2. Verb. To require a new set of bids. ¹
3. Verb. (bridge) To bid a higher value of the current suit. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rebid
1. bid [v -BID, -BIDDEN, -BIDDING, -BIDS] - See also: bid
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rebid
Literary usage of Rebid
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Foster on Auction: A Complete Exposition of the Latest Developments of by Robert Frederick Foster (1918)
"To rebid the hand a second time, without the partner's assistance, or in the face
of his refusal to assist, there should be four more tricks for attack, ..."
2. Foster's Auction Made Easy: A Text Book for the Beginner, the Average Player by Robert Frederick Foster (1920)
"After the partner has assisted, showing more than average, the dealer may rebid
with half the strength which would be necessary to rebid without this assist ..."
3. Politics of Compromise: NATO and AWACS by Arnold L. Tessmer (1995)
"Moreover, some subcontractors declined to confirm or rebid prices because they
doubted AWACS would ever fly. Best estimates had to suffice. ..."
4. Critical and Exegetical Hand-book to the Epistles to the Corinthians by Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer (1884)
"That Paul is thinking of the passages of censure and rebid-e in the first
Epistle (especially of chap, v.1), results from the context, and suffices for its ..."
5. Doe's Fixed-price Cleanup Contracts: Why Are Costs Still Out of Control edited by Fred Upton (2001)
"I think a case could be made if they go through with the termination of your
contract, and you rebid under a different contract, that they are obligated to ..."