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price 音标拼音: [pr'ɑɪs] n. 价格,代价,价值
vt. 定…的价格 价格,代价,价值定…的价格 price价格 price n 1: 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" [ synonym: { monetary value}, { price}, { cost}] 2: 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?" [ synonym: { price}, { terms}, { damage}] 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?" [ synonym: { price}, { cost}, { toll}] 4: the high value or worth of something; " her price is far above rubies" 5: a monetary 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) [ synonym: { Price}, { Leontyne Price}, { Mary Leontyne Price}] v 1: determine the price of; " The grocer priced his wares high" 2: ascertain or learn the price of; " Have you priced personal computers lately?" Price \ Price\, v. t. [ imp. & p. p. { Priced}; p. pr. & vb. n. { Pricing}.] 1. To pay the price of. [ Obs.] [ 1913 Webster] With thine own blood to price his blood. -- Spenser. [ 1913 Webster] 2. To set a price on; to value. See { Prize}. [ 1913 Webster] 3. To ask the price of; as, to price eggs. [ Colloq.] [ 1913 Webster]
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. [ 1913 Webster] We can afford no more at such a price. -- Shak. [ 1913 Webster] 2. Value; estimation; excellence; worth. [ 1913 Webster] Her price is far above rubies. -- Prov. xxxi. 10. [ 1913 Webster] New treasures still, of countless price. -- Keble. [ 1913 Webster] 3. Reward; recompense; as, the price of industry. [ 1913 Webster] ' T is the price of toil, The knave deserves it when he tills the soil. -- Pope. [ 1913 Webster] { 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. [ 1913 Webster] 135 Moby Thesaurus words for " price": amends, amount, appraisal, appraise, asking price, assay, assess, atonement, bank rate, bearish prices, bid price, blood money, bonus, book value, bounty, bullish prices, call price, charge, closing price, compensation, compensatory interest, compound interest, consequence, consideration, cost, cost out, damages, dearness, decline, discount rate, equivalent odds, evaluate, evaluation, even break, even chance, exorbitant interest, expenditure, expense, extraordinary worth, face value, fair- trade, fee, figure, fixed price, flash price, flurry, flutter, good chance, great price, great value, gross interest, guerdon, high, honorarium, hundred- to- one shot, indemnification, indemnity, interest, interest rate, invaluableness, issue par, issue price, long odds, long shot, low, lucrative interest, market price, market value, meed, mortgage points, net interest, no chance, nominal value, odds, offering price, opening price, outlay, par, par value, parity, payment, penal interest, penal retribution, penalization, penalty, penance, preciousness, premium, price of money, price tag, priceless, pricelessness, prize, punishment, put price, quittance, quotation, quote a price, quoted price, rally, rate, rate of interest, recompense, redress, remuneration, reparation, requital, requitement, restitution, retribution, return, reward, sacrifice, salvage, satisfaction, settling price, short odds, simple interest, small chance, smart money, solatium, square odds, stated value, swings, tab, tariff, toll, usury, valorize, valuableness, valuate, valuation, value, wergild, worthPRICE, contracts. The consideration in money given for the purchase of a thing. 2. There are three requisites to the quality of a price in order to make a sale. 3.- 1. It must be serious, and such as may be demanded: if, therefore, a person were to sell me an article, and by the agreement, reduced to writing, he were to release me from the payment, the transaction would no longer be a sale, but a gift, Poth. Vente, n. 18. 4.- 2. The second quality of a price is, that the price be certain and determinate; but what may be rendered certain is considered as certain if, therefore, I sell a thing at a price to be fixed by a third person, this is sufficiently certain, provided the third person make a valuation and fix the price. Poth. Vente, n. 23, 24. 5.- 3. The third quality of a price is, that it consists in money, to be paid down, or at a future time, for if it be of any thing else, it will no longer be a price, nor the contract a sale, but exchange or barter. Poth. Vente, n. 30; 16 Toull. n. 147. 6. The true price of a thing is that for which things of a like nature and quality are usually sold in the place where situated, if real property; or in the place where exposed to sale, if personal. Poth. Contr. de Vente, n. 243. The first price or cost of a thing does not always afford a sure criterion of its value. It may have been bought very dear or very cheap. Marsh. Ins. 620, et seq.; Ayliffe' s Pand. 447; Merlin, Repert. h. t.; 4 Pick. 179; 8 Pick. 252; 16 Pick. 227. 7. In a declaration in trover it is usual, when the chattel found is a living one, to lay it as of such a price when dead, of such a value. 8 Wentw. Pl. 372, n; 2 Lilly' s Ab. 629. Vide Bouv. Inst. Index, h. t.; Adjustment; Inadequacy of price; Pretium affectionis. |
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