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单词 expensive
释义

Definition of expensive in English:

expensive

adjective ɛkˈspɛnsɪvɪkˈspɛnsɪvɪkˈspɛnsɪv
  • Costing a lot of money.

    花钱多的,昂贵的

    keeping a horse is expensive

    养马是要花很多钱的。

    an expensive bottle of wine

    一瓶昂贵的酒。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • More expensive water will provide an incentive to be more thrifty in how it is used.
    • The banks say it would be too expensive to speed things up and, in any case, there is no demand for it.
    • This is prime real estate in one of the most expensive cities in the world.
    • For a man famous for running a tight ship, this could be a painfully expensive exercise.
    • New woodland planting need not be expensive when the full range of grants are utilised.
    • He said the charges were too expensive and would keep visitors away from the palace.
    • Their philosophy is never say no to a man if his car is more expensive than yours.
    • These courses are very expensive, due to the variety of resources needed to run them.
    • Suing a supplier based overseas can be difficult, expensive and take a lot of time.
    • The bargains will prove to be very expensive if you have to pay interest on the money you spent.
    • Irrigation is too expensive to be worthwhile for most crops, so we could do with a bit of rain.
    • December is not an expensive month to fly, as long as you avoid the week before Christmas.
    • A new kitchen can be one of the most expensive home improvements most people will make.
    • The short season is only one reason why asparagus is expensive to grow and produce.
    • There was a swimming pool in the grounds, but apparently it was too expensive to fill.
    • Prices of the more expensive properties have stopped going up and some are on their way down.
    • There seems to be a failure to understand just how expensive it is to run a teaching hospital.
    • We want to revise and update the council tax with more bands for the more expensive houses.
    • We own a buy-to-let property which we want to sell in order to buy a more expensive one.
    • It's a defeat that could prove to be extremely expensive come the end of the season.
    Synonyms
    costly, dear, high-priced, high-cost, big-budget, exorbitant, extortionate, overpriced
    immoderate, extravagant, lavish
    valuable, precious, priceless, worth its weight in gold, worth a king's ransom
    British over the odds
    informal steep, pricey, sky-high, costing an arm and a leg, costing the earth, costing a bomb, daylight robbery

Derivatives

  • expensiveness

  • noun ɪkˈspɛnsɪvnəsɛkˈspɛnsɪvnəsɪkˈspɛnsɪvnəs
    • It gives the impression of expensiveness.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • My husband believed that quality wasn't always represented by expensiveness.
      • There are definitely moments when you hate it (noise, pollution, the busy-ness, the expensiveness of everything, and other stressors), but when you leave New York, you can't wait to get back.
      • She could just feel the expensiveness of the carpet underneath her feet as she walked.
      • The expensiveness indicates to me simply that this object probably won't actually be used for the purpose it was made.

Origin

Early 17th century (in the sense 'lavish, extravagant'): from Latin expens- 'paid out', from the verb expendere (see expend), + -ive.

Rhymes

apprehensive, coextensive, comprehensive, defensive, extensive, intensive, offensive, ostensive, pensive, suspensive

Definition of expensive in US English:

expensive

adjectiveikˈspensivɪkˈspɛnsɪv
  • Costing a lot of money.

    花钱多的,昂贵的

    keeping a horse is expensive

    养马是要花很多钱的。

    an expensive bottle of wine

    一瓶昂贵的酒。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The bargains will prove to be very expensive if you have to pay interest on the money you spent.
    • We own a buy-to-let property which we want to sell in order to buy a more expensive one.
    • Irrigation is too expensive to be worthwhile for most crops, so we could do with a bit of rain.
    • Prices of the more expensive properties have stopped going up and some are on their way down.
    • There was a swimming pool in the grounds, but apparently it was too expensive to fill.
    • Their philosophy is never say no to a man if his car is more expensive than yours.
    • These courses are very expensive, due to the variety of resources needed to run them.
    • There seems to be a failure to understand just how expensive it is to run a teaching hospital.
    • New woodland planting need not be expensive when the full range of grants are utilised.
    • He said the charges were too expensive and would keep visitors away from the palace.
    • December is not an expensive month to fly, as long as you avoid the week before Christmas.
    • The banks say it would be too expensive to speed things up and, in any case, there is no demand for it.
    • Suing a supplier based overseas can be difficult, expensive and take a lot of time.
    • We want to revise and update the council tax with more bands for the more expensive houses.
    • For a man famous for running a tight ship, this could be a painfully expensive exercise.
    • The short season is only one reason why asparagus is expensive to grow and produce.
    • This is prime real estate in one of the most expensive cities in the world.
    • More expensive water will provide an incentive to be more thrifty in how it is used.
    • A new kitchen can be one of the most expensive home improvements most people will make.
    • It's a defeat that could prove to be extremely expensive come the end of the season.
    Synonyms
    costly, dear, high-priced, high-cost, big-budget, exorbitant, extortionate, overpriced

Origin

Early 17th century (in the sense ‘lavish, extravagant’): from Latin expens- ‘paid out’, from the verb expendere (see expend), + -ive.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 3:44:11