dice
noun /daɪs/
  /daɪs/
 (plural dice)
Idioms 
enlarge image(also die especially in North American English)[countable] a small cube of wood, plastic, etc., with a different number of spots on each of its sides, used in games of chance- a pair of dice
 - to roll/throw/shake the dice
 - You decide who’s going to start by throwing the dice.
 - You move forward according to the number on the dice.
 - (figurative) It was a last desperate throw of the dice to save his marriage.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- loaded
 
- play
 - roll
 - throw
 - …
 
- game
 
- on a/the dice
 
- a/the roll of the dice
 - a/the throw of the dice
 
- [uncountable] a game played with dice
- We played dice all night.
 
 
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French des, plural of de, from Latin datum ‘something given or played’, neuter past participle of dare.
Idioms 
load the dice (against/in favour of somebody) 
- to put somebody at an unfair disadvantage/advantage
- He has always felt that the dice were loaded against him in life.
 - This is another attempt to load the dice in favour of employers.
 
 
no dice 
- (especially North American English, informal) used to show that you refuse to do something, or that something cannot be done
- He wanted $400 for it, so no dice.
 
 

