Not that I've ever heard. All bets are not winners - most bets lose the money.
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It depends on how you use it. If you mean literal colors, then it's not an idiom. If you say something like "It's all there in black and white," then it's an idiom meaning that something is printed.
The idiom is " all the bells and whistles ". It means, all the extras possible. For example, the new car came with all the bells and whistles. It was loaded with every option possible.
If something is beyond all question then there is no chance that it is wrong.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
All Bets Off was created in 1997.
All Bets Off - 1916 was released on: USA: 7 August 1916
No...it keeps going
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The cast of All Bets Off - 1916 includes: Priscilla Dean Eddie Lyons Lee Moran
winners take all winners and losers
An "all in" is a poker hand where at least one player bets all of his chips.
There is a link of all of the winners in the "related links."
It's not an idiom. It means exactly what it says. "By all means" or "by any method necessary."
McMillan and Wife - 1971 All Bets Off 6-1 was released on: USA: 5 December 1976
Who are all the "Dancing with the Stars" winners and runners up?
The Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'winners' is ganhadores. The Portuguese pronounciation is gah-nyah-DOH-reesh. The word can be used to refer to a group of all male winners or of all female winners; or to a mixed group of female and male winners.