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Gambler   /gˈæmblər/   Listen
Gambler

noun
1.
A person who wagers money on the outcome of games or sporting events.
2.
Someone who risks loss or injury in the hope of gain or excitement.  Synonym: risk taker.



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"Gambler" Quotes from Famous Books



... listening intently. From the last vessel of the line came the sound of low voices, accompanied at intervals by the click of the oblong bone dice with which the men were gambling. This was a boon, for when the Indian, a born gambler, is engaged in one of his games of chance, he is oblivious of all else around him. But on Angria's gallivat there was no sound. Rising to a crouching position, so that his form could not be seen if any of the gamblers chanced to look in his direction, ...
— In Clive's Command - A Story of the Fight for India • Herbert Strang

... life without risks?" cried Yeux-gris. "I thought you too good a gambler, Gervais, ...
— Helmet of Navarre • Bertha Runkle

... curious," said Blucher, composedly, stroking his long white mustache—"that was really curious. Leesten had never before handled a card; he did not know the game, and yet he won from such an old gambler as I am two hundred louis d'ors in the course of a few hours. Leesten won the money that was to pay for the carriage- horses, and you may give him thanks for being compelled to drive for six months longer with our lame ...
— NAPOLEON AND BLUCHER • L. Muhlbach

... dishonest value unless sold, and even at the most corrupt period of the government nobody was compelled by law to buy. In nine cases in ten the person who bought did so in the hope and expectation of getting much for little and something for nothing. The buyer was no better than the seller. He was a gambler. He "played against the game of the man who kept the table" (as the phrase went), and naturally he lost. Naturally, too, he cried out, but his lamentations, though echoed shrilly by the demagogues, seem to have been unavailing. Even the rudimentary intelligence ...
— The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce • Ambrose Bierce

... was on them both, however, and so soon as the Jew could borrow a little his luck also turned, and Vent-en-Panne was stripped of every sou,—even the clothes he wore. Paris became an iridescent dream, and the gambler found his way to the Tortugas, where he doubtless shipped with Morgan, Teach, or some other of the scourges ...
— Myths & Legends of our New Possessions & Protectorate • Charles M. Skinner


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