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Crossword clues for price

price
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
price
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a bargain price
▪ In the sales you can get a fully fitted kitchen at a bargain price.
a discount price
▪ You can buy books online at discount prices.
a price comparison
▪ A price comparison shopping site was launched last month.
a price increase
▪ We expect a price increase of 1.4% this year.
a price list
▪ We’ll send you a catalog and price list.
a price reduction
▪ Retailers may introduce price reductions to attract custom away from their competitors.
a price rise
▪ The tax would result in a price rise of 6 percent for petrol.
a price tag
▪ Don’t forgot to remove the price tag.
a price/pay/wage freeze
a realistic figure/price
▪ A more realistic figure for energy saving would be 20 percent.
agree a price/plan/strategy etc
▪ We agreed a new four-year contract.
all-in price/package/deal etc
▪ all-in deals to Australia and New Zealand
an all-inclusive price/package/holiday etc
▪ an all-inclusive vacation cruise
asking price
average price
▪ The cars were being sold at an average price of $11,000.
command a high fee/wage/price etc
▪ Which graduates command the highest salaries?
commodity prices
▪ Commodity prices are very high in the UK.
consumer price index
consumer prices
▪ Consumer prices rose 3.26% in December.
cost price
cover price
▪ Ten pence of the cover price goes directly to charity.
cut prices
▪ Shops have been forced to cut their prices after very slow sales.
energy prices
▪ Energy prices are likely to rise significantly in the near future.
exorbitant rent/prices etc
▪ exorbitant rates of interest
fancy pricesBritish English (= very high and often unreasonable prices)
food prices
▪ Food prices have increased rapidly in recent months.
force prices/interest rates etc down/up
▪ The effect will be to increase unemployment and force down wages.
fuel costs/prices
▪ The increase in fuel costs is severely affecting pensioners.
get a good price for
▪ Did you get a good price for it?
half price
▪ Many shoes are at half price or less.
half the price/size/length etc
▪ It’s only half the size of a normal violin.
▪ They offered to pay half the cost of repairs.
high price/charge/tax etc
▪ If you want better public services, you’ll have to pay higher taxes – it’s as simple as that.
house prices
▪ House prices have tripled over the last ten years.
increase in value/price/importance etc
▪ Investments are certain to increase in value.
list price
market price
oil prices
▪ The increase in oil prices has prompted warnings of a global recession.
price control
price cuts
▪ The company announced big price cuts on all its computers.
price fixing
price incentives (=lower prices, offered to people as an incentive)
▪ The strong December sales were attributed to attractive price incentives.
price index
price list
price support
price tag
▪ It’s difficult to put a price tag on such a project say how much it costs.
price war
price/income/wage levels
▪ Wage levels had failed to keep up with inflation.
price/rate/tax etc hikes
▪ Several airlines have proposed fare hikes, effective October 1.
price/wage inflation (=increasing prices/wages)
▪ Price inflation was running at about twelve percent last summer.
property prices
▪ Property prices are much lower here than in London.
purchase price
▪ We borrowed 80% of the purchase price.
put...price tag on (=say how much it costs)
▪ It’s difficult to put a price tag on such a project .
range in age/size/price etc
▪ The shoes range in price from $25 to $100.
rent/price/wage etc controls
▪ Rent controls ensured that no one paid too much for housing.
retail price index
retail price
▪ a retail price of £8.99
road pricing
▪ road pricing schemes for congested cities
rock-bottom prices
▪ bargain holidays at rock-bottom prices
selling price
set a price
▪ We set the price at £30.
share price
▪ The company’s share price has continued to go down.
spot price
▪ He quoted us a spot price for the goods.
starting price
sticker price
trade price
trade-in price/value
▪ The trade-in value is roughly $3000.
unit price
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
average
▪ The average price of these was a little over £26.
▪ On average wholesale prices rose 2. 1 percent in 1995 from 1994.
▪ For the bond in the last example, after three years, the average redemption price is 100.25.
▪ The average house price, according to the Halifax sample, was £30,952 in 1984 and is now £60,837.
▪ The average share price rose 14 cents.
▪ These have been used to calculate continuous price series for 50 individual items based on 10 year average prices.
▪ Industry newsletters report, meantime, that the average price of flat products has fallen by 7 percent this month.
cheap
▪ It seemed cheap at the price - five guineas for travel and a month's board and lodging.
▪ Eventually their designs were appropriated for industrial production, which could be sold at cheaper prices.
▪ Now the trick of course is to buy at the cheapest price or sell at the most expensive.
▪ Selling short involves borrowing stock and then selling it, hoping to replace the shares at a cheaper price later.
▪ The cheapest price he was offered was £730 third party fire and theft.
▪ And a cheap price it was, too, considering your box-office potential in the years ahead.
▪ At £1 a sitting, it was cheap at the price.
▪ From the point of view of other firms, Salomon mortgage traders were cheap at any price.
current
▪ Based on non-seasonally adjusted data, retail sales value in current prices in October was 6 percent higher than in October 1990.
▪ The fair futures prices is equal to the current spot price plus the cost of carry.
▪ As their price falls, however, a larger differential between their current and redemption price emerges.
▪ Its current subsidised price is 45p.
▪ It is possible to decompose the current market price P into accrued interest and principal using the formula.
▪ The current price is comparable with tree-based high quality paper, - that would fall once home-grown hemp is used.
▪ A firm can not, in other words, charge more for its goods than the current market price.
▪ It is largely a matter of economics and much hinges on the current price of energy.
full
▪ Twentieth Century Fox executive Tom Sherak estimated the return would have been £25 million-plus if all tickets had been full price.
▪ Louis today would have faced an unrestricted full fare coach price of $ 1, 586.
▪ In the former case there were no restrictions and thus land changed hands at the full market price.
▪ Finally he gave in and paid her full price for the remaining three.
▪ At full price the set demands as much.
▪ Still, with the Arco refinery back to nearly full production, prices could come down.
▪ The vast majority of members had opted for the full price membership.
▪ Besides, the playing time is hardly generous for an issue retailing at full price.
high
▪ A developer trying to buy up a site in a city comes across an owner who charges a ridiculously high price.
▪ The remainder said that clients are having trouble and that many can get only limited coverage at high prices.
▪ Virtually all empty dwellings were now sold with vacant possession, at extremely high prices.
▪ Firms will invest more and bring more to market only if they get a higher price from consumers.
▪ This evening we have seen the old familiar Labour party of intervention, protectionism and high prices.
▪ The high price of energy reduced the efficiency of the economy.
▪ One director was particularly lucky, selling his shares at 87p, their highest price over the past two years.
▪ A service company makes its profits by hiring people at one price and selling their time at a higher price.
low
▪ The opportunity to purchase works at slightly lower prices had encouraged museums back into the market.
▪ Sharply lower prices and higher sales volume are keys to its success.
▪ Then came low commodity prices, scab disease, excessive moisture and crop-robbing hailstorms.
▪ Selling direct, by mail order and on the telephone, is cost effective, which means low prices for recession-strapped customers.
▪ The idea was to capture the shelf space, lower prices, gain customers and then slowly ratchet prices back up.
▪ The argument was that, despite low prices, farmers were getting back some value in services.
▪ Motorola blamed lagging sales and lower prices for wireless phones for an unexpected drop in fourth-quarter earnings.
reasonable
▪ He also insisted that any private bidders must prove that they are capable of providing better facilities at a reasonable price.
▪ Although not imported in any great quantity it is available at fairly reasonable prices.
▪ The hotel has a small bar and breakfast terrace where clients can get snacks and drinks at reasonable prices.
▪ Bagels always fresh. Reasonable prices.
▪ But it was a reminder the supply of agricultural commodities at reasonable prices could not be guaranteed in the short-term.
▪ This may seem like bad news for the auctioneers and sellers, but for buyers many pristine aircraft sold at reasonable prices.
▪ Secondary double glazing is quite reasonable in price and is fairly easily fitted.
▪ Purchase, Lease, Rent Videotronic machines combine with very high quality with reasonable prices.
retail
▪ At an estimated retail price of $ 500, that translates into $ 500 million.
▪ The recommended retail price of £199.99 inc.
▪ Available this spring for a suggested retail price of $ 99 or less.
▪ The Government takes 65 cent or more of the retail price of a typical bottle of Scotch Whisky.
▪ And we were filling the orders at full retail price, which small businesses were suddenly finding the wherewithal to pay.
▪ The company quotes a target retail price of £300.
▪ That means many gourmet coffee shops more than covered the extra expense with their retail price increases.
stock
▪ When stock prices are volatile, investors often flee the market in favor of less risky money-market mutual funds.
▪ The years 1995 and 1996 were the among the best for stock prices in this century.
▪ Last month, the company announced huge losses and major layoffs in the face of faltering stock prices.
▪ Lower prices for Treasury bonds also weighed on stock prices somewhat, traders said.
▪ Its stock price eroded from a 52-week high of about 39 in October to a low of nearly 15 Tuesday.
▪ Worldwide, stock prices fell in dollar terms.
▪ Thoman said if the stock price remains near current levels, the company is likely to reach that cap soon.
▪ Its stock price closed Friday at 3 well off a 52-week high of 32.
■ NOUN
control
▪ The government would end price controls and subsidies to industry, and impose tight budgets and curbs on welfare spending.
▪ The early years of hyperinflation after price controls were eased in 1992 led to backlogs in debts among businesses and the state.
▪ His new government imposed price controls and nationalized businesses.
▪ Doubts were expressed about last week's rumour of moves to end steel price control.
▪ Also on April 27 measures laying down sanctions against speculation and the circumvention of price controls were announced.
▪ He said that the country had surmounted a crucial test when price controls were lifted for most goods in January.
▪ Its members reckon their enterprises have no future without price controls and government subsidies.
▪ In addition to fiscal measures, price controls have sometimes been used as a weapon.
cut
▪ They embarked on a desperate round of price cuts.
▪ After months of losing traffic, Viacom decided to match the price cuts.
▪ Telegraph proprietor Conrad Black has estimated the price cut will cost £1.5m a month.
▪ We just hope tens of thousands of other Star subscribers can take advantage of this major price cut, too.
▪ They have told me about the effect that price cuts can have on the dairy sector.
▪ Prodigy is trying a price cut of its own.
▪ But recent price cuts have sparked sales and debts have halved to Pounds 66m.
▪ If price cuts have to be paid to all buyers this reduces their profitability as well as increasing their detectability.
house
▪ Indeed, the financial institutions would be hit by a continued slip in house prices.
▪ The figures on relative shares then become highly variable, depending on factors such as share prices and house prices.
▪ This put an end to the national house price explosion, although the effect varied significantly between regions.
▪ The boom in house prices in the 1980s powered the subsequent surge in inflation, and hence the recession.
▪ He believed house prices - the key to recovery in the market - would firm by the end of the year.
▪ In recent decades the most important factors have probably been the increasing number of home owners and rises in house prices.
▪ And house prices have shown the first rise since June.
▪ Trafalgar House's Sir Eric Parker says the tax squeeze on middle income earners could hit house prices.
increase
▪ Unfortunately, faced with price increases of up to 25 percent, many of us decided we could live without champagne.
▪ The success of the price increase also will depend on whether other steelmakers follow.
▪ Fresh protests against price increases took place in Caracas and three other cities on April 4 in which a student was killed.
▪ The price deflator measures the size of price increases, and detects whether higher costs drive consumers away from a product.
▪ Meanwhile, a price increase of 30 percent has had little effect on consumption.
▪ Analysts say the price increase may stick for a few months because demand is strong now.
▪ A 10% price increase was predicted for 1992.
▪ He noted California experienced two big gasoline price increases in the 1990s.
index
▪ The value of these stocks is uprated each year in line with changes in the retail price index.
▪ Salaries are rising barely as fast as the consumer price index, meaning most families do not have more buying power.
▪ The account pays interest at 4.5% gross over the headline retail price index.
▪ Demand is so slow that the price index fell to 40. 8 % in December from 44. 5 %.
▪ Pensions were instead linked to the retail prices index.
▪ The notes' inflation premium, based on the consumer price index, raises the value when you redeem them.
▪ Food prices have consistently risen less than the retail prices index.
▪ In constructing a price index, there are two important initial steps.
level
▪ If the actual price level in t were equal to the expected price level,.
▪ The $ 200, 000 capital gain is illusory, reflecting the change in the overall price level since 1962.
▪ Changes in the price level, however, have been central to the macroeconomics of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
▪ However, others suggest that consumers are well aware of the impact of indirect taxes on the price level.
▪ The price level on other islands can no longer be taken as fixed at p but will be seen to have risen.
▪ The general price level consequently rose by 40 percent per month in the first six months of peace.
▪ Full employment output, y *;, is invariant with respect to the absolute price level and the nominal money stock.
▪ They may therefore agree to sell at price level P whatever is demanded.
list
▪ If one shops around, sizeable discounts are available on the above list prices.
▪ FrontPage will be sold as a separate product, with a list price of $ 695.
▪ The list price starts at £3,945.
▪ Its list price is $ 299.
▪ The current list price for this model is just £11,295.
▪ Despite all evidence to the contrary, the list price of the SE-40 is $ 980.
▪ The product is available immediately, and has a list price of £800.
▪ Most shoppers know that only cave dwellers would pay the list price for electronics goods, for example.
market
▪ In a public company, the value is the market price of the stock.
▪ Therefore taking the data for the day of issue, the market price was 310p and the subscription price was 255p.
▪ Current federal farm programs often guarantee growers a minimum price even if the market price drops lower.
▪ Incidentally, the good art critic should be the reader's friend in refusing to be impressed by art market prices.
▪ You calculate the dividend yield by dividing the annual dividend by the market price of a stock.
▪ Vicenzo had offered the market price for Manningham Electronics.
▪ While world market prices for sugar rose today, domestic prices fell.
oil
▪ A further important consequence was the more rapid implementation of planned petrochemical projects in response to sharp rises in oil production and oil prices.
▪ Average crude oil prices were $ 16. 67 per barrel, up $ 1. 56 from a year ago.
▪ It convinced oil markets that quotas would be cut and briefly caused the oil price to rally.
▪ No struggles for the throne, no uprisings, barely a flutter in oil prices.
▪ The lasting weakness of the euro, combined with soaring oil prices, had begun to fuel inflation.
▪ The reader might question the wisdom of leaving oil prices to be determined by purely market forces.
▪ After a spurt caused by high international oil prices, the headline inflation rate slowed to 3.9 per cent in December.
property
▪ Rising property prices or share prices cause homeowners and shareholders to feel more wealthy - this is known as the wealth effect.
▪ But opponents say it will almost double the population of little Deadwood, sending property prices skyrocketing.
▪ Some of the highest property prices anywhere are in fume-ridden Manhattan and in cleaner but nevertheless congested central Tokyo.
▪ Stagnant for three years, property prices are beginning to move.
▪ The consequence was to redistribute money from the rich south, where property prices were high, to the poorer north.
▪ Escalating property prices mean that many homeowners may now have assets of over £234,000 in the value of their home alone.
▪ Through their impact on property prices, local taxes can have important implications for mobility of labour.
▪ Given the rise in Berlin property prices, choosing a site is as important as getting major funding.
purchase
▪ In addition all the free proceeds of sale must be committed towards the purchase price.
▪ The purchase price was not disclosed.
▪ The purchase price will be and the maturity value will be M 100.
▪ He declined to comment on the purchase price.
▪ The purchase price has been agreed at £5000, and the form of the conveyance follows a conventional pattern.
▪ The fare will save travelers about $ 100 off the current 21-day advance purchase price.
▪ This amounted to the entire purchase price.
▪ He already paid the purchase price for it when he gave his life on the cross.
range
▪ Paint finishes, panel fit and interior fit and finish are all of a standard expected from this price range.
▪ The company could not yet say what the retail price range would be.
▪ Eating Out: Plenty of places in all price ranges - just look at the menu displayed and take your pick.
▪ Lunch prices range from $ 6 to $ 11, dinners from $ 8 to $ 20.
▪ Initial prices range from around £121,750 to £162,500.
▪ It compares favorably with some of the tawny ports in the price range.
▪ The prices range from 47,25 to 5.040,80.
▪ A comprehensive, rather unusual wine list pushes diners into trying new wines in order to stay in an affordable price range.
rise
▪ The devaluation and the cuts in subsidies resulted in price rises of between 100 and 120 percent.
▪ Adjusting for quality improvements or consumer substitutions when prices rise is no doubt technically challenging.
▪ The firm blamed the Sterling devaluation for the price rise.
▪ State-owned enterprises are believed to face pressures to select profit-reducing choices where, for example, price rises are politically sensitive.
▪ Currently wages are rising by about 7.5 p.c. perannum compared to price rises of about 4 p.c.
▪ Market specialists said yesterday's price rises were exacerbated by a shortage of stock in many leading companies.
▪ Such warrants offer the potential for sizeable capital gains if equity prices rise.
share
▪ Rising property prices or share prices cause homeowners and shareholders to feel more wealthy - this is known as the wealth effect.
▪ Nynex CableComms' share price fell as much as 0. 5 pence to 97p on the London Stock Exchange.
▪ The increase in rates initially sent London share prices tumbling.
▪ London share prices also fell sharply.
▪ Criticism of a company's accounts has, on occasion, been accompanied by a fall in its share price.
▪ The mistake then made was to re-establish the holding in Pearson, whose subsequent share price performance has been desultory.
▪ Short sales permitted; 4. Share prices follow a random walk without any underlying trend. 5.
▪ The semi-strong form suggests that all publicly available information is fully and instantaneously reflected in share prices.
tag
▪ The huge price tag attached to the iron certainly promises a great deal.
▪ The price tag for such an endeavor: $ 20million.
▪ She had found the price tag off the tracksuit.
▪ Put a price tag beside each tactic and schedule the date you hope to have that tactic accomplished successfully.
▪ The price tag is expected to be about £150m.
▪ Gillingham marina offers top grade facilities without the South Coast price tag.
▪ A diagnostic colon test, which costs the average beneficiary $ 164, would carry a price tag of $ 79.
ticket
▪ Dial TICKETlink for immediate information on concerts, theatre, events, ticket prices and availability.
▪ At the very least they should cut ticket prices, which have become unaffordable for the average family.
▪ Admittedly, ticket prices for the terraces will be about a third higher than in Schalke's old ground.
▪ The league jacked up its average ticket price 7. 6 percent from last year, to $ 36. 32.
▪ Dean Mansfield says the ticket price is redeemable and he hopes to claim most of it back from the airline.
▪ Suppose the symphony could get away with higher ticket prices because loyal patrons would keep buying.
▪ For some ticket prices there will be a choice of two areas in the auditorium - please state your preference when booking.
▪ If ticket prices fell, would the orchestra play less often?
war
▪ The threat of a price war led to plunging shares for all the major players in the market.
▪ A price war is not to be excluded.
▪ In other words, in the former price and profits are more likely to be affected by price wars.
▪ Hundreds of smaller chains and stores went out of business, many hurt by price wars waged by appliance chains.
▪ Essentially, the talks were hostile: Morgan used the threat of price war to force firms to sell out and merge.
▪ Us Inc. posted a 7 % increase in holiday sales despite a fierce price war among discount retailers.
▪ The inevitable result was over-capacity in the market place followed by a vicious price war.
▪ Jenny Craig and Weight Watchers will have a price war.
■ VERB
agree
▪ The critical aspect still to be agreed was the gas price.
▪ The two parties may agree a price for the land or ask an agent to act on their behalf.
▪ We have already agreed on a price for each tree, so the job is to agree on how many there are.
▪ That is, it may be easier to agree a price for a contract for clinical services than to assess cost or cost-effectiveness.
▪ At the very least the seller agrees that the buyer shall become the owner and the buyer agrees to pay the price.
▪ The weekend talks stalled on United's inability to agree the price for Knighton's withdrawal from the take-over.
▪ They may therefore agree to sell at price level P whatever is demanded.
drive
▪ Over-capacity in some sectors is still driving down selling prices.
▪ The company said aggressive pricing by Intel has driven down prices for so-called 486 chips.
▪ Interest generated by this sale drove prices high in the early 1980s.
▪ He threatened to take over private power plants caught withholding electricity to drive up wholesale prices.
▪ The negotiations had driven up the share prices, which was wonderful.
▪ Tensions in the gulf drove prices at the time up to the present-day rate of $ 1. 46 per gallon.
▪ Therefore price competition between them for the right to sell to the retailers would drive price to marginal cost.
▪ Slumping heating oil prices drove other oil prices lower as well.
drop
▪ A buyer might say that he is willing to buy if the seller drops his price by £100.
▪ Sega and Sony are gearing up by dropping the price on their hardware to $ 199.
▪ Go to the best studio your budget will allow and remember that studios will often drop their price if you haggle.
▪ Prices dropping High-speed modems are really dropping in price.
▪ Which forced Teistra to drop its prices and offer a similar deal through Foxtel.
▪ It recently dropped the price of MiniDisc players to about $ 200 and recordable discs to about $ 8.
▪ Most hotels and resorts drop prices by up to 40 percent.
fall
▪ In order to make up for falling retail prices, tire makers have been struggling to raise prices to car makers.
▪ Traders said intensifying worries about falling prices and excess supply have sent investors scurrying from the semiconductor sector.
▪ Computers continue to advance, with falling prices and shrinking components.
▪ If interest rates shoot up, stocks and bonds usually fall in price.
▪ But when that new equity fell through, all prices collapsed to around 20%.
▪ The company blamed weak sales and falling chip prices for its microprocessors.
▪ Output has fallen and price risen, but not by as much as in the case depicted in Figure 5.2.
▪ The falling price will cause less corn to be offered and will simultaneously encourage consumers to buy more.
fix
▪ Nintendo, a household name, is accused of fixing the prices of its home-video games.
▪ By selling gold forward, producers are guaranteed a fixed price for their future gold production.
▪ This brings dependence on those who fix the price on the international market.
▪ He can buy a put, which would let him sell the shares at a fixed price at a later date.
▪ The fourth is not to believe his own publicity and think that the problem is fixed if the share price goes up.
▪ We kept off the beaten track, away from those traders who fixed high prices, for Shallot knew where to go.
▪ But it was Picasso who fixed the price, knowing that Modigliani would undersell himself.
▪ It called for a strengthening of trade associations after the war, with statutory power to fix prices and output levels.
keep
▪ Governments will be able to meet their targets only if they keep fuel prices high.
▪ Overvalued currencies kept the price of imported goods low, crowding out locally produced goods.
▪ Nigel Lawson, it seemed, was neither holding the pound steady abroad nor keeping down prices at home.
▪ Mmost everyone deplores inflation, especially retirees who have fixed incomes that do not keep up with rising prices.
▪ This will not occur if lack of competition enables firms to keep their prices above the lowest attainable costs of production.
▪ Churn makes it harder for charities to raise money, keeps real-estate prices in check and politics volatile.
▪ Their town house had been sold, lingeringly, with rearguard modernizing actions to keep up its price.
▪ Low inflation that keeps house prices from appreciating and high interest rates were blamed.
lower
▪ Would you be better off lowering your prices and selling for cash only? 3.
▪ Mr Petty is hoping to gain market share by lowering prices on popular menu combinations under a new three-tiered pricing program.
▪ There may be an attempt to increase profits by so lowering the price that no profits are possible.
▪ Liverpool, who splashed £2.9m for Saunders 13 months ago, are equally determined not to lower their asking price.
▪ The South Pasadena specialty food chain recently started lowering its prices for gourmet roasted whole beans.
▪ He lowered his price too much and too soon.
▪ Even Deavenport said that by 1997 the polyester supply could swamp demand, leading to lower prices.
offer
▪ Invariably, the own-brand range is offered at lower prices than the competing brands.
▪ The system went wrong in the 1970s when long-distance attracted new carriers with new technologies enabling them to offer lower prices.
▪ Vicenzo had offered the market price for Manningham Electronics.
▪ And of those few, the vast majority flocked to stores offering rock-bottom prices.
▪ A thief wants to sell quickly and can offer an unusually low price.
▪ The study claimed that the same applications performed better in the Macintosh models and that Macintosh offered better price performance.
▪ Bills are allocated to those offering the highest prices until the total amount on offer is used up.
▪ Tajudin declined to comment on the London Times report yesterday that Airbus offered to cut the price of its A330.
pay
▪ The striker has paid the price for a run which has seen Pompey win only two of their last 19 games.
▪ They would move to buy at low prices from those sellers who have not discovered that some buyers are paying high prices.
▪ The level of security PortKnox gives is high, but you pay a price.
▪ We paid the highest price for the revolution.
▪ He paid the lower price at the checkout but was then arrested and charged with theft.
▪ He said voters also may pay the price of an early primary with a more confusing ballot in November.
raise
▪ So I tried raising the price - that works with a lot of people; you'd be surprised.
▪ Separately, Chrysler said it is raising prices on its 1997 Jeep Wrangler by $ 705 to $ 755 a vehicle.
▪ Would a trader have dared to raise prices so?
▪ To do otherwise could force the company to raise prices on patients, as well as cutting into shareholders' profits.
▪ Simply raising the price of food would increase the disadvantages of people on low incomes.
▪ Of course, all the skateboard sellers could get together and conspire to raise prices.
▪ Wolfensohn has a solution to the lack of water: raise the price.
▪ In order to make up for falling retail prices, tire makers have been struggling to raise prices to car makers.
reduce
▪ In order to compete, firms would therefore have to seek ever-increasing technological innovations to raise productivity, increase output and reduce prices.
▪ The company also will reduce the price of one component of the product 55 percent to $ 69.
▪ Clubs did not compete with one another to attract larger crowds by reducing their prices.
▪ You also get reduced prices for golf and lodging that make the Panhandle a tremendous bargain.
▪ Such producers were encouraged to reduce capacity and maintain prices.
▪ The government wishes to assist the consumer of product X by reducing its price.
sell
▪ The winning objects will be sold at reasonable prices in 300 department stores, from the date our exhibition begins.
▪ The company said it will write off $ 80 million in inventory to account for the expected lower selling prices.
▪ Very expensive, it sells abroad for enormous prices.
▪ Are they quality products sold at a reasonable price with a money-back guarantee?
▪ Should an instrument come with an option attached allowing investors to buy or sell at particular prices?
▪ Founding shareholders are reluctant to dilute their controlling holdings or to sell shares at depressed prices.
▪ Above this line standard uplifts for selling expenses and budgeted profit are added to arrive at average selling price.
set
▪ But it will deal a blow to the agreement, which allows publishers to set a minimum price for most books.
▪ Company officials use a formula to set the stock price and control stock sales to employees.
▪ It has since been used on many small computers as a means of implementing a rich instruction set at a reasonable price.
▪ Let him play for the Astros, at least to the July trading deadline, to set his price.
▪ It allows retailers to set prices as they see fit.
▪ Rosenberg said Cupo also set the price, $ 6 for a burrito.
▪ Manufacturers often set different prices for their goods in different countries, but unofficial importers can undercut these prices.
▪ Oil companies all set the same prices, but not the same salaries.
slash
▪ But they still look for quality and are put off stores that repeatedly slash prices.
▪ Mitsubishi also seeks to cut production by 20 percent and pressure suppliers to slash prices by 15 percent by 2003.
▪ Last year Kraft was forced to slash prices when it began losing sales to own-label cheeses that were 45% cheaper.
▪ The company has slashed prices to fend off competitors and pump up slackening demand.
▪ As it slashed Marlboro's price, Wall Street wailed.
▪ To woo customers, carpet stores have slashed prices, which cut into the bottom line of carpet manufacturers.
▪ After announcing this decision the company slashed prices to sell stock.
▪ Even tiny firms of six men in dingy offices with low overheads were able to compete by slashing prices to the bone.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
buy sth at the cost/expense/price of sth
cheap at the price/at any price
closeout sale/price
exact a high/heavy price
full price
▪ At full price the set demands as much.
▪ Besides, the playing time is hardly generous for an issue retailing at full price.
▪ Bond traders will not be willing to pay full price for a bond that has a low interest rate.
▪ Finally he gave in and paid her full price for the remaining three.
▪ I can't feel that this music as presented here is an attractive proposition at full price.
▪ If the guest took up the booking, the deposit was part payment of the full price.
▪ They was rubbish, and they was full price.
introductory offer/price etc
▪ As an introductory offer the first 1,000 brochures to be sent will include a 10% discount voucher.
▪ Continental begins service to Lima on March 14 with an introductory offer of $ 558 for a round-trip ticket.
▪ Those looking for a low introductory offer that covers both purchases and transfers could consider the Nationwide Building Society and Marbles.
▪ Usually customers are encouraged to join by a special introductory offer of very cheap books or records.
moderately priced
moderately priced homes
▪ Hotels and motels are moderately priced, but book first.
▪ Many moderately priced clothing stores do an excellent job of balancing security and service needs at their dressing rooms.
▪ Shoulder cuts of all kinds of meat are moderately priced; when properly cooked, they make fine eating.
▪ Souverain continues to offer consistently fine value with this rare example of a moderately priced California Chardonnay with character.
▪ The first one is to manufacture the people to buy the moderately priced poison that's brewed in the second one.
▪ The Scanmar 40 is well equipped in basic trim and moderately priced.
▪ There is an extensive and moderately priced wine list.
name your price
▪ While they have consistently refused to name their price, they value their captain much higher than that.
pay the penalty/price
▪ She makes plenty of money, but there's a high price to pay in terms of long hours.
▪ But I had been caught, well and truly, and had paid the price, time and time again.
▪ He had paid the price of surrendering his loyalty to Jeffries-stag-nation, nostalgia, bitterness.
▪ He warned us that we would pay the price.
▪ It started out with all the wrong assumptions about users and their habits and has paid the price in subscriber unrest.
▪ Now ordinary people will pay the price, as inflation eats further into fixed incomes and economic growth stagnates.
▪ The customer wanted to flip a coin about paying the price for a photo of his daughter.
▪ With data filtering one pays the price of decreasing the effective library redundancy and increasing the number of hybridisations.
premium price/rate
▪ Despite the premium rate, Mr Lowman claims that mortgage demand is still high at the moment.
▪ In return for premium service, such retailers charge premium prices.
▪ Insurance companies may collaborate in working out loss probabilities and this leads to uniformity in premium rates.
▪ Is he further aware that many industrialists believe that those high premium rates will cost us business and jobs?
▪ It operates via the regional electricity companies, which must pay a premium price for renewable energy.
▪ Most societies offer the cover with differing benefits, premium rates and periods allowed to make claims.
▪ Naturally, it is always our aim to keep our premium rates as competitive as possible.
▪ Worse, these disasters coincided with falling premium rates in almost every one of the market's businesses.
price-wise/time-wise etc
punitive taxes/price increases etc
sort of price/time/speed etc
▪ But it was the key sort of time, wasn't it?
▪ Got to call opposite number in Coventry office about outstanding claim ... 16.22 Meeting time not like any other sort of time.
▪ It was the sort of price any commander had to pay for hoped-for victory.
▪ It was the sort of time and place where poems flourished along with the vegetation.
▪ Most of us do not have that sort of time to spare.
▪ Of course, a tactless dealer irritated him even more at this sort of time.
▪ Of course, there were other sorts of times too.
the going rate/price/salary etc
▪ A million pounds is the going rate for an ordinary player in today's inflationary market.
▪ At the going rate of half a million dollars per minute, there is no time for truth.
▪ It typically is charged twice the going rate as the criminal inmates housed in the same facility.
▪ One can of C rations was the going rate.
▪ Or holiday-depending if he's got the brains to get the going rate on betrayal.
▪ State law now prohibits insurers from denying coverage to small businesses or charging them more than 20 percent above the going rate.
▪ What is the going rate for bodies in Cairo, Mr el Zaki?
▪ Who is it that sets the going rate for our work?
the retail price index
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Apple was forced to cut prices sharply, reducing its profit margin.
▪ Experts say they expect price rises to be gradual but persistent.
▪ House prices are beginning to fall again.
▪ House prices rose by around 12% in the south-east last year.
▪ Microsoft chairman Bill Gates said it was impossible to build a good computer for such a low price.
▪ The asking price for the 60-acre estate in Atlanta is $27 million.
▪ The Japanese have raised prices just $8 a vehicle on average.
▪ There's a great new clothes store on Main Street, and its prices seem very reasonable.
▪ They charge the same price for a takeaway as they do for eating in the restaurant.
▪ What's the price of a pack of cigarettes nowadays?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Brand A is available, price £x, from the following chains.
▪ But that could cause another problem: If enough farmers pile into grain, it might cause an oversupply and depress prices.
▪ Has the price of heart surgery gone up in the last five hundred years?
▪ He told them to put their pushers out to undercut Huey's prices.
▪ Just sick over the prices in shops selling the 1960s furniture you finally convinced your parents to throw out?
▪ Payment at today's price may be by a single lump sum or by instalments.
▪ The threat of a price war led to plunging shares for all the major players in the market.
II.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
competitively
▪ The fares on the single headed trains were competitively priced and they were fully booked.
▪ Belfast International Airport has three major advantages ... primarily, that it offers Ireland's most competitively priced aviation fuel.
▪ Does he accept that the way to solve the problem is for workers to provide goods and services that are competitively priced?
▪ They usually offer a wide selection of lines, and are very competitively priced.
moderately
▪ Hotels and motels are moderately priced, but book first.
▪ Souverain continues to offer consistently fine value with this rare example of a moderately priced California Chardonnay with character.
▪ There is an extensive and moderately priced wine list.
▪ Many moderately priced clothing stores do an excellent job of balancing security and service needs at their dressing rooms.
▪ On the outskirts of many destinations, you will find moderately priced motels.
reasonably
▪ It is reasonably priced, and I can certainly recommend it very highly both for personal and institutional purchase.
▪ It used to be that Quattro was a pricey model, not just a reasonably priced option.
▪ It's lightweight, durable and relatively easy to fit, as well as being reasonably priced.
▪ Every industrial X-ray analyst should have this reasonably priced book on his / her shelf.
▪ Each title will be c. 200 pages in length and very reasonably priced at only £9.95.
▪ This book is reasonably priced and may appeal to some undergraduates.
Reasonably priced theatre tickets and affordable health care are tangible.
▪ The book is reasonably priced and generally well written, with few errors.
■ NOUN
dollar
▪ Partiya's cornucopia of consumer items is priced in dollars.
▪ Crude oil is the world's most important commodity and crude oil is priced in dollars.
goods
▪ Many exporters are now having to price their goods in euros rather than pounds when they pitch for sales in Euroland.
product
▪ They are often described as speciality products and are priced as such.
▪ How should the product be priced so that firms are competitive as well as profitable?
▪ This product is priced higher than ice cream.
▪ How much are consumers willing to spend and how should products be priced?
share
▪ It would thus appear that shares were incorrectly priced.
▪ The 20 million shares were priced at $ 25 each.
▪ Iron Mountain is offering 2. 3 million shares expected to be priced this week at $ 16 to $ 18 each.
ticket
▪ All tickets are priced at £35 enabling easy transfers.
▪ Seating for the show is reserved, with tickets priced at $ 14 and $ 16.
▪ A family day ticket is priced at £5.00.
▪ The T.R. may have been unique in having tickets priced in farthings.
▪ The swing tickets are for pricing your garments and also for giving washing instructions and fibre content.
▪ Babes in the Wood tickets are priced from £4.50£10.50, and dress circle boxes at £15.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
cheap at the price/at any price
closeout sale/price
full price
▪ At full price the set demands as much.
▪ Besides, the playing time is hardly generous for an issue retailing at full price.
▪ Bond traders will not be willing to pay full price for a bond that has a low interest rate.
▪ Finally he gave in and paid her full price for the remaining three.
▪ I can't feel that this music as presented here is an attractive proposition at full price.
▪ If the guest took up the booking, the deposit was part payment of the full price.
▪ They was rubbish, and they was full price.
introductory offer/price etc
▪ As an introductory offer the first 1,000 brochures to be sent will include a 10% discount voucher.
▪ Continental begins service to Lima on March 14 with an introductory offer of $ 558 for a round-trip ticket.
▪ Those looking for a low introductory offer that covers both purchases and transfers could consider the Nationwide Building Society and Marbles.
▪ Usually customers are encouraged to join by a special introductory offer of very cheap books or records.
moderately priced
moderately priced homes
▪ Hotels and motels are moderately priced, but book first.
▪ Many moderately priced clothing stores do an excellent job of balancing security and service needs at their dressing rooms.
▪ Shoulder cuts of all kinds of meat are moderately priced; when properly cooked, they make fine eating.
▪ Souverain continues to offer consistently fine value with this rare example of a moderately priced California Chardonnay with character.
▪ The first one is to manufacture the people to buy the moderately priced poison that's brewed in the second one.
▪ The Scanmar 40 is well equipped in basic trim and moderately priced.
▪ There is an extensive and moderately priced wine list.
premium price/rate
▪ Despite the premium rate, Mr Lowman claims that mortgage demand is still high at the moment.
▪ In return for premium service, such retailers charge premium prices.
▪ Insurance companies may collaborate in working out loss probabilities and this leads to uniformity in premium rates.
▪ Is he further aware that many industrialists believe that those high premium rates will cost us business and jobs?
▪ It operates via the regional electricity companies, which must pay a premium price for renewable energy.
▪ Most societies offer the cover with differing benefits, premium rates and periods allowed to make claims.
▪ Naturally, it is always our aim to keep our premium rates as competitive as possible.
▪ Worse, these disasters coincided with falling premium rates in almost every one of the market's businesses.
price-wise/time-wise etc
punitive taxes/price increases etc
sort of price/time/speed etc
▪ But it was the key sort of time, wasn't it?
▪ Got to call opposite number in Coventry office about outstanding claim ... 16.22 Meeting time not like any other sort of time.
▪ It was the sort of price any commander had to pay for hoped-for victory.
▪ It was the sort of time and place where poems flourished along with the vegetation.
▪ Most of us do not have that sort of time to spare.
▪ Of course, a tactless dealer irritated him even more at this sort of time.
▪ Of course, there were other sorts of times too.
the going rate/price/salary etc
▪ A million pounds is the going rate for an ordinary player in today's inflationary market.
▪ At the going rate of half a million dollars per minute, there is no time for truth.
▪ It typically is charged twice the going rate as the criminal inmates housed in the same facility.
▪ One can of C rations was the going rate.
▪ Or holiday-depending if he's got the brains to get the going rate on betrayal.
▪ State law now prohibits insurers from denying coverage to small businesses or charging them more than 20 percent above the going rate.
▪ What is the going rate for bodies in Cairo, Mr el Zaki?
▪ Who is it that sets the going rate for our work?
the retail price index
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ I've been pricing VCRs.
▪ Please get your fruit and vegetables weighed and priced before you take them to the checkout.
▪ Porsche said its new 911 Carrera 4s would be very competitively priced.
▪ These shoes are pretty reasonably priced.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ For weekend breaks only, the Holiday Inn Hotel is also priced at this grade even though it is a 5 star hotel.
▪ In Chapter 6 the variant known as the arbitrage pricing model will be presented.
▪ It was this that suggested that there had been pricing errors which lead to the suspension of the trusts.
▪ Specials are items that are priced less than their regular price for a period of time, perhaps only one day.
▪ The debentures were priced to yield 25 basis points more than comparable U. S. Treasury notes.
▪ The notes, which are noncallable for one year, were priced to yield 69 basis points above comparable Treasurys.
▪ Unsurprisingly, supermarkets are the loudest advocates of free pricing, followed closely by mass booksellers.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Price

Price \Price\, n. [OE. pris, OF. pris, F. prix, L. pretium; cf. Gr. ? I sell ? to buy, Skr. pa? to buy, OI. renim I sell. Cf. Appreciate, Depreciate, Interpret, Praise, n. & v., Precious, Prize.]

  1. The sum or amount of money at which a thing is valued, or the value which a seller sets on his goods in market; that for which something is bought or sold, or offered for sale; equivalent in money or other means of exchange; current value or rate paid or demanded in market or in barter; cost. ``Buy wine and milk without money and without price.''
    --Isa. lv. 1.

    We can afford no more at such a price.
    --Shak.

  2. Value; estimation; excellence; worth.

    Her price is far above rubies.
    --Prov. xxxi. 10.

    New treasures still, of countless price.
    --Keble.

  3. Reward; recompense; as, the price of industry.

    'T is the price of toil, The knave deserves it when he tills the soil.
    --Pope.

    Price current, or Price list, a statement or list of the prevailing prices of merchandise, stocks, specie, bills of exchange, etc., published statedly or occasionally.

Price

Price \Price\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Priced; p. pr. & vb. n. Pricing.]

  1. To pay the price of. [Obs.]

    With thine own blood to price his blood.
    --Spenser.

  2. To set a price on; to value. See Prize.

  3. To ask the price of; as, to price eggs. [Colloq.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
price

c.1200, pris "value, worth; praise," later "cost, recompense, prize" (mid-13c.), from Old French pris "price, value, wages, reward," also "honor, fame, praise, prize" (Modern French prix), from Late Latin precium, from Latin pretium "reward, prize, value, worth," from PIE *pret-yo-, \nfrom root *per- (5) "to traffic in, to sell" (cognates: Sanskrit aprata "without recompense, gratuitously;" Greek porne "prostitute," originally "bought, purchased," pernanai "to sell;" Lithuanian perku "I buy").\n

\n Praise, price, and prize began to diverge in Old French, with praise emerging in Middle English by early 14c. and prize being evident by late 1500s with the rise of the -z- spelling. Having shed the extra Old French and Middle English senses, the word now again has the base sense of the Latin original. To set (or put) a price on someone, "offer a reward for capture" is from 1766.

price

"to set the price of," late 14c., from price (n.) or from Old French prisier, variant of preisier "to value, estimate; to praise." Related: Priced; pricing.

Wiktionary
price

n. The cost required to gain possession of something. vb. 1 To determine the monetary value of (an item), to put a price on. 2 (context obsolete English) To pay the price of, to make reparation for. 3 (context obsolete English) To set a price on; to value; to prize. 4 (context colloquial dated English) To ask the price of.

WordNet
price
  1. n. the amount of money needed to purchase something; "the price of gasoline"; "he got his new car on excellent terms"; "how much is the damage?" [syn: terms, damage]

  2. the property of having material worth (often indicated by the amount of money something would bring if sold); "the fluctuating monetary value of gold and silver"; "he puts a high price on his services"; "he couldn't calculate the cost of the collection" [syn: monetary value, cost]

  3. value measured by what must be given or done or undergone to obtain something; "the cost in human life was enormous"; "the price of success is hard work"; "what price glory?" [syn: cost, toll]

  4. the high value or worth of something; "her price is far above rubies"

  5. a reward for helping to catch a criminal; "the cattle thief has a price on his head"

  6. cost of bribing someone; "they say that every politician has a price"

  7. United States operatic soprano (born 1927) [syn: Leontyne Price, Mary Leontyne Price]

price
  1. v. determine the price of; "The grocer priced his wares high"

  2. ascertain or learn the price of; "Have you priced personal computers lately?"

Gazetteer
Price, UT -- U.S. city in Utah
Population (2000): 8402
Housing Units (2000): 3311
Land area (2000): 4.243980 sq. miles (10.991857 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 4.243980 sq. miles (10.991857 sq. km)
FIPS code: 62030
Located within: Utah (UT), FIPS 49
Location: 39.600119 N, 110.806564 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 84501
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Price, UT
Price
Price -- U.S. County in Wisconsin
Population (2000): 15822
Housing Units (2000): 9574
Land area (2000): 1252.557215 sq. miles (3244.108156 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 25.870112 sq. miles (67.003280 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1278.427327 sq. miles (3311.111436 sq. km)
Located within: Wisconsin (WI), FIPS 55
Location: 45.711050 N, 90.373060 W
Headwords:
Price
Price, WI
Price County
Price County, WI
Wikipedia
Price (disambiguation)

The price is the assigned numerical monetary value of a good, service, or asset.

Price may also refer to:

Price (given name)

Price is a male given name which may refer to:

  • Price Cobb (born 1954), American racecar driver
  • Price Daniel (1910-1988), US Senator and 38th Governor of Texas
  • Price Daniel, Jr. (1941-1981), American politician, Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives from 1973 to 1975
  • Price Ellison (1852–1932), English-born Canadian politician
  • Price Hartstonge (1692–1743), Anglo-Irish politician who sat in the Irish House of Commons
Price

In ordinary usage, price is the quantity of payment or compensation given by one party to another in return for goods or services.

In modern economies, prices are generally expressed in units of some form of currency. (For commodities, they are expressed as currency per unit weight of the commodity, e.g. euros per kilogram.) Although prices could be quoted as quantities of other goods or services this sort of barter exchange is rarely seen. Prices are sometimes quoted in terms of vouchers such as trading stamps and air miles. In some circumstances, cigarettes have been used as currency, for example in prisons, in times of hyperinflation, and in some places during World War 2. In a black market economy, barter is also relatively common.

In many financial transactions, it is customary to quote prices in other ways. The most obvious example is in pricing a loan, when the cost will be expressed as the percentage rate of interest. The total amount of interest payable depends upon credit risk, the loan amount and the period of the loan. Other examples can be found in pricing financial derivatives and other financial assets. For instance the price of inflation-linked government securities in several countries is quoted as the actual price divided by a factor representing inflation since the security was issued.

Price sometimes refers to the quantity of payment requested by a seller of goods or services, rather than the eventual payment amount. This requested amount is often called the asking price or selling price, while the actual payment may be called the transaction price or traded price. Likewise, the bid price or buying price is the quantity of payment offered by a buyer of goods or services, although this meaning is more common in asset or financial markets than in consumer markets.

Economists sometimes define price more generally as the ratio of the quantities of goods that are exchanged for each other.

Price theory Economic theory asserts that in a free market economy the market price reflects interaction between supply and demand: the price is set so as to equate the quantity being supplied and that being demanded. In turn these quantities are determined by the marginal utility of the asset to different buyers and to different sellers. In reality, the price may be distorted by other factors, such as tax and other government regulations.

When a commodity is for sale at multiple locations, the law of one price is generally believed to hold. This essentially states that the cost difference between the locations cannot be greater than that representing shipping, taxes, other distribution costs and more. In the case of the majority of consumer goods and services, distribution costs are quite a high proportion of the overall price, so the law may not be very useful.

Price (surname)

Price is a patronymic name derived from the Welsh "ap Rhys" meaning "son of Rhys". The given name Rhys means "enthusiasm" in Welsh. It is a common surname among those of Welsh ancestry. At the time of the British Census of 1881, its frequency was highest in Radnorshire (38.2 times the British average), followed by Brecknockshire, Herefordshire, Monmouthshire, Flintshire, Shropshire, Denbighshire, Glamorgan, Carmarthenshire and Worcestershire. The surname has many other spellings including Priess, Priesz, and many others.

The name is thought to have originally been spelled "Pryce" and pronounced "Preese". Name experts believe that the change of the "y" to "i" and the subsequent change in pronunciation was originally an affectation meant to make the name seem more English and therefore more prestigious.

Price (Sussex cricketer)

Price (full name and dates of birth and death unknown) was an English cricketer. Price's batting and bowling styles are unknown. He appeared in scorecards as Captain Price, suggesting an army or naval connection.

Price made his first-class debut for Sussex against Kent at the Royal New Ground in 1828. He was dismissed for 3 runs by William Ashby in Sussex's first-innings, while in their second-innings he was dismissed for a single run, though the bowler who his wicket is not recorded. The match was drawn. His next first-class appearance came twelve years later for the Marylebone Cricket Club against Oxford University at Lord's in 1840. The following season he appeared for the Fast Bowlers (suggesting his bowling style was fast in nature) in a first-class match against the Slow Bowlers, while in 1842 he played his final first-class match for the Marylebone Cricket Club against Hampshire. In his four first-class matches, Price scored 10 runs at an average of 1.66, with a high score of 6. With the ball, he took 2 wickets, both of which came for Marylebone Cricket Club, although his bowling average and best figures are unknown due to incomplete records.

Usage examples of "price".

He saw Darryl Adin and his gang training the Gellesenians in guerrilla warfare, hoping to make the price of taking the planet too high in Konor lives.

The advertisement also gave the reader the specifications of the product-measurements, accessories and price.

He left the price of admission on the little desk to his left and as an afterthought, tossed in something for the lock.

Sis and old Si and Shep Hodgden and Gimmy Biddle and Charles Fifield was there and father said this will make jest the horse you want for your store and old Si said she aint biger than a rat and father said i gess she is big enuf to carry out all your lodes unless you put down your price, and then they all laffed at Si, and then Si said she was a puller and father said what do you want Josiar one that you have to push, and then they laffed agen and when father called him Josiar i know Si had better look out for when father calls me Henry i know i am in for a liking.

Reflect upon the continual, wearisome pregnancies, the price of a momentary and I may say aleatory pleasure.

Seregil paid his price without quibbling and Maklin threw in a sword belt, showing Alec how to wrap it twice around his waist 63 and fix the lacings so that the blade hung at the proper angle against his left hip.

Master Radly had included an oilskin bow case and a covered quiver in the price of the bow, to which Alec had added a score of arrows, linen twine and wax for bowstrings, and packets of red and white fletching.

There, he was appalled to find that what he believed to be such a pretty amethyst, for which he would be willing to pay three or four hundred dollars, was an alexandrite priced at five thousand.

Here, Georgia sued certain asphalt companies for treble damages under the Sherman Act arising allegedly out of a conspiracy to control the prices of asphalt of which Georgia was a large purchaser.

If your company receives every ounce of alumite in existence and finds that it meets requirements, will they pay my price for the formula?

Throughout the world Tierra Alvarado was known informally as the Clone Zone, the place where anyone could go to have a reasonable facsimile manufactured at a reasonable price.

Eye of Malsum, Angekok and his cruel price for hospitality and the shadowy shapelessness of a darkling demon summoned from out an icy sky!

Sicily for one cent apiece and transfer them to Malta secretly at four and a half cents apiece in order to get the price of eggs up to seven cents apiece when people come to Malta looking for them.

Finn Durandal immediately, as he sat and listened patiently while they all but fell over themselves detailing all the appalling things they could do for him, for the right price.

Where could one obtain the best price for hundred-ton lots of Arabica coffee?