Similar words: overbite, proverbial, proverbially, underbid, verbiage, adverbial, proverb, overbore. Meaning: [‚əʊvə(r)'bɪd] n. 1. a bid that is higher than preceding bids 2. (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). v. 1. to bid for more tricks than one can expect to win, 2. bid more than the object is worth.
Random good picture Not show
1. They were overbid by a Japanese firm.
2. The Commission felt the company were overbidding and gave the franchise to their competitors instead.
3. Peddleries usually overbid to gain more profits.
4. As for why subjects overbid, perhaps the answer is that high-bid auctions are just too complex for a typical buyer to analyze completely systematically.
5. Please do NOT overbid.
6. But why do we do that: overbid at public auctions?
7. And when an envelope was passed, he would either overbid the project, not bid at all, or claim that all his Inside-Outers were committed elsewhere.
8. Bid submission ; delivery of Bids: The act of a Bidder handing overBid to the purchaser.
8. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress every day!
9. In San Francisco, prices are still rising even as frenzied overbid ding quiets.
10. Get the right product on the right keywords, and you can mess up your ad copy, overbid and still profit.
More similar words: overbite, proverbial, proverbially, underbid, verbiage, adverbial, proverb, overbore, proverbs, overbear, overblow, overblew, overblown, overborne, overbuilt, overboard, overburden, overbridge, overbearing, overbalance, herbert hoover, overburdened, throw overboard, book of proverbs, forbid, morbid, turbid, carbide, bend over backwards, morbidly.