Its meaning is different from the meaning of price, which is (principally, but not only) the amount of money expected, required, or given in payment for something So the bottom line is People can use a phrase used in a specific context and give it a different, or a wider.
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The merriam webster dictionary defines cheap as charging or obtainable at a low price a
A good cheap hotel cheap tickets b
Purchasable below the going price or the real value so, strictly speaking, prices cannot be cheap since there is usually no price for a price Goods and services can be cheap or expensive but prices, as you say, can only be low or high Which is correct to use in a sentence, 10 us$ or us$ 10 Perhaps usd should be used instead or even something else?
The preposition of is used here to indicate that the price belongs to/is used in relation with prices of spare parts I baked a cake for your birthday. You know a price after tax (the gross price) but want to find out the price before tax (the net price) So, i would say that
$100 = initial price $110 = gross price $100 = net price
$95 = discount price $105. Is it correct to say 'what price is it?' ask question asked 8 years, 3 months ago modified 8 years, 3 months ago I am seeing both 20$ and $20 usages (20 is nonessential to this question.) what is the difference between them?
1904 topeka capital 10 june 4 city center kept the price of ice cream sodas at five cents until the state sunday school convention struck town, and then the scale was hiked to ten cents It is also used as a transitive verb But why is it hike? Pricey has always been more popular than pricy