Crapshoot is typically encountered today written as a closed compound (single word). If you haven't solved the crossword clue a-gambler-(slang) yet try to search our Crossword Dictionary by entering the letters you already know! (Enter a dot for each missing letters, e.g. “P.ZZ.” will find “PUZZLE”.) Also look at the related clues for crossword clues with similar answers to “a-gambler-(slang)”.
Synonyms for gambler include better, bettor, punter, backer, risk-taker, speculator, plunger, gamester, staker and wagerer. Find more similar words at wordhippo.com!
Sports Betting Terms and Definitions
Like any hobby, sports betting has a massive library of jargon and terms that new bettors may not know. If you’re a novice sportsbook customer, reading through this list of the most commonly-used sports betting terms, along with their dictionary definitions, will help you ease your way into the world of gambling on sporting events.
Accountant
This is a euphemism for “bookie,” used by some gamblers on message boards and in email as a kind of secret code. For example: “My accountant offered me a half-point at a decent price, so I took it.”
Action
This word refers to a valid and active wager. It’s opposite, “no action,” refers to bets that have been invalidated, either because of a rain-out, postponement, or other suspension of game play. The word is also used to refer to the complete amount of bets a gambler places at a time: if you place 20 bets of $10 apiece, your total action is $200.
Arbitrage
Arbs, as they’re sometimes called, are differences between odds at different books that allow players to wager on both sides for a guaranteed win. Arbitrage can make sports betting a positive expectation gamble.
Buck
This slang word refers to a $100 wager. Sometimes called a one dollar bet, the term probably originated in the early days after the passage of the Federal Wire Act to disguise how much money was actually being bet.
Buying Points
Sometimes a bookie will let you change the point spread or the over/under on a game that you think will give you an advantage. Sports bettors buy points one half-point at a time. Generally, each half-point costs the gambler an extra 10% in juice.
Another slang term originally used to disguise gambler’s bets; a dime actually means a wager of $1,000. You’ll still hear people use the term “dime” or “dime bet,” though these colorful slang terms are not as common at online books.
Fifty Cents
Yet another bet size slang word, a wager of fifty cents is actually a bet of $50.
Futures
This term refers to any bet you make on a sporting event in the future. The most common Futures bet in the Western world are wagers placed on who will win the Super Bowl before the NFL season even starts. The idea behind a future wager is to get a better line now than after the season starts and your team’s performance means the bookmaker shifts the odds. Placing futures bets is all about finding high-value wagers at the cheapest prices.
Hedge
Slang For Gamblers
This gambling term has made it into the common parlance; to hedge your bet means to wager the opposite side of a wager you’ve already placed in order to limit your potential losses. Placing hedge bets is a way to shield your bankroll from exposure.
Slang For Gambler
Juice
This word refers to the bookmaker’s commission. A common example is the 110/100 lines offered on straight bets on football games. Juice goes by many names, including vigorish and vig. A sportsbook’s juice is the cash amount that actually gives the bookmaker an advantage against the sports bettor.
Line
This generic gambling term refers to the totality of all posted odds, points, money lines, and point spreads for a sporting event.
Money Line
When a gambler’s odds are shown in terms of dollar signs, they’re looking at a money line. The money line tells you how much you have to risk to win $100 if you bet on a favorite, or the amount a gambler will win based on a wager of $100 if they bet on the underdog. There are no point spreads in money line odds; rather the gambler only has to pick the winner, not worry about how much they win by.
Newspaper Line
Odds that appear in your daily newspaper. The least-trustworthy lines you can find, usually given for entertainment purposes only.
No Action
A “No Action” game is a game that’s either already in progress or has been re-scheduled. All sporting events that are played at a different time than the original schedule are ineligible for wagers.
Off the Board
Any game that your bookmaker won’t accept bets on is considered “off the board.”
Over/Under Wager
This is a type of bet on the combined total of points scored by two teams competing against each other. Over/Under bets let the gambler decide whether the final points total will be more or less than the number put out by the bookmaker.
Point Spread
The point spread is the number of points a bookmaker will give to an underdog, the predicted difference in two team’s final scores. If the point spread reads Dallas +5 at New York, a gambler who lays his money on Dallas will win if the Cowboys win OR lose by less than 5 points.
Rundown
When the sportsbook reads all the available lines to a customer, this is referred to as the “rundown.” Sometimes the board on which odds and prices are listed is called the “rundown” as well.
Running Bad / Running Good
If a player is on a losing streak, he’s said to be “running bad.” When on a winning streak, he’s said to be “running good.”
Scratch
A slang term describing the withdrawal or cancellation of a bet.
Sharp
A term of endearment for smart professional gamblers, usually guys that are expert handicappers or know how to calculate positive expectation wagers.
Square
The opposite of a sharp, a square is a novice or totally ignorant sports bettor.
Teaser
A teaser is a wager on two or more teams in which the line on each bet is adjusted slightly in favor of the gambler. A gambler has to pick each game on the teaser to win the payoff, which gets bigger the more teams you wager on.
Tout
A gambler or sports betting expert that sells or otherwise gives away his picks on sporting events. Some touts hand out their info for free, while other charge fees for their “inside information.” Most touts that charge for their picks are probably not worth the investment, especially if you know how to shop for lines and handicap games yourself. Free picks from touts that don’t charge anything can often help a gambler, but should not be considered a guaranteed winner.
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Slang For Gambler
Related to gamblers: Gamblers Anonymous
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amber gambler
slang A driver who speeds through an intersection just before the traffic light is about to turn red. The middle (yellow) traffic signal is often referred to as being the color amber. Primarily heard in UK. If you keep being a reckless ambler gambler, you're going to get into a car accident soon enough!
tinhorn gambler
A cheap, small-stakes gambler who boasts and dresses ostentatiously to seem more successful or skilled than they really are. An allusion to the dice game 'chuck-a-luck,' which features a chute, called a 'horn,' from which the dice are dispensed. More high-class leather horns were often substituted with makeshift tin ones, and thus cheaper, lower-stakes gamblers were known for their tin horns. He always wears the same three-piece suit and slicks his hair back like he's the Great Gatsby when he comes in to play, but everyone knows he's just a tinhorn gambler who taps out after losing a couple hundred bucks.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2015 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.
tinhorn gambler
An unsuccessful player. In the dice game of chuck-a-luck, backroom players tossed the dice not with their hand but out of a small metal handheld cage called the “horn” (more upscale games used leather horns). Hence, the “tin horn” noun that became the “tinhorn” adjective when applied to nickel-dime gamblers. “Tinhorn” sounds as though it might also refer to a musical instrument, and composer Frank Loesser took advantage of that sound-alike association with “Fugue for Tinhorns” in his musical Guys & Dolls.
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price Copyright © 2011 by Steven D. Price
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