idiom
—used to say one is making a claim (to something)
"I call dibs on the front seat!"
idiom
—used to say one is making a claim (to something)
"I call dibs on the front seat!"
idiom
—used to say one is making a claim (to something)
"I call dibs on the front seat!"
idiom
—used to say one is making a claim (to something)
"I call dibs on the front seat!"
1 Cowboy Carter also has dibs on the biggest week of 2024 to date, marking the largest opening frame since Taylor Swift’s 1989 (Taylor’s Version) bowed with 1.653 million units in November.
2 Bad news, Junior: Your primos already called dibs on your bunk bed.
3 The frequent result, not surprisingly, is a tussle over precious space informed by people's personal views on who has dibs on the armrests or how they should be partitioned.
4 Call dibs on Stacey, who almost exclusively wears the color black.
5 That’s because customers for one bank in Argentina, Banco Patagonia, get dibs on the first 24,000 Swift tickets and can pay in six installments free of interest, according to ticket sale site AllAccess.com.
6 And Allegiant would have dibs on the megastar tours – the Swifts, the Beyonces and Jay-Zs and Springsteens, leaving the occasional Billy Joel or perhaps Bad Bunny for the ballpark.