Find the word definition

Crossword clues for exorbitant

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
exorbitant
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
exorbitant (=extremely high)
▪ Some landlords charge exorbitant rents.
exorbitant/extortionate (=much too high)
▪ £10,000 seemed an exorbitant price for the rug.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
fee
▪ The exorbitant fee caused uproar in the land.
price
▪ Slipped in as if it is a mere trifle, a quite exorbitant price!
▪ So we paid an exorbitant price for the decisions that were made in good faith and for good purpose.
▪ A few farmers even managed to do very well out of the exorbitant prices charged to urban residents for a few mouthfuls of grain.
rent
▪ When that failed they attempted an exorbitant rent so I intervened.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ It's a nice hotel, but the prices are exorbitant.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And the price of entertainment everywhere is exorbitant.
▪ Each year time and money is wasted by the exorbitant amount of telephoning required to gather in all this information. 8.
▪ It is a price that today may seem exorbitant to many.
▪ Only 10 to 15 percent goes toward administrative costs, which is certainly not exorbitant.
▪ The exorbitant fee caused uproar in the land.
▪ We couldn't afford to buy and rents are exorbitant.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Exorbitant

Exorbitant \Ex*or"bi*tant\, a. [L. exorbitans, -antis, p. pr. of exorbitare to go out of the track; ex out + orbita track: cf. F. exorbitant. See Orbit.]

  1. Departing from an orbit or usual track; hence, deviating from the usual or due course; going beyond the appointed rules or established limits of right or propriety; excessive; extravagant; enormous; inordinate; as, exorbitant appetites and passions; exorbitant charges, demands, or claims.

    Foul exorbitant desires.
    --Milton.

  2. Not comprehended in a settled rule or method; anomalous.

    The Jews . . . [were] inured with causes exorbitant, and such as their laws had not provided for.
    --Hooker.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
exorbitant

mid-15c., a legal term, "deviating from rule or principle, eccentric;" from Late Latin exorbitantem (nominative exorbitans), present participle of exorbitare "deviate, go out of the track," from ex- "out of" (see ex-) + orbita "wheel track" (see orb). General sense of "excessive, immoderate" is from 1620s; of prices, rates, etc., from 1660s. Related: Exorbitantly.

Wiktionary
exorbitant

a. exceeding proper limits; extravagant; excessive or unduly high.

WordNet
exorbitant

adj. greatly exceeding bounds of reason or moderation; "exorbitant rent"; "extortionate prices"; "spends an outrageous amount on entertainment"; "usorious interest rate"; "unconscionable spending" [syn: extortionate, outrageous, steep, unconscionable, usurious]

Usage examples of "exorbitant".

The copyhold was also subject to a variety of grievous taxes, which the lord had the privilege, upon many occasions, of imposing - such as aids, reliefs, primer seisin, wardship, escheats for felony and want of heirs, and many more, altogether so exorbitant and oppressive as often totally to ruin the tenant and rob him of almost all interest in his property.

Known as the Naos sharptooth, the fish spawned only in the coldest months, was shipped offworld, flash-frozen, and sold at exorbitant prices in eateries from Mon Calamari to Corellia.

The freed slave who owned the building and charged exorbitant rents, extorting one out of every three reales from the putas and sugarcane hucksters he boarded, clearly did not bother with repairs.

The gum senega, of which a great quantity is used by the manufacturers of England, being wholly in the hands of the enemy, the English dealers were obliged to buy it at second-hand from the Dutch, who purchased it of the French, and exacted an exorbitant price for that commodity.

But the elder Titus Vettius being a tightwad of the first order, and too old to be the father of a twenty-year-old besides, young Titus Vettius borrowed the money at exorbitant interest, pledging his entire inheritance as collateral.

My father never went along, having become an apostate at the age of eight over the exorbitant price of votive candles.

The price of provisions, and bread in particular, being raised to an exorbitant rate in consequence of an absurd exportation of corn, for the sake of the bounty, a formidable body of colliers, and other labouring people, raised an insurrection at Bristol, began to plunder the corn vessels in the harbour, and commit such outrages in the city, that the magistrates were obliged to have recourse to military power.

He was introduced to the drug, acquired a habit for it, was forced to hand it out to clients at the Metronome and as a reward was given as much as Rivera thought was good for him at the usual exorbitant rate.

His heart sank as he saw that the tariff, instead of being quoted in the common contraction of monits, was given in monetary unitsthe sort of traditional touch usually associated with exorbitant prices.

He often protected Hamburg against exorbitant exactions, The Hanse Towns revived a little under his government, which continued longer than that of Mortier, Michaud, and Brune.

Westminster, and preventing scandalous monopolies of a few engrossing fishmongers, who imposed exorbitant prices on their fish, and, in this particular branch of traffic, gave law to above six hundred thousand of their fellow-citizens.

Railway companies were especially plundered in the exorbitant valuation of lands, and therefore an advocate who could check the valuers by cross-examination was sought after.

In the spacious anteroom are three-way floor-length mirrors, a long vanity with tissues and cotton balls and individual mirrors, dispensers for lotions and astringent cleansers, little squirt bottles of antistatic and hairspray, nail buffers, a vending machine dispensing individual vials of various scents at a cost per ounce as exorbitant as if it were Parisian perfume.

The inhabitants of Westminster had long laboured under the want of a fish-market, and complained that the price of this species of provision was kept up at an exorbitant rate by the fraudulent combination of a few dealers, who engrossed the whole market at Billingsgate, and destroyed great quantities of fish, in order to enhance the value of those that remained.

Money, though obviously essential on occasion, usually had a bad effect on intelligence - for his part he had never touched a Brummagem farthing for his services- and money in such exorbitant, unnatural amounts might be very bad indeed, endangering all those who came into contact with it.