bid

BID

abbr.

Bachelor of Industrial Design


bid

 (bĭd)

v. bade (băd, bād) or bid, bid·den (bĭd′n) or bid, bid·ding, bids

v.tr.

1. past tense and past participle bid

a. To offer or propose (an amount) as a price.

b. To auction (a contract): The city will bid the project next summer.

c. To offer (someone) membership, as in a group or club: "glancing around to be sure that he had been bid by a society that he wanted" (Louis Auchincloss).

d. Games To state one's intention to take (tricks of a certain number or suit in cards): bid four hearts.

2. To utter (a greeting or salutation): I bid you farewell.

3. To issue a command to; direct: "Lee ... bid the captain sit beside him and report" (Stephen W. Sears).

4. To invite to attend; summon: The host bid the guests come to dinner.

v.intr. past tense and past participle bid

1. To make an offer to pay or accept a specified price: decided not to bid on the roll-top desk.

2. To seek to win or attain something; strive.

n.

1.

a. An offer to pay a certain amount of money for something: made a bid on the antique desk.

b. The amount offered or proposed: The highest bid at the auction was $5,000.

2. An invitation, especially one offering membership in a group or club.

3. An earnest effort to win or attain something: a team in a bid to win the championship; a candidate who made a bid for the presidency.

4. Games

a. The act of bidding in cards.

b. The number of tricks or points declared.

c. The trump or no-trump declared.

d. The turn of a player to bid.

Phrasal Verbs:

bid in

To outbid on one's own property at an auction in order to raise the final selling price.

bid out

To offer (work) for bids from outside contractors.

bid up

To cause (a price) to rise by increasing the amount bid: bid up the price of wheat.

Idioms:

bid defiance

To refuse to submit; offer resistance to.

bid fair

To appear likely.


[Middle English bidden, to ask, command (from Old English biddan; see gwhedh- in Indo-European roots) and Middle English beden, to offer, proclaim (from Old English bēodan; see bheudh- in Indo-European roots).]


bid′der n.

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

bid

(bɪd)

vb, bids, bidding, bad, bade, (esp for senses 1, 2, 5, 7)bid, bidden or (esp for senses 1, 2, 5, 7)bid

1. (often foll by: for or against) to offer (an amount) in attempting to buy something, esp in competition with others as at an auction

2. (Commerce) commerce to respond to an offer by a seller by stating (the more favourable terms) on which one is willing to make a purchase

3. (tr) to say (a greeting, blessing, etc): to bid farewell.

4. to order; command: do as you are bid!.

5. (usually foll by: for) to attempt to attain power, etc

6. (tr) to invite; ask kindly: she bade him sit down.

7. (Bridge) bridge to declare in the auction before play how many tricks one expects to make

8. bid defiance to resist boldly

9. bid fair to seem probable

n

10.

a. an offer of a specified amount, as at an auction

b. the price offered

11. (Commerce) commerce

a. a statement by a buyer, in response to an offer by a seller, of the more favourable terms that would be acceptable

b. the price or other terms so stated

12. an attempt, esp an attempt to attain power

13. (Card Games) bridge

a. the number of tricks a player undertakes to make

b. a player's turn to make a bid

14. (Stock Exchange) short for bid price

[Old English biddan; related to German bitten]

ˈbidder n

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

bid

(bɪd)

v. bade bid, bid•den bid, bid•ding, v.t.

1. to command; order; direct: to bid them depart.

2. to say as a greeting, wish, etc.: to bid good night.

3. to offer (a certain sum) as the price one will charge or pay: They bid $25,000 and got the contract.

4. to enter a bid of (a given quantity or suit at cards).

5. to offer or declare: to bid defiance.

6. to invite.

v.i.

7. to command; order; direct: Do as I bid.

8. to make a bid.

9. bid up, to increase the market price of by increasing bids.

n.

10. an act or instance of bidding.

11.

a. an offer to make a specified number of points or to take a specified number of card tricks.

b. the amount of such an offer.

c. the turn of a person to bid.

12. an invitation: a bid to join a club.

13. an attempt to attain some goal or purpose.

14. the highest price a prospective buyer is willing to pay for a security during a trading period.

Idioms:

bid fair, to seem likely.

[before 900; Middle English bidden, Old English biddan to beg]

bid′der, n.

b.i.d.

(in prescriptions) twice a day.

[< Latin bis in diē]

Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

bid

- Derives from Old English beodan, "to offer or command."

See also related terms for offer.

Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

bid

1. 'bid' in offers of payment

If you bid for something that is being sold, you offer to pay a particular amount of money for it. When bid has this meaning, its past tense and past participle is bid.

He bid a quarter of a million pounds for the portrait.

2. 'bid' in greetings and farewells

People used to use bid with expressions like good day and farewell. This use still occurs sometimes in stories. When bid has this meaning, its past tense is either bid or bade and its past participle is either bid or bidden.

The old woman brought him his coffee and shyly bid him goodbye.

We bade Nandron a goodbye which was not returned.

Tom had bid her a good evening.

We had bidden them good night.

In modern English, you use say instead of 'bid' in sentences like these.

I said good evening to them.

Gertrude had already had her supper and had said good night to Guy.

However, when you use say, the indirect object goes after the direct object. You do not say 'I said them good evening'.

Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012

bid


Past participle: bid/bidden
Gerund: bidding
Imperative
bid
bid
Present
I bid
you bid
he/she/it bids
we bid
you bid
they bid
Preterite
I bid/bad/bade
you bid/bad/bade
he/she/it bid/bad/bade
we bid/bad/bade
you bid/bad/bade
they bid/bad/bade
Present Continuous
I am bidding
you are bidding
he/she/it is bidding
we are bidding
you are bidding
they are bidding
Present Perfect
I have bid/bidden
you have bid/bidden
he/she/it has bid/bidden
we have bid/bidden
you have bid/bidden
they have bid/bidden
Past Continuous
I was bidding
you were bidding
he/she/it was bidding
we were bidding
you were bidding
they were bidding
Past Perfect
I had bid/bidden
you had bid/bidden
he/she/it had bid/bidden
we had bid/bidden
you had bid/bidden
they had bid/bidden
Future
I will bid
you will bid
he/she/it will bid
we will bid
you will bid
they will bid
Future Perfect
I will have bid/bidden
you will have bid/bidden
he/she/it will have bid/bidden
we will have bid/bidden
you will have bid/bidden
they will have bid/bidden
Future Continuous
I will be bidding
you will be bidding
he/she/it will be bidding
we will be bidding
you will be bidding
they will be bidding
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been bidding
you have been bidding
he/she/it has been bidding
we have been bidding
you have been bidding
they have been bidding
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been bidding
you will have been bidding
he/she/it will have been bidding
we will have been bidding
you will have been bidding
they will have been bidding
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been bidding
you had been bidding
he/she/it had been bidding
we had been bidding
you had been bidding
they had been bidding
Conditional
I would bid
you would bid
he/she/it would bid
we would bid
you would bid
they would bid
Past Conditional
I would have bid/bidden
you would have bid/bidden
he/she/it would have bid/bidden
we would have bid/bidden
you would have bid/bidden
they would have bid/bidden

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun1.bid - an authoritative direction or instruction to do somethingbid - an authoritative direction or instruction to do something

speech act - the use of language to perform some act

countermand - a contrary command cancelling or reversing a previous command

order - (often plural) a command given by a superior (e.g., a military or law enforcement officer) that must be obeyed; "the British ships dropped anchor and waited for orders from London"

commission, direction, charge - a formal statement of a command or injunction to do something; "the judge's charge to the jury"

commandment - something that is commanded

injunction - a formal command or admonition

behest - an authoritative command or request

open sesame - a magical command; used by Ali Baba

2.bid - an attempt to get somethingbid - an attempt to get something; "they made a futile play for power"; "he made a bid to gain attention"

attempt, effort, try, endeavor, endeavour - earnest and conscientious activity intended to do or accomplish something; "made an effort to cover all the reading material"; "wished him luck in his endeavor"; "she gave it a good try"

3.bid - a formal proposal to buy at a specified pricebid - a formal proposal to buy at a specified price

offering, offer - something offered (as a proposal or bid); "noteworthy new offerings for investors included several index funds"

overbid - a bid that is higher than preceding bids

buyout bid - a bid to buy all of a person's holdings

4.bid - (bridge) the number of tricks a bridge player is willing to contract to makebid - (bridge) the number of tricks a bridge player is willing to contract to make

bridge - any of various card games based on whist for four players

statement - a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc; "according to his statement he was in London on that day"

contract, declaration - (contract bridge) the highest bid becomes the contract setting the number of tricks that the bidder must make

takeout - (bridge) a bid that asks your partner to bid another suit

overcall, overbid - (bridge) a bid that is higher than your opponent's bid (especially when your partner has not bid at all and your bid exceeds the value of your hand)

preempt, pre-empt, preemptive bid - a high bid that is intended to prevent the opposing players from bidding

Verb1.bid - propose a paymentbid - propose a payment; "The Swiss dealer offered $2 million for the painting"

auction sale, vendue, auction - the public sale of something to the highest bidder

by-bid - bid on behalf of someone else

subscribe - offer to buy, as of stocks and shares; "The broker subscribed 500 shares"

overbid - bid more than the object is worth

underbid - bid too low

outbid - bid higher than others

underbid - bid lower than a competing bidder

2.bid - invoke uponbid - invoke upon; "wish you a nice evening"; "bid farewell"

felicitate, congratulate - express congratulations

greet, recognise, recognize - express greetings upon meeting someone

3.bid - ask for or request earnestlybid - ask for or request earnestly; "The prophet bid all people to become good persons"

plead - appeal or request earnestly; "I pleaded with him to stop"

4.bid - make a demand, as for a card or a suit or a show of handsbid - make a demand, as for a card or a suit or a show of hands; "He called his trump"

card game, cards - a game played with playing cards

play - participate in games or sport; "We played hockey all afternoon"; "play cards"; "Pele played for the Brazilian teams in many important matches"

raise - bid (one's partner's suit) at a higher level

double - bridge: make a demand for (a card or suit)

outcall - make a higher bid than (the previous bid or player); in a card game

underbid - bid (a hand of cards) at less than the strength of the hand warrants

outbid - bid over an opponent's bid when one's partner has not bid or doubled

overbid - to bid for more tricks than one can expect to win,

preempt - make a preemptive bid in the game of bridge

5.bid - make a serious effort to attain somethingbid - make a serious effort to attain something; "His campaign bid for the attention of the poor population"

seek - try to get or reach; "seek a position"; "seek an education"; "seek happiness"

6.bid - ask someone in a friendly way to do somethingbid - ask someone in a friendly way to do something

request - ask (a person) to do something; "She asked him to be here at noon"; "I requested that she type the entire manuscript"

allure, tempt - dispose or incline or entice to; "We were tempted by the delicious-looking food"

challenge - issue a challenge to; "Fischer challenged Spassky to a match"

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

bid

verb

1. make a bid for, attempt, seek, strive I don't think she is bidding to be Prime Minister again.

4. tell, call, ask, order, charge, require, direct, desire, invite, command, summon, instruct, solicit, enjoin I dare say he did as he was bidden.

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

bid

verb

2. To request that someone take part in or be present at a particular occasion:

3. To make an offer of:

Informal: go.

noun

2. A spoken or written request for someone to take part or be present:

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

nabídkanabídnoutpodat nabídkupokus opopřát

bydebyde påforsøgtilbudbede

tarjotatarjoustoivottaakäskeäkutsua

licitiratiponuda

licitálmeghagy

biîja, bjóîa, kveîjabjóîabjóîa ískipa, bjóîatilboî

入札入札する

입찰입찰하다

bandymasduoti paraiškąkainos siūlymaskainos siūlytojasliepti

atvadītiesliktmēģinājumspavēlētpiedāvāt

dať ponukuponúknuťpopriať

bjudabud

การประมูลประมูล

sự đấu thầutrả giá

bid

[bɪd]

B. VT

1. (bid (pt, pp)) (at auction etc) → pujar
to bid £10 forofrecer 10 libras por

2. (bad(e) (pt) (bidden (pp))) (o.f., also poet) (= order) → mandar
to bid sb to do sthmandar a algn hacer algo

3. (bad(e) (pt) (bidden (pp))) to bid sb good morningdar los buenos días a algn
see also adieu

Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

bid

[ˈbɪd]

vi [bid] [ˈbɪd] (pt, pp) (at auction)faire une enchère

vt

[bid or bade] (pt) [bid or bidden] (pp) (literary) (= command) → ordonner

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

bid

vt

pret, ptp <bid> (at auction) → bieten (→ for auf +acc)

pret <bade or bad>, ptp <bidden> to bid somebody (to) do something (old, liter)jdn etw tun heißen (old)

n

(at auction) → Gebot nt (→ for auf +acc); (Comm) → Angebot nt(for für); any more bids? (at auction) → wer bietet mehr?

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

bid

[bɪd]

2. vt

b. (bade (pt) (bidden (pp))) (frm) (order) to bid sb do sthingiungere a qn di fare qc

3. vi

b. (bade (pt) (bidden (pp))) to bid fair to be/do sthpromettere di essere/fare qc

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

bid

(bid) verb

1. past tense, past participle bid – to offer (an amount of money) at an auction. John bid ($1,000) for the painting.

2. (with for) – past tense, past participle bid – to state a price (for a contract). My firm is bidding for the contract for the new road.

3. past tense bade (bӕd) , past participle ˈbidden – to tell (someone) to (do something). He bade me enter.

4. past tense bade (bӕd) , past participle ˈbidden – to express a greeting etc (to someone). He bade me farewell.

noun

1. an offer of a price. a bid of $20.

2. an attempt (to obtain). a bid for freedom.

ˈbidder nounˈbidding nounˈbiddable adjective

obedient. a biddable child.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

bid

مُنَاقَصَة, يُزايدُ nabídka, nabídnout bud, byde bieten, Gebot πλειοδοτώ, προσφορά oferta, ofertar, puja, pujar tarjota, tarjous faire une offre, offre licitirati, ponuda fare un’offerta, offerta 入札, 入札する 입찰, 입찰하다 bieden, bod bud, gi bud oferta, zalicytować fazer um lance, oferta ставка, участвовать в торге bjuda, bud การประมูล, ประมูล fiyat vermek, teklif sự đấu thầu, trả giá 投标, 竞价

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009