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to+be+priced+out+of+the+market

  • 1 price

    1. noun
    1) (the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost: The price of the book was $10.) preço
    2) (what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something: Loss of freedom is often the price of success.) preço
    2. verb
    1) (to mark a price on: I haven't priced these articles yet.) pôr preço
    2) (to find out the price of: He went into the furniture shop to price the beds.) apreçar
    - pricey
    - at a price
    - beyond/without price
    * * *
    [prais] n 1 preço: a) custo. b) prêmio, recompensa. c) valor, valia. I do it at any price / vou fazê-lo a qualquer preço. 2 oportunidades, esperanças. • vt 1 apreçar: a) fixar o preço de. b) colocar o preço em. c) coll perguntar o preço de. 2 estimar, avaliar. at a high price por alto preço. at any price a qualquer preço, custe o que custar. cut price preço reduzido. retail price index índice de preços no varejo. to price oneself out of the market cobrar mais que o mercado. to set ou put a price on pôr um preço em. what is the price of this? quanto custa isto?

    English-Portuguese dictionary > price

См. также в других словарях:

  • priced out of the market — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. high priced, unreasonable, not competitive; see expensive …   English dictionary for students

  • priced out of the market — sold at a high rate, speculated, raised the price above the accepted market price …   English contemporary dictionary

  • price sb/sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… …   Financial and business terms

  • price sb out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… …   Financial and business terms

  • price sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… …   Financial and business terms

  • price yourself out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… …   Financial and business terms

  • price yourself/sb/sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… …   Financial and business terms

  • Priced Out — The state of being unable to invest in a particular market or purchase a particular product or service. When someone is priced out of a market, their choices are to simply remain out of the market, to wait for the market to become more affordable …   Investment dictionary

  • price yourself out of the market — phrase to charge such high prices for your products that customers stop buying them Thesaurus: setting, controlling and changing prices and costshyponym prices and costssynonym Main entry: price * * * price yourself out of the market : to make… …   Useful english dictionary

  • price oneself out of the market —    If you price yourself out of the market, you charge such a high price for your goods or services that nobody wants to buy them.     He was so eager to make money that he priced himself out of the market …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • The Market for Lemons — The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism is a 1970 paper by the economist George Akerlof. It discusses information asymmetry, which occurs when the seller knows more about a product than the buyer. A lemon is an… …   Wikipedia

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