Wiktionary
n. (context poker English) A poker game where bets and raises can be as large as the player is capable of making them.
Wikipedia
"No Limit" is a song recorded by Dutch Eurodance band 2 Unlimited.
No Limit may refer to:
No Limit is a 1935 British musical comedy starring George Formby and Florence Desmond. The film, which was directed by Monty Banks, was made on location at the Isle of Man's famous TT motorcycle race. It was the first of eleven films that Formby made with Associated Talking Pictures.
Although Formby had already made two moderately successful films, No Limit was the film that put him on the road to stardom. It is still regarded as one of his best and funniest featuring good songs and numerous stunts.
No Limit is a 1931 American Pre-Code comedy film starring Clara Bow, Norman Foster, Stuart Erwin, Thelma Todd, Dixie Lee, and Mischa Auer.
No Limit: A Search for the American Dream on the Poker Tournament Trail is a 2006 documentary film about the professional poker tournament circuit. The film follows producer Susan Genard as she enters several Seven-Card Stud Hi/Lo and Omaha poker tournaments across the country. Dozens of professional poker players appear in the film. No Limit features interviews with over 40 of the top players in the world. No Limit had its premiere screening at The Palms Hotel and Casino on July 27, 2006 and toured the film festival circuit. The film was released on DVD in October 2006. Interview subjects include:
- Amir Vahedi
- Annie Duke
- Barry Greenstein
- Bobby Baldwin (CEO, Mirage Resorts, Las Vegas)
- Bonnie Damiano
- Charlie Shoten
- Chip Jett
- Chris "Jesus" Ferguson
- Chris Moneymaker
- Clonie Gowen
- Daniel Negreanu
- Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott
- David Sklansky
- Dean Shores
- Doyle Brunson
- Evelyn Ng
- Hendon Mob
- Howard Lederer
- James McManus
- Jennifer Harman
- Kathy Liebert
- Kenna James
- Larry Flynt
- Layne Flack
- Linda Johnson
- Lou Krieger
- Mark Seif
- Mel Judah
- Men "the Master" Nguyen
- "Miami" John Cernuto
- Mike Sexton
- Paul Phillips
- Phil Gordon
- Phil Hellmuth
- Puggy Pearson
- Ron Rose
- Scotty Nguyen
- Steve Lipscomb
- T.J. Cloutier
- Thor Hansen
- Tom McEvoy
- Vince Burgio
- Warren Karp
- Yosh Nakano
No Limit is a pop album by Japanese singer and songwriter Mari Iijima. It was both her first English language album and first independent release. Iijima’s former recording label, Warner Music Japan, distributed the album as an independent album in Japan. She received a nomination for Best Pop Artist at the Los Angeles Music Awards in 2000 for No Limit.
Iijima's then-husband, James Studer, was a producer for No Limit. The couple divorced in 2001.
No Limit is a 1977 jazz album by saxophonist Art Pepper playing with George Cables, Tony Dumas, and Carl Burnett.
As Pepper says in the sleeve notes, he considered this album to be a memento of his friendship with Lester Koenig, who died on 21 November 1977.
"No Limit (Hardstyle Remix)" is a promo record by Dutch eurodance band 2 Unlimited.
No Limit is a comedy / action film directed by Fu Huayang, it is a movie involves elements of extreme sports, Shaolin Kung Fu and other parkour. The movie stars new generation actors Hans Zhang, Zheng Shuang, Xing Yu and new uprising star Melrose Hu. The movie released on August 12, 2011.
No Limit is a French television action-adventure series created by filmmaker Luc Besson with Franck Philippon through Besson's EuropaCorp company. Along with Transporter: The Series, it represents one of Besson's first forays into television, although this time as a writer as well as a producer.
The series follows, Vincent Libérati, played by Vincent Elbaz, a DGSE agent plagued with an incurable disease who accepts an offer from a mysterious secret organization to perform missions on French soil in exchange for an experimental treatment, which brings him closer to his temperamental teenage daughter Lola, his ex-wife Alexandra and his suspicious cop sister Juliette.
No Limit premiered in Belgium on RTL-TVI on November 5, 2012 and ten days later in France on TF1. A second and third season were confirmed on November 29, before the French airing of the first season's last two episodes. International broadcast rights are held by TF1 International.
was the professional wrestling tag team of Tetsuya Naito and Yujiro Takahashi. The team formed in early 2008, working in their home promotion New Japan Pro Wrestling's (NJPW) junior heavyweight division, where they later in the year captured the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship. For most of 2009, through NJPW's foreign relationships, No Limit worked for promotions in the United States and Mexico, most notably Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) and Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), before returning to NJPW at the start of 2010. Now working as a heavyweight tag team, the team captured the IWGP Tag Team Championship shortly thereafter, becoming the first and thus far only tag team to have held both the junior heavyweight and heavyweight versions of the NJPW's tag team championship. Naito and Takahashi broke up in May 2011 and have had an extended storyline rivalry with each other ever since.
"No Limit" is a song by American singer Usher, featuring American rapper Young Thug. It was released by RCA on June 9, 2016, for online streaming through the streaming service Tidal, which Usher co-owns. The following day it was released for paid purchase on other digital download and online streaming services. It's expected that "No Limit" is to appear on Usher's upcoming eight studio album, Flawed. The song was written by Usher, Rock City, Jeffrey Lamar Williams, Brandon "B.A.M." Hodge and Christopher Perry, while production was handled by the latter two. The track gives reference to Master P's song, " Make 'Em Say Uhh", from his 1997 No Limit Records release Ghetto D singing, "Make you say uh, no limit / Got that Master P, no limit baby".
Usage examples of "no limit".
Do you fancy that others have no limit, but that your dignity and your feelings must be respected?
This means that there is no limit to the number that can be exchanged, and so they can give rise to a strong force.
There seemed no limit to how cold something could get, just as today there is no practical limit to how hot something can become.
The principles that in explaining phenomena we must proceed as if the field of investigation were enclosed by no limit or beginning of the world.