Price

  • 51Price — (as used in expressions) Johnson, James P(rice) Emily Price Price, (Mary Violet) Leontyne Price, Vincent (Leonard) …

    Enciclopedia Universal

  • 52price — [13] The Latin word for ‘price’ was pretium (it was probably derived ultimately from the Indo European preposition *preti ‘back’, and so etymologically denoted ‘recompense’). Its descendants have spread through most modern western European… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 53price —    The amount demanded or paid for (not to be confused with the art term value) for an art object, writing, intellectual property, etc., which is largely the same as its market value or monetary worth. Knowing an earlier price for something can… …

    Glossary of Art Terms

  • 54price — n 1. cost, expense, charge, Inf. damages, fee, rate; check, Inf. tab, bill, Fr. addition; pay, payment, hire, rent, fare, toll, tax, levy, duty, assessment; consideration, compensation, recompense, remuneration; outlay, expenditure; value, worth …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 55price —   Kumu kū ai, kumu, auhau, kālā, make.    ♦ Bid price, huina koho.    ♦ What is the price? He aha ke kumu kū ai? Ehia kālā?    ♦ High price, kumu kū ai nui …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 56price — [13] The Latin word for ‘price’ was pretium (it was probably derived ultimately from the Indo European preposition *preti ‘back’, and so etymologically denoted ‘recompense’). Its descendants have spread through most modern western European… …

    Word origins

  • 57Price, H.H. — ▪ British philosopher in full  Henry Habberley Price   born 1899, Neath, Glamorgan, Wales died Nov. 26, 1985       British philosopher noted for his study of perception and thinking.       Before his appointment as Wykeham professor of logic at… …

    Universalium

  • 58price — 1. noun /pɹaɪs/ a) The cost required to gain possession of something. b) The cost of an action or deed. 2. verb /pɹaɪs/ To determine the …

    Wiktionary

  • 59price — 1. The rate at which a good or service can be exchanged for *money. Price mechanisms are driven by competitive pressures in capitalist or *mixed economies in the regulation of *supply and *demand, and they facilitate distribution and exchange.… …

    Auditor's dictionary

  • 60price — noun 1) the purchase price Syn: cost, charge, fee, fare, amount, sum; informal damage 2) the price of success Syn: consequence, result, cost, penalty, toll …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary