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Answer for the clue "Fundraising game ", 7 letters:
lottery

Alternative clues for the word lottery

Word definitions for lottery in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A scheme for the distribution of prizes by lot or chance, especially a gaming scheme in which one or more tickets bearing particular numbers draw prizes, the other tickets are blanks. 2 (context figuratively English) An affair of chance. 3 (context ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Lottery is a 2007 novel by Patricia Wood . Her first published novel, it was shortlisted for the 2008 Orange Prize for Fiction .

Usage examples of lottery.

It was a cold-blooded lottery that paid off often enough to be worthwhile adapting for.

I began by showing him that Leticia Nazareno owed us for an amount of taffeta twice the nautical distance to Santa Maria del Altar, that is, one hundred ninety leagues, and he said aha as if to himself, and I ended up by showing him that the total debt with the special discount for your excellency was equal to six times the grand prize in the lottery for ten years, and he said aha again and only then did he look at me directly without his glasses and I could see that his eyes were timid and indulgent, and only then did he tell me with a strange voice of harmony that our reasons were clear and just, to each his own, he said, have them send the bill to the government.

After the customary greetings he began by complimenting me on the success of my lottery, and then remarked that I had distributed tickets for more than six thousand francs.

They began to talk of the lottery which was to be drawn the day after next, and all the girls mentioned the numbers on which they had risked a few bajocchi.

At dessert Calsabigi begged me to give him my opinion of a scheme he had drafted, the aim of which was to bring in a sum of two million crowns, so that the credit of the lottery might remain secure.

Then, abruptly, men were screaming, crying and fighting for the precious bracky, like the legions of the damned grabbing for lottery tickets when the prize was a passport to paradise.

Calsabigi came to me from his brother, with a large sheet of paper containing all the calculations pertaining to the lottery.

Vernai remarked that if the worst came to the worst the lottery could be suppressed.

He told me that my decisive way of speaking had made a great impression, and he was certain that if I cared to make interest with the comptroller we could set up the lottery and make a large profit.

I finally told them that no man of honour and learning would volunteer to conduct the lottery on the understanding that it was to win every time, and that if anyone had the impudence to give such an undertaking they should turn him out of the room forthwith, for it was impossible that such an agreement could be maintained except by some roguery.

Hitherto the lottery had always been a gainer, but its late loss could not have come at a worse time.

She closed the library early and drove fast along the seamless neighborhood streets, passed the bright clumps of all-night megastores packed with tired people buying groceries, lottery tickets, booze and drugs, sweaters, shoes, dinette sets.

These five numbers were very profitable to the Lottery of Naples, for everyone, myself excepted, rushed to get them.

A lean Kandori with a large pearl in her left ear and silver chains across her chest sat her saddle calmly, gloved hand folded on the pommel, maybe still unaware that her gray gelding and her wagon teams alike would be put into the lottery once she was into the city.

He shewed me the pile of papers, on which he had worked out all the problems referring to the lottery.