What's the difference between baccarat and roulette?

Baccarat


Definition:

  • (n.) A French game of cards, played by a banker and punters.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Our hero duels the wicked communist Le Chiffre across the baccarat table.
  • (2) In a late book of short stories, Flashman and the Tiger (1999), Flashman, up against Bismarck again, averts a European war in 'The Road to Charing Cross', is involved in a celebrated royal scandal concerning Edward VII in 'The Subtleties of Baccarat', and, in the title story, 'Flashman and the Tiger', he is found at the battle of Rorke's Drift before encountering Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson.

Roulette


Definition:

  • (n.) A game of chance, in which a small ball is made to move round rapidly on a circle divided off into numbered red and black spaces, the one on which it stops indicating the result of a variety of wagers permitted by the game.
  • (n.) A small toothed wheel used by engravers to roll over a plate in order to order to produce rows of dots.
  • (n.) A similar wheel used to roughen the surface of a plate, as in making alterations in a mezzotint.
  • (n.) the curve traced by any point in the plane of a given curve when the latter rolls, without sliding, over another fixed curve. See Cycloid, and Epycycloid.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Read Rachel’s full story Facebook Twitter Pinterest Chris Owen: ‘I’ve been sober for six years now, and I don’t miss alcohol.’ Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian I spent my 20s playing Russian roulette with alcohol The NHS has been there time and time again for Chris Owen, who battled alcoholism throughout his 20s.
  • (2) Recent use of cocaine, the most common drug found at autopsy, was detected in 64% of Russian roulette fatalities and in 35% of the control group (P less than .05).
  • (3) The sound of chips landing on the tables chimes with house music filling the room and the roll of the ball along the roulette wheel.
  • (4) Severe restriction of the stakes on FOBTs or, better still, banishing roulette back to the casinos altogether would focus the minds of both CEOs and shareholders on getting their slice of the action from of the best betting medium ever devised.
  • (5) Until now the controversial electronic FOBTs - which account for half of betting shop profits - allowed players to lose £100 of their own money every 20 seconds on casino games such as roulette.
  • (6) Meanwhile in Britain, the game of Russian roulette played out by young drug users every night continues apace, with the risks continually heightened by the introduction of ever more dangerous drugs, such as PMA, which killed 23 people last year .
  • (7) He naively thought the roulette wheel in the City would keep turning and the house price bubble keep floating, forever.
  • (8) Labour accuses the government of playing Russian roulette with homes and businesses by cutting flood protection, but McIntosh said: "Be in no doubt, a Labour government would have cut flood defences.
  • (9) The waiting goes on to discover what, if anything, the Government proposes to do next about the addictive, high-stakes roulette and gaming machines which have created several thousand mini-casinos on our high streets.
  • (10) Unite has accused the company of playing "Russian roulette" with the future of Grangemouth, the biggest industrial site in Scotland, and is backing any efforts by the Scottish Government to find a new buyer for the oil refinery and petrochemical complex.
  • (11) The terminals allow bets of up to £100 every 20 seconds on casino games such as roulette, leading to the machines being dubbed the "crack cocaine of gambling".
  • (12) Because people buying advance tickets get seat reservations, for regular commuters it's like Russian roulette.
  • (13) If he is playing electoral roulette with the one-time bankable constituency of students, he is also hopeful of picking up voters "abandoned" by Labour in the north, where the Lib Dems are second to Labour in 52 constituencies.
  • (14) Britain’s hardworking taxpayers will pay the price for the economic chaos.” Where the parties stand on the economy Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, said: “Ed Miliband and Ed Balls are intent on playing Russian roulette with Britain’s economy … The fact is, Labour want a return to reckless and excessive borrowing.” The Labour leadership is aiming to wrong-foot Osborne, who hopes to portray Labour as fiscally irresponsible, by placing the elimination of the budget deficit at the centre of its manifesto.
  • (15) "Banks should be safe places for people's savings, not huge roulette wheels," Cable said.
  • (16) There were only four accidents, two of which were the results of 'Russian roulette'.
  • (17) Nicknamed ‘Casino Jimmy’ by the Danish press after skipping curfew to go play roulette while on international duty with the Under-21 team, Nielsen would go on to become a hardened gambling addict.
  • (18) William Hill , Ladbrokes and Coral, together with the smaller competitor Paddy Power, have promised from next month to remove all adverts for touch-screen roulette machines from their windows and to dedicate a fifth of the space to responsible gambling messages.
  • (19) A reply is offered to an article likening the use of condoms to Russian roulette in its vaunted protection against AIDS.
  • (20) In the caloric test especially the patients show canal paresis (CP) on the more impaired side, but none of them appeared to be nonresponsive to the test; lumbar air insufflation is often an effective treatment for this disease; pneumoencephalo-roulette tomography is very useful for diagnosing pathological changes in the posterior fossa.

Words possibly related to "baccarat"

Words possibly related to "roulette"