gamble
The second category of poor were those whose deviant nature was expressed both in appeareance (ruinous and presumptuous clothing) and 🫦 behaviour (gambling, squandering, fornication). From the Cambridge English Corpus
Subjects were asked to evaluate pairs of gambles of comparable expected value. 🫦 From the Cambridge English Corpus
The same considerations apply when the agent is asked for the highest price at which she 🫦 would buy the gambles. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Cricket-fighting is a sport in which two male crickets are made to 🫦 engage in a duel, and it often involves gambling. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Writing an explicit description of the expected 🫦 utility as a function of gambles is overly complicated and relies on the order of task completions. From the Cambridge 🫦 English Corpus
In a sense, all of our research and theoretical commitments are gambles, investments we hope will pay off epistemologically. 🫦 From the Cambridge English Corpus
A married man, who had risked losing his cohabiting girlfriend if he had not agreed to 🫦 marriage, commented that 'she seemed worth gambling on'. From the Cambridge English Corpus
He can damage himself with either eating or 🫦 drinking; he can ruin himself with gambling. From the Cambridge English Corpus
There is some evidence that the attribute that is 🫦 traded off, or gambled with, becomes salient; that is, people give more importance to this attribute. From the Cambridge English 🫦 Corpus
Throughout this note, we have assumed that gambling does not directly give rise to utility. From the Cambridge English Corpus
I 🫦 think gambling is a type of compulsive behaviour. From the Cambridge English Corpus
In the context of such gambles, it seems 🫦 unlikely that subjects would ignore the difference between 14 and eight. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Of course, when two gambles 🫦 have the same expected payoff, then an expected payoff maximising agent might use another criterion as a tie breaker. From 🫦 the Cambridge English Corpus
Responses to standard gambles: are preferences 'well constructed'? From the Cambridge English Corpus
Notable among these was gambling, 🫦 whose flexibility and familiarity accommodated many of the constraints of clandestine prison activities. From the Cambridge English Corpus
These examples are 🫦 from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the 🫦 Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.