Skip to main content

hi,
i'm currently bidding on an item through sniper. the item is currently £870, i've set my max bid to £1200, does sniper just wallop my max bid straight away or does it increase it bit by bit upto the maximum bid? so if the bid only went to say £1000, sniper ain't gonna bid my max right?

thanks all Big Grin Confused Confused
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Smilethanks for a quick reply! i'm not sure i understand though. say that with 10 seconds to go til the end, the highest bid is £1000, so does AS just bid my maximum bid (£1200, in an attempt to win it, or would it just bid the next increment(which i think goes up by £20)after all, i'm trying to get it as cheap as possible!

one other thing, what's a proxy bid? i'm new to this ebaying lark!

thanks all Eek
The word puggle can be either a noun or a verb. The verb “to puggle” means “to push or poke a stick or a wire down a hole and work it about in order to clear the hole”. The source of this word seems to be an earlier verb “to pug” meaning to hit or punch (in turn “pug” was probably onomatopoeic – and is the source of the American slang word for a boxer: a “pug”). The listener (in her letter) says that she’s familiar with this verb “to puggle” because her father told her that when he was about five or six years old, on the way to school he puggled a hole in a dead tree and out came a horde of angry hornets who stung him all over his head. Fortunately, she adds, it was wash day and his mother covered him in blue from a blue bag. But what about the noun puggle? What is a puggle? (That was Richard Morecroft’s question.) Used as a noun puggle (sometimes spelled poggle) means “a crazy or foolish person, an idiot”. It comes from India, from the days of the British Raj, and the source is a Hindi word pagal with almost the same meaning (“madman, idiot”). Perhaps, if you go about puggling holes in dead trees that makes you a bit of a puggle! - via Google!

R2

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×