BID

Bid or BID may refer to:

Offer

  • Bidding, making a price offer in an auction, stock exchange, or card games
  • Bid, in a financial market, the price a market maker will buy a commodity at to buy a product in such a way; see bid-offer spread
  • Bid price, a price offered for a good by a potential buyer or a price offered by a potential vendor to perform a specific job
  • Bid, a formal invitation to join a fraternity or sorority
  • Places

  • Bid, Razavi Khorasan, a village in Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran
  • Bid, South Khorasan, a village in South Khorasan Province, Iran
  • Beed, a town in Maharashtra, India is sometimes referred to as Bid
  • Block Island State Airport, by IATA Code
  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, a hospital in Boston, USA
  • Science, medicine and technology

  • BH3 interacting domain death agonist, a pro-apoptotic protein
  • Binary Integer Decimal
  • Brought in dead, a patient found dead upon the arrival of medical assistance
  • bis in die, (Latin for "twice daily"), a medication dosage
  • Bugtraq ID, a list of security vulnerabilities
  • Shop at Bid

    Shop at Bid was a British television shopping channel based in the UK, that ran daily auction style and later fixed price demonstrations. It was the first channel of its kind in the world. The channel first launched as Bid-Up.tv. The channel was owned by Bid Shopping.

    As of 3rd of September, Bid Shopping had reopened with new owners, It was announced on Twitter under the name @bidtv, it was the same Twitter account as they renamed, Bid has planned to reopen on 4/12/15

    History

    Bid-Up.TV (2000–2005)

    The channel was launched by its parent company, Sit-Up Shopping, in October 2000. It started by broadcasting 12 hours a day, much of which were pre-recorded, with auction graphics overlaid so people could bid despite the video itself being pre-recorded. Bid later aired live broadcasts almost 18 hours a day from 7:45am to 2am, with recorded TV Shopping Network presentations during its downtime.

    The channel amassed a cult-following as it spread to various digital platforms. This growth in popularity can also be partly attributed to the use of David Dickinson, ex-presenter of the BBC television series Bargain Hunt, in various television advertising campaigns.

    Bid price

    A bid price is the highest price that a buyer (i.e., bidder) is willing to pay for a good. It is usually referred to simply as the "bid."

    In bid and ask, the bid price stands in contrast to the ask price or "offer", and the difference between the two is called the bid–ask spread.

    An unsolicited bid or purchase offer is when a person or company receives a bid even though they are not looking to sell.

    Bidding war

    A bidding war is said to occur when a large number of bids are placed in rapid succession by two or more entities, especially when the price paid is much greater than the ask price, or greater than the first bid in the case of unsolicited bidding.

    In other word, bidding war is a situation where two or more buyers are so interested in an item (such as a house or a business) that they make increasingly higher offers of the price they are willing to pay to try to become the new owner of the item.

    In the markets

    In the context of stock trading on a stock exchange, the bid price is the highest price a buyer of a stock is willing to pay for a share of that given stock. The bid price displayed in most quote services is the highest bid price in the market. The ask or offer price on the other hand is the lowest price a seller of a particular stock is willing to sell a share of that given stock. The ask or offer price displayed is the lowest ask/offer price in the market (Stock market).

    Bid‘ah

    In Islam, Bid‘ah (Arabic: بدعة) refers to any innovations in religious matters. Linguistically the term means "innovation, novelty, heretical doctrine, heresy". In contrast to the English term "innovation", the word bid'ah in Arabic generally carries a negative connotation. One tradition holds that Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, told a companion to "avoid novelties, for every novelty is an innovation, and every innovation is an error”. Another more dire hadith holds, “Every bid’ah is a going astray and every going astray is in Hell-fire”.

    In classical Arabic literature (adab), it has been used as a form of praise for outstanding compositions of prose and poetry.


    In Sunni Islam

    In early Islamic history, bid'ah referred primarily to heterodox doctrines (as evidenced below). However, in Islamic law, when used without qualification, bid'ah denotes any newly invented matter that is without precedent and is in opposition to the Qur'an and Sunnah.

    Islam Question and Answer (supervised by Muhammad Saalih al-Munajjid), defines bid'ah as "anything that is not referred to specifically in Shariah, and for which there is no evidence (daleel) in the Qur'an or Sunnah, and which was not known at the time of the Prophet ... and his Companions." It further elaborates that bid'ah suggests that Islam is not complete and perfect, has room for improvement or is otherwise lacking in some way.

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