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wild card
[wahyld-kahrd]
noun
Cards.a card having its value decided by the wishes of the players.
a determining or important person or thing whose qualities are unknown, indeterminate, or unpredictable.
In a sailboat race the weather is the wild card.
Sports.an unranked or unproven player or team that is allowed to enter a tournament after regularly qualifying competitors have been selected.
The committee added several retired champions as wild cards in the tennis championships.
Digital Technology.a symbol in a search parameter, usually the asterisk or question mark, that will retrieve all results for another character or other characters in its position.
The file search is case-sensitive, and wildcards are not supported.
wild card
noun
See wild
sport a player or team that has not qualified for a competition but is allowed to take part, at the organizers' discretion, after all the regular places have been taken
an unpredictable element in a situation
computing a symbol that can represent any character or group of characters, as in a filename
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of wild card1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
The Dodgers do have Hyeseong Kim as a wild card on the bench, and on a roster loaded with positional flexibility.
Perhaps the most corrosive effect of all is yet another wild card being thrown into an already unpredictable game of international trade stand-off.
The Dodgers eventually knocked the Giants out of the playoffs that October, but their elongated path through the postseason as a wild card team left them gassed in the NL Championship Series.
He asked a bunch of friends to write down possible names for the new gym, saying that in the process he would certainly find a good wild card.
The wild card is whether the Rams have identified a quarterback who could succeed Stafford if the 16-year veteran retires in the next few years.
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