Betting in a sentence as an adjective

Youre betting a lot of this on luck, and the odds are stacked against you," Finnell says.

Maybe it means they looked at what you showed them and decided that it wasn't a horse worth betting on.

No, but it's kind of like going to the track and only betting on the longest-shot horses you can find.

Examples are betting on sport events or movies box office success.

It's no different than people who play Texas Hold'em online and speculate what cards others have based on betting patterns.

That manager believes that they know nearly all that is needed to do the work and otherwise would not be betting his career on the work.

They are betting on last year’s fashion\n\nI'm surprised it wasn't Google that made an offer on Snapchat, since it's normally quite forward-looking.

His argument, essentially, is that he's betting against continued progress in science, software, and hardware.

Lots of the people doing these mechanics actually did owe the debt at one point, but are betting that it can't be conveniently demonstrated that they owe the debt.

It's really because people with less money need to spend more time managing their money because they are closer to drawing down the account, and the banks are betting on this.

You are currently betting that your fraud prevention expertise is better than every criminal's fraud execution expertise.

My problem with the "I'm betting on Elon" approach is that the market is clearly already betting on Elon, to the point of somewhere between 10-40x a sensible company valuation.

If you buy now, you're betting on a clearly ridiculously-optimistic valuation being not quite ridiculously-optimistic enough.

Betting definitions

adjective

preoccupied with the pursuit of pleasure and especially games of chance; "led a dissipated life"; "a betting man"; "a card-playing son of a bitch"; "a gambling fool"; "sporting gents and their ladies"

See also: dissipated card-playing sporting