n.
Game of chance played with cards having a grid of numbered squares corresponding to numbered balls drawn at random.
When a number on the card is drawn, the players cover that number (should they have it); the game is won by covering a certain number of squares in a row (vertically, horizontally, or diagonally). Cards are purchased and proceeds are placed into a common "pot"; winning cards are awarded a portion of the pot. Wildly popular in the mid 20th century, bingo has in recent decades suffered a decline in America but has increased in popularity in other parts of the world. The earliest name for bingo
lotto
was recorded in Britain in 1776; the game is sometimes called keno in the U.S.