Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

all-in

In no-limit poker, to bet all of your chips as a sign of total confidence in your hand. If you have a very good hand, go all-in to win the maximum number of chips or to scare off mediocre hands so they won't catch the cards they need to beat yours. If you have a bad hand, you can bluff by going all-in and hope everyone folds.

I went all-in on thirty miles and that river rat caught a runner-runner flush.

by Coell November 10, 2005

all-in

A donkey's favorite action in poker. When used by a shark it means the odds are in his favor so fold or possibly that he is willing to gamble for the pot, are you?

The donkey went all-in for the fifth time in a row.

by AlienSorrow May 28, 2007

all in all

To explain something

All in all, Donald Trump needs to fix the economy and get out.

by CrimsonSun_FTW April 14, 2018

All of it! All of it!

When a group of friends are taking tequila shots, someone named Abdul yells, "All of it! All of it!" Funny thing is he's the only one not taking shots on his birthday.

Thomas: "Alright guys, cheers!" *Everyone takes a shot of tequila except Abdul* Abdul: "All of it! All of it!"

by tac1991 July 19, 2011

that's all there is to it

That's it. You can't say anything else/more about it. That's all you know.

-Monica is moving to London. -Why? -I don't know. That's all there is to it.

by handgrenade July 07, 2014

all in

To be totally committed to something. Possibly originating with gambling games such as Texas Hold 'em style poker, where the maximum 'raise' is to bet your full stack of chips.

If we're gonna do it, let's do it. I'm all in.

by Honor June 24, 2004

all in

When you place all your eggs in one basket.

Jim: Yo John, how much money are you going to put in that stock John: Hey buddy, I'm going all in by selling my wife, house, car and kids Jim: Cool

by John Kennington February 08, 2021