card games: any of various card games for usually four players in two partnerships that bid for the right to declare a trump suit, seek to win tricks (see trickentry 1 sense 4) equal to the final bid, and play with the hand of declarer's partner exposed and played by declarer
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Noun
These fans had started queueing up hours earlier, the lines spilling across the street via a metal pedestrian bridge.—Dana O’Neil, CNN Money, 8 Feb. 2026 From the digital creations that power our modern world to the bridges that span these waters, the Bay Area has always been the American cradle of invention.—Dieter Kurtenbach, Mercury News, 8 Feb. 2026
Verb
Sometimes the gap between simply learning skills and performing them is too large to bridge.—Los Angeles Times, 7 Feb. 2026 And they are drawn to efforts to bridge partisan divides.—Karen Brooks Harper, Dallas Morning News, 7 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for bridge
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English brigge, from Old English brycg; akin to Old High German brucka bridge, Old Church Slavic brŭvŭno beam
Verb
Middle English briggen, going back to Old English brycgian, noun derivative of brycgbridge entry 1
Noun (2)
alteration of earlier biritch, of unknown origin
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
Verb
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
: a strand of protoplasm extending between two cells
c
: a partial denture held in place by anchorage to adjacent teeth
d
: a connection (as an atom or group of atoms) that joins two different parts of a molecule (as opposite sides of a ring)
e
: an area of physical continuity between two chromatids persisting during the later phases of mitosis and constituting a possible source of somatic genetic change