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词汇 price
释义 price
noun[ C ]
uk /praɪs/ us /praɪs/
A2[ C ]
the amount of money for which something is sold: 价格,价钱
The price of oil has risen sharply.油价急剧上涨。
House prices have been falling.房价一直在下跌。
We thought they were asking a very high/low price.我们认为他们要价很高/低。
The large supermarkets are offering big price cuts.大超市在大减价。
C1[ S ]
the unpleasant results that you must accept or experience for getting or doing something: 代价
Perhaps being unpopular is the price of success.也许不受欢迎是成功的代价。
An extra few minutes at the airport is a small price to pay for safe travel.在机场多呆几分钟是为安全旅行付出的小代价。
The price of petrol will rise by 5p a gallon from tomorrow.汽油价格从明天起每加仑上涨5便士。
Shall I inquire about the price of tickets?我可以问一下票价吗?
The price of PCs has fallen recently.
The restaurant charges shockingly high prices for its food.
There are a couple of shops in town which sell nice clothes at affordable prices.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Costs & expenses
admission charge
aliment
all in
at cost
at someone's expense
bank charges
outgo
outlay
overrun
palimony
price point
pricing
redress
remittance
reserve
RPI
spend
ticket
tune
upkeep

You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:


Outcomes and consequences

Grammar



Price or prize?
Price /praɪs/ and prize /praɪz/ are nouns. …

Idioms


at any price
at/for a price
not at any price
what price...?
price
verb
uk /praɪs/ us /praɪs/
C1[ Toften passive ]
to say what the price of something is: 给…定价,给…标价
The car is priced at £28,000.这辆车标价2.8万英镑。
There is a lack of reasonably priced housing for rent.要价合理的出租房屋很紧缺。
Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples

to have a certain monetary value
costHiring a car for the week will cost close to £300!
beThe cakes were £1.50 each or two for £2.
sell forThe tickets sell for £100 each.
fetchThe medieval manuscript fetched a record-breaking £1.2 million at auction.
go for somethingHouses around here usually go for about £500,000.
set someone back (something)Phew, that ring looks like it set you back.
[ T ]
to discover how much something costs: 查明…的价格
We went around all the travel agents pricing the different tours.我们走遍了各家旅行社询问各种旅游项目的价格。
competitively priced goods
The company makes and retails moderately priced sportswear.这家公司生产和零售价格适中的运动服。
I bought a reasonably priced radio.我买了一台价格很划算的收音机。
We've been pricing new kitchens.
I think you need to price things slightly lower if you want to get rid of them quickly.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Estimating value
appraise
appraiser
book value
buying power
cost
costing
de-index
dollar sign
est.
euro
index of leading economic indicators
pricelessly
pricing
put a figure on itidiom
put something at something
quantity surveyor
quote
re-estimate
recommended retail price
underestimate

Idiom


price yourself out of the market

Phrasal verb


price someone out

price | American Dictionary


price
noun[ C ]
us/prɑɪs/
the amount of money for which something is sold or offered for sale:
high/low prices
The price of gas went up five cents a gallon.

price


verb[ T ]us/prɑɪs/
The car is priced at $24,000.

Idiom


at a price

price | Business English


price
noun[ C ]
 MONEY, FINANCEuk /praɪs/us
the amount of money for which something is sold or offered for sale:
at/for a priceWe managed to purchase the business for a reasonable price.
house/oil/share pricesLarge increases in house prices have given a strong boost to consumer spending.
During the last week of May, share prices surged.
a competitive/fair/reasonable priceThe company hopes to sell its biofuel at a competitive price.
a high/low priceThey sold the property for a high price.
falling/rising pricesFalling prices should be good news for textile producers.
agree/agree on a priceIt took some time before we could agree on a price
increase/put up/raise pricesThey're quite willing to raise prices when there are more people wanting to buy something than there are units available for sale.
cut/reduce/slash pricesCompanies are slashing prices in an attempt to attract customers who are reluctant to spend.
price increases/reductions/risesA spokesman confirmed that the price increases would take effect from next month.
a price of $50/£300/€10,000, etc.The stocks reached a price of $25.
The plumber will estimate how long the work will take and give the customer a price for labor.
Some retailers are still selling the goods at full price.
 at/for a price
for a lot of money:
Almost anything can be fixed for a price.
 put a price on sth
to say how much something costs, or is worth:
The latest development makes it difficult to put a price on other bonds and loans.
Staff loyalty is something that you can't really put a price on.

See also


actual price
after-hours price
adjusted share price
ask price
asked price
asking price
bargain-priced
basic price
below-cost price
best price
View all

bid price
buying price
cash price
catalogue price
closing price
consumer prices
cost price
current price
cut-price
delivered price
demand price
discount price
equilibrium price
exercise price
factor price
factory price
firm price
fixed price
floor price
forward price
guaranteed price
guide price
half price
inflation-adjusted price
initial price
intervention price
invoice price
issue price
law of one price
list price
low-price
manufacturer's recommended price
market price
market clearing price
median price
net price
nominal price
offering price
offer price
official price
off-price
opening price
package price
per subscriber price
physical price
popular price
premium price
producer price
producer price index
pump price
purchase price
recommended retail price
reservation price
reserve price
retail price
retail price index
sale price
selling price
share price
soft price
spot price
sticker price
stock price
street price
strike price
striking price
subsidized price
suggested retail price
supply price
support price
threshold price
trade price
transfer price
unit price
upset price
wholesale price
wide price
price
verb[ T ]
uk /praɪs/us
COMMERCE, MARKETING
to decide the price of a particular product or service:
price sth at sthWith tickets priced at $300 a person, proceeds from the event are to be given to charity.
Many stocks are priced as if oil were still $28 to $30 a barrel.
price sth high/lowThe sales team felt that the new product had been priced too low.
attractively/competitively pricedThe major mining stocks look attractively priced, and our recommendation is to buy.
moderately/reasonably pricedThe sales staff always stay at a moderately priced hotel.
See also
bargain-priced
mid-priced
overpriced
underpriced
(alsoprice sth up)
to compare prices of similar products or services:
We priced up the various systems on offer before deciding to go for this one.
COMMERCE (alsoprice sth up)
to put a ticket or label on goods in a store to show how much they cost:
All these items need pricing up before they go on display.
The gadget had been wrongly priced by the store, but they agreed to sell it to me for the price on the label.
 price yourself/sb/sth out of the market
COMMERCE
to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it:
By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market.
With house prices and mortgage rates so high, first-time buyers are effectively priced out of the market.

Phrasal verb


price sth in

Examples of price


price
The government therefore set up a marketing-board type of purchasing arrangement, with higher, fixed producer prices.
In short, prices have declined the most in international calls and the least in local calls.
Clearly, different analysts could arrive at different accounting prices.
Privatisation may affect prices if it has an impact on costs.
However, the pricing issue is complex as increasing prices may reduce demand, and thus have an adverse impact on the overall revenue position.
The method of pricing depends on the objectives of the water agency and the government.
If an impresario did not meet the minimum, he had to lower the ticket prices, and his theater would receive a smaller subsidy.
Even in the 1920s, when demand was expanding, an excess continued to keep prices down in most salons.
Lowering prices just enough to empty the stock of resources seems more rational.
Agents are assigned limit prices that are private knowledge to them.
First, it provided a larger selection of drugs then ever before and at regulated prices.
The prices for 1767 were, on an average, higher by 16 per cent than the ones for 1766.
The commission's own comparison of redemption values and current land prices revealed a large discrepancy.
The prices on each activity depended more on a billing structure than the true labor and material that comprised the activity.
There were also massive differences in land prices and yields.
See all examples of price
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

Collocations withprice


price

These are words often used in combination with price.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.


affordable price
And, now we can all afford a beautifully produced composite copy at a remarkably affordableprice.
average price
The gross revenue is the yield multiplied by the averageprice of the product that year.
bargain price
The authorities may imagine that the more companies who tender, the more likely they are to get a bargainprice for their housing.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
See all collocations with price
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