Sinônimos
Examples for "better"
Examples for "better"
1Red hot market conditions allowed the company to secure far better terms.
2Public health agencies need a better long-term solution for prevention: a vaccine.
3Year after year after year of getting better and better and better.
4The situation is certainly better that it was than a year ago.
5Future research is needed to better understand the reasons behind these differences.
1I'm not much of a punter, I just really enjoy the sport.
2Then a young female punter leans over and spits in the bin.
3These included an occasion when the punter immediately restaked his seven-figure winnings.
4TO YOUR average punter, much of Bitcoin remains somewhat of a mystery.
5Long, the Chargers punter, was filling in for injured kicker Michael Badgley.
1The highest point is reached in safety; the wagerer looks humbled and disappointed.
2"You are not going now," exclaimed the wagerer-"atnight?"
3Great Britain was an empire of wagerers she knew; they wagered for and against every conceivable thing which had its dependence on chance.
4How odd that these two old creatures, selected for their antiquities, should live to see both their wagerers put an end to their own lives!
5"Done," said Holderness, "and I must say that you show a spirit of confidence when you let me, one of the wagerers, decide."
1Piece describes the handicapping process and the feelings of the bettor.
2One bettor was laughing all the way to the bank at the late switch.
3Spurred by American Pharaoh, Internet-savvy racing entrepreneurs are drawing a new breed of bettor.
4The original bettor offered to put up three hundred dollars.
5I warrant I read it to your bettor satisfaction.
6Otway would have made a bettor thing of it.
7The bettor discovered it was the wrong number.
8The setting was perfect for the enterprising bettor.
9It is only undaunted Floridian optimism which could see a philanthropist in a bettor on the races.
10In blackjack, the bettor's edge is small.
11An attendant in white came with a sheet and a pneumatic stretcher, and took the bettor away.
12But I think you'd bettor not.
13But Mary was bettor employed.
14He also compared prosecutors' case to three-card monte, a con game in which a card is hidden from a bettor.
15The omnibus-box was occupied by the Englishman, the eccentric and portentous bettor, whose presence inspired Morok with so much dread.
16Tells about one race in which a $2 ticket brought a bettor $19,759.