(bets, betting)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Note: The form 'bet' is used in the present tense and is the past tense and past participle.
1.
If you bet on the result of a horse race, football game, or other event, you give someone a sum of money which they give you back with extra money if the result is what you predicted, or which they keep if it is not.
Jockeys are forbidden to bet on the outcome of races...
I bet ?10 on a horse called Premonition...
He bet them 500 pounds they would lose.
VERB: V on n, V amount on n, V n amount that
•
Bet is also a noun.
Do you always have a bet on the Grand National?
N-COUNT
• betting
...his thousand-pound fine for illegal betting.
...betting shops.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
A bet is a sum of money which you give to someone when you bet.
You can put a bet on almost anything these days.
N-COUNT
3.
If someone is betting that something will happen, they are hoping or expecting that it will happen. (JOURNALISM)
The party is betting that the presidential race will turn into a battle for younger voters...
People were betting on a further easing of credit conditions.
VERB: only cont, V that, V on n
4.
5.
You use expressions such as 'I bet', 'I'll bet', and 'you can bet' to indicate that you are sure something is true. (INFORMAL)
I bet you were good at games when you were at school...
I'll bet they'll taste out of this world...
PHRASE
6.
If you tell someone that something is a good bet, you are suggesting that it is the thing or course of action that they should choose. (INFORMAL)
Your best bet is to choose a guest house.
PHRASE
7.
If you say that it is a good bet or a safe bet that something is true or will happen, you are saying that it is extremely likely to be true or to happen. (INFORMAL)
It is a safe bet that the current owners will not sell.
PHRASE: usu it v-link PHR that
8.
If you hedge your bets, you follow two courses of action to avoid making a decision between two things because you cannot decide which one is right.
NASA is hedging its bets and adopting both strategies.
= play safe
PHRASE: V inflects
9.
You use I bet or I'll bet in reply to a statement to show that you agree with it or that you expected it to be true, usually when you are annoyed or amused by it. (INFORMAL, SPOKEN)
'I'd like to ask you something,' I said. 'I bet you would,' she grinned.
PHRASE: oft PHR that [feelings]
10.
You can use my bet is or it's my bet to give your personal opinion about something, when you are fairly sure that you are right. (INFORMAL)
My bet is that next year will be different...
It's my bet that he's the guy behind this killing.
PHRASE
11.
If you say don't bet on something or I wouldn't bet on something, you mean that you do not think that something is true or will happen. (INFORMAL, SPOKEN)
'We'll never get a table in there'-'Don't bet on it.'
PHRASE
12.
If you reply 'Do you want to bet?' or 'Want a bet?' to someone, you mean you are certain that what they have said is wrong. (INFORMAL, SPOKEN)
'Money can't buy happiness'-'Want to bet?'
CONVENTION
13.
You use 'You bet' or 'you bet your life' to say yes in an emphatic way or to emphasize a reply or statement. (INFORMAL, SPOKEN)
'It's settled, then?'-'You bet.'...
'Are you afraid of snakes?'-'You bet your life I'm afraid of snakes.'
PHRASE [emphasis]