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What does "bids" mean in this sentence?

English Language Learners Asked by yllgl on December 8, 2020

"Parents would be looking at their emails while the children would be making excited bids for their attention."

I have consulted the dictionary, "If you make a bid for something that is being sold, you say that you will pay a certain amount of money for it."
But in this sentence nothing is to be sold. Does "make a bid for" have other meanings?

3 Answers

The children would be attempting to obtain their parents' attention. A bid can be an attempt to secure some objective.

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bid noun [C] (ATTEMPT) C2 an attempt to achieve or get something:

Bid (Cambridge Dictionary)

Answered by Michael Harvey on December 8, 2020

Making a bid for something is an attempt to solicit a particular type of behavior from someone else. For example:

"The company bids on the government contract."

Means that the company applies to receive the contract. It does NOT mean the company is bribing a government employee with money!

As an extension of this meaning, a person can "bid" on an item, and offer "consideration" (money) as one part of the bid. However, the bid must typically be "accepted" before it is valid. The point here is that simply offering the highest amount of money is not sufficient to win an activity that involves bidding; it is only one aspect of a subset of completed bids. For example, on auction sites such as eBay, valid bids would also require a user account in good standing and generally a mailing address. In other places, bids may have more substantive requirements.

Answered by Ragaroni on December 8, 2020

To "bid for attention" is a common phrase, particularly when used regarding a child's behaviour. It's really being used in the same way as a monetary bid for goods - the child in this case is making a bid by asking for the attention of the parent, and the parent can decide whether to accept the "bid" by giving attention or not.

This article may help give more context.

Answered by Harry on December 8, 2020

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