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—priceable, adj./pruys/, n., v., priced, pricing.n.1. the sum or amount of money or its equivalent for which anything is bought, sold, or offered for sale.2. a sum offered for the capture of a person alive or dead: The authorities put a price on his head.3. the sum of money, or other consideration, for which a person's support, consent, etc., may be obtained, esp. in cases involving sacrifice of integrity: They claimed that every politician has a price.4. that which must be given, done, or undergone in order to obtain a thing: He gained the victory, but at a heavy price.5. odds (def. 2).6. Archaic. value or worth.7. Archaic. great value or worth (usually prec. by of).8. at any price, at any cost, no matter how great: Their orders were to capture the town at any price.9. beyond or without price, of incalculable value; priceless: The crown jewels are beyond price.v.t.10. to fix the price of.11. to ask or determine the price of: We spent the day pricing furniture at various stores.[1175-1225; (n.) ME pris(e) < OF < L pretium price, value, worth (cf. PRECIOUS); (v.) late ME prisen < MF prisier, deriv. of pris, OF as above; see PRIZE2, PRAISE]Syn. 1, 4. PRICE, CHARGE, COST, EXPENSE refer to outlay or expenditure required in buying or maintaining something. PRICE is used mainly of single, concrete objects offered for sale; CHARGE, of services: What is the price of that coat? There is a small charge for mailing packages. COST is mainly a purely objective term, often used in financial calculations: The cost of building a new annex was estimated at $10,000. EXPENSE suggests cost plus incidental expenditure: The expense of the journey was more than the contemplated cost. Only CHARGE is not used figuratively. PRICE, COST, and sometimes EXPENSE may be used to refer to the expenditure of mental energy, what one "pays" in anxiety, suffering, etc.
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IAmount of money that has to be paid to acquire a given good, service, or resource.Operating as a measure of value, prices perform a significant economic function, distributing the scarce supply of goods, services, and resources to those who most want them through the adjustments of supply and demand. Prices of resources are called wages, interest, and rent. This system, known as the price mechanism, is based on the principle that only by allowing prices to move freely will the supply of any given commodity match demand. If supply is excessive, prices will be low and production will be reduced; this will cause prices to rise until there is a balance of demand and supply. If supply is inadequate, prices will be high, prompting an increase in production that in turn will lead to a reduction in prices until supply and demand are in equilibrium. A totally free price mechanism does not exist in practice; even in free-market economies, monopolies or government regulation may limit the efficiency of price as a determinant of supply and demand. In centrally planned economies, the price mechanism may be supplanted by centralized government control. Attempts to operate an economy without a price mechanism usually result in surpluses of unwanted goods, shortages of desired products, black markets, and stunted economic growth.II(as used in expressions)Johnson James PriceEmily PricePrice Mary Violet LeontynePrice Vincent Leonardwage price controlmarginal cost pricing* * *
city, seat (1894) of Carbon county, central Utah, U.S., on the Price River, 65 miles (105 km) southeast of Provo. Settled in 1877 by Mormons, it was named for the river discovered in 1869 by William Price, a bishop of the Mormon church. Its growth was spurred by the arrival of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad (Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company) in 1883. Coal production, livestock, and agriculture (sugar beets and grains) are major economic factors. Price is the seat of the (junior) College of Eastern Utah (1937). This college maintains the Prehistoric Museum (in the city hall), which contains a notable dinosaur display, including the Allosaurus found in the nearby Cleveland-Lloyd Quarry. The Black Diamond Stampede, a rodeo, is held annually. The main unit of the Manti-LaSal National Forest (headquartered in Price) is to the west. Inc. 1892. Pop. (1990) 8,712; (2000) 8,402.* * *
Universalium. 2010.