From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishantean‧te1 /ˈænti/ noun → up/raise the ante → penny ante
Examples from the Corpus
ante• What they are now doing is compromising, in this half-baked manner, by raising the ante to 70.• Creating an economic asset in the form of a parental dividend would obviously up the ante in these kinds of contentious issues.• The group mind plays Pong so well that Carpenter decides to up the ante.• Sometimes the parents upped the ante.• And next year, the requests might double, with the whole dreary cycle restarting at an upped ante.anteante2 verb (past tense and past participle anted or anteed, present participle anteing) → ante up (something)→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
ante• For the first time, women would ante up $ 1,000 to join a special group in the party.• My friends would have to ante up their credit card again for another possible $ 35 charge.ante-ante- /æntɪ/ prefix BEFOREbefore → anti-, post-, pre- antedate (=earlier than something) antenatal (=before birth)Examples from the Corpus
ante-• the antebellum South• to antedateFrom Longman Business Dictionaryantean‧te /ˈænti/ noun raise/up the ante informal to make a situation more competitive, so that individuals or companies have more to gain or loseThe computer company’s lead may be short-lived as rivals raise the ante with faster machines.Origin ante- Latin ante “before, in front of” ante1 (1800-1900) ante-