Cards. a game of draw poker in which the player having the lowest-ranking hand wins the pot.
v. 有主动词 verb
to deliberately estimate a lower price for than one intends to charge: to lowball the cost of a move.
to give a false estimate or bid for.
v. 无主动词 verb
to engage in lowballing.
adj. 形容词 adjective
engaged in or characteristic of lowballing: a lowball bid.
更多lowball例句
Several former Twitch staff and members of the streaming industry with knowledge of Twitch’s contract offers say that Lupo, in particular, got “lowballed” by Twitch, which made YouTube’s offer more tantalizing.
Fifty-eight is definitely a lowball figure, too, he says, but the team wanted to give a conservative estimate, knowing that future researchers will be able to categorize the regions that weren’t as obvious to find.
During the permit process, all three projects presented calculations regarding vapor cloud explosions based on small potential spills and the model that critics say lowballs the shock wave emanating from a blast.
Tech salespeople lowball the cost of service in order to get new customers and then, eventually, have to figure out how to make money on what they sell.
He also repeatedly lowballed the death count, falsely claiming he saved millions of lives.
This is likely a lowball number but it has the merit to illustrate the tradeoff that raising the minimum wage requires.
You will probably give him a lowball offer in order to pay less.
But over the last few years, the banks have had two enticing reasons to give lowball answers.