at+a+high+price
51High on the Hog — Álbum de The Band Publicación 27 de febrero de 1996 Grabación 1995 Género(s) Rock Duración …
52price something out of the market — price yourself/sth out of the ˈmarket idiom to charge such a high price for your goods, services, etc. that nobody wants to buy them Main entry: ↑priceidiom …
53high-fash|ion — «HY FASH uhn», adjective, of or having to do with the fashions taken up by the leaders in fashionable dress and living; of the most exclusive style: »the high price, high fashion field gets itself reorganized every six months by peregrinating… …
54at a high price — expensively, at great cost …
55paid a high price — paid dearly, punished far beyond what he deserved …
56price — A fixed value of something. Prices are usually expressed in monetary terms. In a free market, prices are set as a result of the interaction of supply and demand in a market; when demand for a product increases and supply remains constant, the… …
57price — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ exorbitant, high, inflated, prohibitive, steep ▪ They charge exorbitant prices for their goods. ▪ The price of fuel is prohibitive …
58price system — ▪ economics Introduction a means of organizing economic activity. It does this primarily by coordinating the decisions of consumers, producers, and owners of productive resources. Millions of economic agents who have no direct communication …
59price — I n. 1) to fix, set a price 2) to hike (AE; colloq.), increase, mark up, raise prices 3) to freeze; hold down, keep down; maintain prices 4) to pay a price 5) to place, put a price on smt.; to quote a price 6) bring, command, fetch, get a price… …
60price — price1 [ praıs ] noun *** 1. ) count the amount of money that you have to pay in order to buy something: They charge the same prices in all their restaurants. The cameras range in price from $150 to over $600. The price per person goes down for… …