Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    pricey
    /ˈprʌɪsi/

    adjective

    • 1. expensive: informal "boutiques selling pricey clothes"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Etymonline confirms: "1932, from price + -y ". Pricey has always been more popular than pricy. Pricey is getting even more popular, while pricy fades in comparison. So the bottom line is: both spellings are correct, but if you want to be on the safe side, pricey is the way to go. Share.

  3. Apr 30, 2020 · Pricey refers to 'the price' - ie how much you would pay for an item in a shop. It refers to the prevailing cost to buy something 'in the marketplace' - and to the difficulty that you might have, in finding it at a suitable or low price. 'Eggs are pricey at the moment'. 'Bananas were pricey in the market this morning'.

  4. Oct 15, 2011 · I'm trying to write good English even if I'm not a native speaker. My phrase goes something like: I then realized program X doesn't provide classes for Y (albeit its excellent support for Z).

  5. Apr 28, 2011 · The word quite is often confusing to non-native speakers. Can you give me a list of words that typically collocate with quite when the meaning is 'extreme'?

  6. Mar 16, 2017 · Belated as they may be. The above is not a complete sentence. Normally, such phrases are the middle of a complete sentence or the end of a complete sentence.

  7. Nov 3, 2010 · Googling for the origin of "A penny for your thoughts," I have only found the origin of a likely-related phrase "my two cents" and simple dictionary entries for "a penny for your thoughts."

  8. Dec 15, 2014 · In­stead, go by the ad­jec­tive-or­der­ing hi­er­ar­chy, and don’t use com­mas. If more than one ad­jec­tive has the same kind of mean­ing in the hi­er­ar­chy, then use com­mas, or ands or buts if the ad­jec­tives have con­tras­tive mean­ings. There’s a lot more out there on this top­ic. Share. Improve this answer.

  9. 1. "Take" here is an idiomatic usage, and it means "perspective, approach, aesthetic". I believe it was adopted from the film industry, where a "take" is a particular way of filming a scene, and then other "takes" would be shot, from which a final scene would be edited up out of the various perspectives and shooting angles.

  10. Nov 16, 2015 · 3. The cost of an item defines the specific price at which it is sold. It is objective and factual. The sticker price lists the "cost." The worth of an item is a more intangible sense of value. It may or may not align with the cost. Worth generally aligns with cost when the price is well established and generally agreed upon.

  11. Sep 4, 2015 · A mink coat is pricey, doesn't mean the person buying it has been ripped off. Likewise a good bottle of wine, some people are prepared to fork out an extra ten euros, while those who buy their wine in carton boxes (shiver) think paying anything above two euros is lavish spending. I usually hear something being "a bit pricey" or "steep ...