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Answer for the clue "Retailer's concern ", 6 letters:
markup

Alternative clues for the word markup

Word definitions for markup in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Markup is the difference between the cost of a good or service and its selling price. A markup is added onto the total cost incurred by the producer of a good or service in order to cover the costs of doing business and create a profit . The total cost ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 The notation that is used to indicate how text should be displayed. 2 The percentage or amount by which a seller hike up his buy-in price when determining his selling price. 3 An increase in price.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also mark up , mark-up , "amount added by a retailer to cover overhead and provide profit," 1899; see mark (v.).

Usage examples of markup.

Jules Verne This version has been stripped of markup, markup in version 10.

They were so accustomed to getting their 45 percent markup, they never let go.

Now, if we can get within 5 percent of the same price and quality, we take a smaller markup and go with the American product.

You can save about seventy percent markup if you know how to go about it.

When we arrived in these little towns offering low prices every day, satisfaction guaranteed, and hours that were realistic for the way people wanted to shop, we passed right by that old variety store competition, with its 45 percent markups, limited selection, and limited hours.

Grocery markups in Beverly Hills, my mother had warned me, were absurd.

They let the freelancers do the scut work, and rake a percentage off the top—plus selling information, repairs and stuff, all at fantastic markups.

With the advent of sophisticated GUI's (Graphic UserInterfaces) and VRML (Virtual Reality Markup Language) - these maps may well show us the way to a more colourful and user-friendly future.

Everything will be based on the industry-standard Extensible Markup Language (XML), which, unlike the Web-pioneering HTML language, can present structured data (such as databases and spreadsheets) and is more similar to traditional software development languages.