chambers_search-1

Search Chambers

Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.

Search results for 'price':

price noun 1 the amount, usually in money, for which a thing is sold or offered. 2 what must be given up or suffered in gaining something • the price of celebrity. 3 the sum by which someone may be bribed. 4 betting odds. verb (priced, pricing) 1 to fix a price for or mark a price on something. 2 to find out the price of something. a price on someone's head a reward offered for capturing or killing them. at a price at great expense. at any price no matter what it costs, eg in terms of money, sacrifice, etc. beyond or without price invaluable.
ETYMOLOGY: 13c: from French pris, from Latin pretium.

price noun 1 the amount, usually in money, for which a thing is sold or offered. 2 what must be given up or suffered in gaining something • the price of celebrity. 3 the sum by which someone may be bribed. 4 betting odds. verb (priced, pricing) 1 to fix a price for or mark a price on something. 2 to find out the price of something. a price on someone's head a reward offered for capturing or killing them. at a price at great expense. at any price no matter what it costs, eg in terms of money, sacrifice, etc. beyond or without price invaluable.
ETYMOLOGY: 13c: from French pris, from Latin pretium.

price noun 1 the amount, usually in money, for which a thing is sold or offered. 2 what must be given up or suffered in gaining something • the price of celebrity. 3 the sum by which someone may be bribed. 4 betting odds. verb (priced, pricing) 1 to fix a price for or mark a price on something. 2 to find out the price of something. a price on someone's head a reward offered for capturing or killing them. at a price at great expense. at any price no matter what it costs, eg in terms of money, sacrifice, etc. beyond or without price invaluable.
ETYMOLOGY: 13c: from French pris, from Latin pretium.