price) for something, especially at an auction.
■ (bid for) (of a contractor) tender for (work).
- 2 (often bid for) make an effort to obtain or achieve.
- 3 Bridge make a statement during the auction undertaking to make (a certain number of tricks).
- 1 an offer to buy something.
■ an offer to do work or supply goods at a stated price.
- 2 an effort to obtain or achieve.
- 3 Bridge an undertaking by a player in the auction to make a stated number of tricks with a stated suit as trumps.
– derivatives
bidder noun,
bidding noun.
bidder noun,
bidding noun.
– origin OE bēodan ‘to offer, command’, of Gmc origin.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
bid2
▶verb (bids, bidding; past bid or bade; past part. bid)
- 1 utter (a greeting or farewell) to.
- 2 archaic command (someone) to do something.
– phrases
bid fair to archaic seem likely to.
bid fair to archaic seem likely to.
– origin OE biddan ‘ask’, of Gmc origin.
'bid' also found in these Oxford entries:
abundance
- artificial
- attempt
- auction
- auction bridge
- backwardation
- bade
- behest
- biddable
- bidden
- bridge
- call
- contract
- contract bridge
- convention
- conventional
- cue bid
- dawn raid
- declarer
- forbid
- forcing
- hostile
- jump
- lowball
- misère
- natural
- no-trumper
- offer document
- open
- outbid
- overbid
- overcall
- pitch
- poison pill
- pre-empt
- psych
- psychic
- raise
- rebid
- redouble
- shut-out bid
- slam
- solo
- take
- takeout
- underbid
- white knight

