reraise

reraise

(riːˈreɪz)
vb (tr)
to raise (literally or figuratively) again
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Verderami says the new Italian government is the latest in a string of "a long list including previous politicians who continued to reraise as if sitting at a casino table without worrying about anything except clashing with each other."
Andy Chamberlain With expected annual sales of around PS100,000 this year, app design firm ReRaise was founded by Andy, 34.
Pakistan has made persistent efforts to resolve this issue through dialogue on the bilateral level as envisaged in the Simla Agreement and having been frustrated by the noncooperative attitude of India has rightly decided to reraise the issue at the international level and in the UN.
And I think it would be distressing to the folks back home to think that we are not concerned enough about that possibility that we provide a clear channel, a clear avenue in the law for someone to reraise that basic issue....
Let's say you're dealt KK first up and there's a raise and a reraise. You're going to have to four bet and then either get raised again or called.
Cork4ever's flat call of the reraise to me meant a decent KKxx hand or a good run-down type hand.
(39.) Issues that I reraise in Part II about what it means to make
In Texas Hold 'Em, the poker game that's played at the World Series of Poker at Binion's Horseshoe Las Vegas, the reraise, or "all in" bet on "fourth street" (that's the fourth community card, after the initial flop of three community cards and before "the river," or fifth community card), is sometimes referred to as "accidentally on purpose." This scene should include Kate, the cowboy, the comedian, the girl on the motorcycle, and someone who works in the body shop.
I reraise eight more and flash her what I hope is a friendly but confident smile.
Finally, on page twenty-one, the author unwittingly provides a textbook example of a dangling modifier: "Once achieved, you can reraise the standards and acquire better doubt at a level of still better taste."
The British challenge for the six-furlong Sprint, in the form of Bolshoi, met with dignified defeat as Jack Berry's Royal Academy colt could manage only seventh to Reraise.