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dibs
[ dibz ]
noun
- money in small amounts.
- rights; claims:
I have dibs on the car when Jimmy brings it back.
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of dibs1
Idioms and Phrases
see have dibs on .Example Sentences
Itâs long been anticipated that if the freeway never got finished, Caltrans would sell the houses, with existing tenants getting first dibs.
âRock, upstairs. I got dibs on the first floor.â
For England, Bellingham has had first dibs as the number 10 this season.
Others pointed out that most major resellers have relationships with shoe company officials, or plugs, who occasionally offer them first dibs on a new release.
âIowa has first dibs on the Department of Agriculture,â a grinning Mr. DeSantis replied.
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More About Dibs
What doesÌędibs mean?
When you call dibs on something, you claim it, especially in advance (before other people can claim it or get to it).
To call dibs, you usually actually say (or shout) dibs, especially while mentioning the thing youâre claiming, as in Dibs on the last slice of pizza! If youâve got dibs, you consider yourself to have the right to the thing that youâve made a claim to. Dibs is very informal and is mostly used by kids. Itâs especially seen in the phrases call dibs, have dibs, got dibs, and first dibs.
Less commonly, dibs is used as a slang term for small amounts of money or as another name for the game of jacks.
Example: Thereâs only one cupcake left, but I already called dibs on it.
Where doesÌędibs come from?
The first records of the word dibs come from the early 1700s. It probably comes from a shortening of the word dibstones. Originally, dibs referred to the childrenâs game called jacks (or a version of it), in which small objects are thrown and then picked up between bounces of a ball. The name of the game of jacks is a shortening of jackstones and early versions of both jacks and dibs were played with pebbles or the knucklebones of animals, such as those of a sheep. (Jacks is sometimes called knucklebones because earlier versions used such bones.)
Today, youâre most likely to hear dibs shouted by kids who are staking their claim to the last of something (like the last mozzarella stick) before other people (their siblings or friends) can take it. Along with giving you the right to the last of something, dibs can also give you the right to the first choice of something, as in Iâve got dibs on first pick for movie night on Friday. For this reason, dibs is often seen in the phrase first dibs, meaning âfirst choice.â
Dibs is very similar to the common practice among kids of calling shotgun to claim the right to ride in the front seat of a car, or calling fives upon getting up from a seat to âsaveâ that seat for the next five minutes. (You could call dibs on shotgun, but this is slightly unconventional and your rights to shotgun may be disputed.) To kids, all such claims are seen as a binding social contract that must be respected.
Did you know ... ?
How isÌędibs used in real life?
Dibs is most commonly used by kids, but itâs sometimes also used by adults as a joke.
We do this weird thing where we sell it to the highest bidder, not the first person to call dibs on Twitter đ€·ââïž
â jordan buckley (@JordanETID)
quick everybody quote tweet the same tweet, i've got dibs on the eyes emoji
â Josh Billinson (@jbillinson)
"this is MY bed, I call dibs" â Copper
â đ The CavityKing đŠ· (@TCavityking)
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Try usingÌędibs!
Is dibs used correctly in the following sentence?
I canât wait till those brownies are doneâdibs on a corner piece!
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American HeritageŸ Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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