释义 |
Definition of trixie in English: trixienoun ˈtrɪksi British A bet consisting of three doubles and one treble. I had a tenner trixie a few years back which netted me over £5,500 Example sentencesExamples - The bet was a trixie, made up of 3x£5 doubles and a £5 treble for a stake of £20.
- I'm thinking of a trixie on FC Basel, Sparta Prague and Dinamo Zagreb.
- John placed £20 on a trixie and was laughing when his selection paid £1611.25.
- The Irish firm also paid out £8,000 to a London punter for a £40 trixie (three doubles and a treble) on three correct half-time/full-time predictions on Saturday.
- Rather than going for a trixie with today's multiple selections, I am happy to put The Hague, Sphere and Wee Forbees in a win treble.
- Let's have an each-way trixie on the final day of Royal Ascot.
- The trixie would give us a nice profit should two win and if all three hit, the treble alone is a massive 40-1 shot.
- I can make a case for the draw in all of them and backing them in a trixie, three doubles and a treble, could pay big rewards.
- After careful textual analysis of the Christmas story, it's struck me that the arrival of the three wise men in Bethlehem is a bit like having a trixie on the football, writes James Milton.
- Let's push the boat out and have an each-way Trixie at Bangor.
- Try a trixie (three doubles and a treble) with the treble alone paying 38-1 at BetVictor.
- Put a trixie on the first 3 horses - made a nice little profit on these!
- Ladbrokes settle two selections in different races as a double, three as a trixie, four as a yankee and so on.
- Leyton Orient v Swindon, Gillingham v Rotherham and Hereford v Macclesfield are all closely matched on paper and it could pay to do a trixie (three doubles and a treble) on all three finishing level at 9-4 apiece.
Origin 1970s: of unknown origin. |