free ride
Appearance
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]free ride (plural free rides)
- (idiomatic) An opportunity or benefit which has no cost, especially one enjoyed or undertaken at the expense of others.
- 1980 March 31, “The Shaky House of Cards”, in Time:
- Previously, shoppers were given a free ride on charges until the end of the month. Now interest will start on the day of purchase on accounts with balances.
- 2006 April 9, “A Yankees Station in the Bronx”, in New York Times, retrieved 11 June 2009:
- Financially, the two New York teams have not asked for the sort of free ride at taxpayer expense that has been commonplace elsewhere.
- (finance) The practice of buying and selling shares or other securities without actually having the capital to cover the trade.
- (poker) A hand in which a player can remain without betting further money.
Verb
[edit]free ride (third-person singular simple present free rides, present participle free riding, simple past free rode, past participle free ridden)
- To take a free ride; to take advantage of a benefit without contributing.
- 1999, J. Samuel Barkin, George E. Shambaugh, Anarchy and the Environment, →ISBN:
- Finally, the level of excludahility of a CPR should affect the propensity to free ride.
- 2000, André Blais, To Vote Or Not to Vote?: The Merits and Limits of Rational Choice Theory, →ISBN, pages 119–120:
- Less than half the participants chose to free ride in each of the first two experiments, but the great majority (77 percent) did in the last.
- 2013, Kenneth Godwin, Scott H. Ainsworth, Erik Godwin, Lobbying and Policymaking, →ISBN:
- If an issue involves a purely private good such as a regulatory waiver or a tax loophole that would benefit only a single corporation, there is no opportunity to free ride.
- (finance) To buy and sell shares or other securities without actually having the capital to cover the trade.
Derived terms
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- “free ride”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.