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Bidding Common

Bidding has 5 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

an authoritative direction or instruction to do something

"The captain raised his voice, giving a firm bidding for all hands to abandon ship immediately."

2

a request to be present

"they came at his bidding"

3

(bridge) the number of tricks a bridge player is willing to contract to make

"After reviewing our partners' hands, I raised my bid from six to seven in spades."

4

That which one is bidden to do; a command.

"The captain ignored our protests and continued forward, disregarding every bidding we had issued for him to stop."

In plain English: Bidding is an offer of money made by someone hoping to win something in an auction.

"The bidding for the antique vase ended at five hundred dollars."

Usage: In everyday usage, "bidding" as a noun refers to an offer or bid made at an auction or in a commercial transaction, not a command. Use it when describing the specific price someone is willing to pay for an item.

Verb
1

present participle of bid

"The auctioneer stopped bidding after no one else raised their hand for the antique vase."

In plain English: Bidding means offering to pay a certain amount of money to win something in an auction.

"The auctioneer started bidding on the antique vase."

Usage: Use bidding to describe the ongoing act of offering money for something at an auction or making repeated requests. It functions as the present participle of bid when you need to show that the action is currently happening or has been continuous over time.

Example Sentences
"The bidding for the antique vase ended at five hundred dollars." noun
"The bidding for the antique vase ended when no one would pay more than fifty dollars." noun
"He won the auction by placing the highest bid during the final round of bidding." noun
"After months of secret bidding, the company finally secured the contract to build the new bridge." noun
"The auctioneer started bidding on the antique vase." verb
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
speech act invitation statement
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
countermand order commission commandment injunction behest open sesame contract takeout overbid preemptive bid

Origin

Derived from Old English bidddan, this verb form originally meant to ask earnestly or command with authority. It evolved through Middle English to encompass both making requests and offering prices in commerce.

Rhyming Words
ing ging ying sing ling xing ting zing fing hing qing ving ring jing ping king ning oing ding ming
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