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Casino Short Meaning

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I play mostly green chips to black chips. I recently ground through a tough trip to Las Vegas. I know it's normal and not that big of a deal, but after reviewing my play I came up with something that I thought might be biting me in the butt!

Do you ever bet more or less than what you're 'supposed' to with regard to the count?

Ever since I got backed off my first time, my game has been more paranoid. I was backed off because surveillance was counting along with me and I had no hints with regards to angry pit bosses or phones ringing or anything like that. So now, about once per shuffle, I will over/under bet by one or two units depending on what I feel a ploppy would do based on his last win or loss. Obviously, I will lose EV with this approach, but don't you think the cost is small relative to the longevity it will hopefully provide? Or am I better off just playing correctly until I get backed off?

Life is too short to live this way. It could just be our last day on earth for all we know. We always hear about people being taken from this world too suddenly. Some calamity strikes and they're gone. Here one day and vanished the next. As if they were some memory. And when that happens, you realize that life is incredibly short. Etymology and usage. Casino is of Italian origin; the root casa means a house. The term casino may mean a small country villa, summerhouse, or social club. During the 19th century, casino came to include other public buildings where pleasurable activities took place; such edifices were usually built on the grounds of a larger Italian villa or palazzo, and were used to host civic town functions. Oct 01, 2017 The reason M was called M was a reference to the first head of the secret service, Mansfield Smith-Cumming, who used to sign his name 'C'. Ian Fleming decided to take this a step further and actually make M the official title of the head of MI6 in. Advantage gambling, or advantage play, refers to legal methods, in contrast to cheating in casinos, used to gain an advantage while gambling. The term usually refers to house-banked games, but can also refer to games played against other players, such as poker. A casino employee in charge of running a gaming table. Also referred to as a croupier. Deck Penetration: The term used to describe the (approximate) percentage of a deck, or decks, of cards before they are shuffled. Deposit: Sending funds to your online casino account using the payment method of your choice. Deposit Bonus: A specific type of.

Young Gun: If you're playing stakes that can blend in with the crowd, you don't really need to use this type of cover, but if you're not, betting cover can be essential to longevity. Little moves here and there can you buy a lot of extra playing time, and they cost you very little EV if used wisely. The real downside is your variance can skyrocket if you're betting big when you only hold a tiny edge, but again playing high stakes this is essential to longevity. Remember the best cover of all is short sessions if that is feasible.

bigplayer: It's costing you some money and making it more likely that you will experience unexpected swings (i.e, you're not going to get into the long run as fast as you otherwise would expect).

Just put out the money. What's going to happen by cheating on your proper bets is that you're going to get backed off anyway and you're not going to pull out what you should from the casino. Also, you're never going to find out how far you can push certain casinos unless you push them reasonably. Some casinos will not take any kind of bet movement, some are incredibly tolerant and you'll never find them if you play too conservatively.

The best cover remains to play many shorter sessions rather than single long sessions.

Skittish: Thanks for the advice, I really appreciate it. But please define 'short session.' Does that mean thirty minutes? An hour? If I sit down with $500, am I happy to leave after thirty minutes with a $300 profit? If I'm losing can I stick around longer?

Young Gun: In a big action casino, I say an hour. If it's a smaller casino or one with few green chip players, than thirty minutes or less. But it's not really a set amount of time. If all of your first three shoes go positive and don't drop, thus you have multiple-unit bets out most of the time, there's no need to leave. Also, if all of the shoes are negative and you wong out once or twice, there's no reason to leave since they haven't yet watched you unless your action will really turn heads when the shoe goes positive. So basically, if you have a bunch of maximum-bet cycles in the first half hour, leave, and if your bets are fairly uniform and you aren't drawing attention to yourself, stay an extra 15-30 minutes, or until a shoe goes negative and you want to wong out.

A $300 profit is nothing anywhere on the Las Vegas Strip. I certainly wouldn't leave just because I was up a couple of max bets, but yes I am more inclined to stick around if I'm losing. Sometimes I will lose a bunch of max bets in a row and the pit boss will walk away just to get rid of the awkwardness created by me losing so much money. I'm certainly not going to leave when this happens. You can and will eventually get backed off while losing, but it happens less frequently than when you are winning.

EmeraldCityBJ:BJ21's glossary defines a short session as leaving the casino after spreading beyond what you think the casino will tolerate, immediately at the end of the deck/shoe or as soon as the count is no longer positive; or leaving after thirty minutes of play -- whichever comes first. This is a good definition. In some cases, this means playing for less than five minutes if the first shoe/deck you play happens to involve a high count. In other cases, you'll end up with mostly neutral counts and end up playing a half hour.

Note that this is a guideline. Casino ouistreham restaurant le doris la. There are places where you might be able to camp out all day without incident. There are other places where anything more than fifteen minutes is too long. If you've been flyered, it's a matter of how long it takes someone to recognize you and for them to go through whatever procedures they follow for a backoff/trespass. To understand tolerance levels and backoff procedures for each given casino, your best bet is to network and talk to local AP's through private email.

Richie Lakin: I leave after 'showing my spread.' Win or lose has little or nothing to do with it. I also agree with thirty minutes. Nobody has ever been kicked out for leaving too early. Never overstay in an attempt to recover a losing session. Book the loser, and move on.

One Big Shoe: Time is not necessarily the essential element for a short session. For example, you might sit down at a table and have a series of flat shoes where the count never gets high enough to justify putting out your max bets. This could go on for a while. Then, you get that one big shoe where you have a high count and you start putting out big bets. You should consider leaving after that shoe is over, win or lose. If the shoe comes early, then you've played a short session in terms of time. If it comes later, you've played a longer session in terms of time, but a short session where you've exposed yourself in terms of big bets. If you stay after the big shoe, you're faced with the problem of reducing your bet after having made a series of big bets. None of us like to leave the table as a loser, but you don't have to win it back in that particular casino. There is always the one next door or down the street.

This is assuming you are playing in a venue where you can easily go to another casino. It's a little different when you're playing in a place that doesn't have another casino nearby and it took you some time to get there. Then you have to consider getting in enough play to justify the time and expense it took to get to the casino.
Originally published on bj21.com Green Chip, edited for this format.


I usually play short sessions 45 min-1 hour. I play black chip and recently I have been flat betted in two casinos. I think know matter what if you are making a profit they will notice you.
I stayed totally under the radar and by coincidence there was a casino I never lost in(I played probably 6-10 times in a year) I never won more than 2G in one sitting and followed all advice of not staying past a big bet streak anyway they upgraded my players card and must have realized this I walked into the casino I don't think I played three hands when a gentlemen in a suit asked me to step away from the table when I did he told me that he was flat betting me on the Blackjack tables I am welcome to stay as long as I did not vary my bet or I can play any other game in his casino

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comp 1

(kŏmp)intr.v.comped, comp·ing

Casino Short Meaning Definition

, comps
To play a jazz accompaniment, as on a piano or guitar.

comp 2

(kŏmp)Informaln.
1. Something of value, such as a ticket for admission or a book, given free of charge: The first caller to the radio station received four comps to a rock concert.
2. A person who receives something of value free of charge: The audience at the play consisted of 80 paying customers and 20 comps.
tr.v.
1. comped, comp·ing, comps To give (someone) something of value, such as a ticket or a hotel room, free of charge: Each performer was allowed to comp two guests.
2. To give (something of value, such as a ticket or a hotel room) free of charge: The customers' meal was comped after they complained about the service.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

comp

(kɒmp) n
1. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) a compositor
3. (Music, other) an accompaniment
vb
5. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) (intr) to work as a compositor in the printing industry
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

comp2

(kɒmp)
Informal.n.
1. something, as a ticket or book, provided free of charge.
adj. v.t.
3. to provide with a comp.
[1885–90; shortening of complimentary]

comp3

(kɒmp)
v.i.
to accompany a jazz soloist with irregularly spaced, punctuating chords.

comp.

1. comparative.
3. compensation.
5. compiled.
7. complement.
9. composition.
11. compound.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

comp


Past participle: comped
Gerund: comping
Imperative
comp
comp
Present
I comp
you comp
he/she/it comps
we comp
you comp
they comp
Preterite
I comped
you comped
he/she/it comped
we comped
you comped
they comped
Present Continuous
I am comping
you are comping
he/she/it is comping
we are comping
you are comping
they are comping
Present Perfect
I have comped
you have comped
he/she/it has comped
we have comped
you have comped
they have comped
Past Continuous
I was comping
you were comping
he/she/it was comping
we were comping
you were comping
they were comping
Past Perfect
I had comped
you had comped
he/she/it had comped
we had comped
you had comped
they had comped
Future
I will comp
you will comp
he/she/it will comp
we will comp
you will comp
they will comp
Future Perfect
I will have comped
you will have comped
he/she/it will have comped
we will have comped
you will have comped
they will have comped
Future Continuous
I will be comping
you will be comping
he/she/it will be comping
we will be comping
you will be comping
they will be comping
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been comping
you have been comping
he/she/it has been comping
we have been comping
you have been comping
they have been comping

Short Synonym

Short
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been comping
you will have been comping
he/she/it will have been comping
we will have been comping
you will have been comping
they will have been comping
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been comping
you had been comping
he/she/it had been comping
we had been comping
you had been comping
they had been comping
Conditional
I would comp
you would comp
he/she/it would comp
we would comp
you would comp
they would comp
Past Conditional
I would have comped
you would have comped
he/she/it would have comped
we would have comped
you would have comped
they would have comped
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
Noun1.comp - an intensive examination testing a student's proficiency in some special field of knowledge; 'she took her comps in English literature'
comprehensive, comprehensive examination
exam, examination, test - a set of questions or exercises evaluating skill or knowledge; 'when the test was stolen the professor had to make a new set of questions'
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

comp

nounInformal. A free ticket entitling one to transportation or admission:
Slang: freebie.
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

comp

Casino Short Meaning Synonym

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

Casino Short Meaning Synonyms

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