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单词 cut-price
释义

Definition of cut-price in English:

cut-price

(North American cut-rate)
adjectivekʌtˈprʌɪs
  • 1For sale at a reduced or unusually low price.

    减价(出售)的,低价的

    cut-price footwear

    减价鞋类。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Batchelor claimed at the time he was able to offer the cut-price tickets because he would soon be announcing a major sponsorship deal.
    • The Bank of Scotland is subsidising Swan Lake, while the Royal is funding cut-price tickets for hordes of teenage lovers of opera and theatre.
    • Rather than going to a reputable DIY store like any sensible man would have, Howard had to buy the sink cheap from the closing down sale of that cut-price bathroom suppliers the Atlantis Showroom.
    • A cut-price ticket deal against Wimbledon two seasons ago produced an 18, 255 turn-out on a Tuesday night.
    • Time is running out for York City Knights RL fans to get their hands on cut-price season tickets for the new season.
    • Batchelor claimed a sponsorship deal was helping fund the offer and around 1,000 fans bought the cut-price tickets last autumn.
    • Your cut-price carrier ticket is around a third of the price of the full fare - do the maths.
    • Incredulous journalists have reported seeing her buy discounted miniskirts at factory outlets and queuing for cut-price theater tickets.
    • This comes after the airline has sold 135,000 cut-price tickets since it announced its new Manchester operation two months ago.
    • Bates wrote back saying he might consider concessions for kids, but he reckoned pensioners should have saved enough in their lifetime to buy their tickets and not be dependent on freebies or cut-price tickets.
    • Public transport including ferryboats, also offered cut-price tickets to make it cheap for locals to travel around the city.
    • The airline is offering 20,000 cut-price tickets from Singapore to Phuket and by the end of the third day of sales had already sold 5,000.
    • Bolstered by season ticket sales, including the new cut-price two-year package, the City chief is impatient to buy now rather than in the summer when competition for young talent will be hotter.
    • Rail travellers have snapped up more than 115,000 cut-price tickets as part of GNER's plans to win back passengers.
    • Will we open Australia to competition from cut-rate overseas universities?
    • The advert was printed in red ink on the back of the tickets, promoting cut-price kitchens on the same number used by Miller.
    • Within days of that conversation, Black was offering his readers cut-rate subscriptions, thereby reducing his circulation revenue by millions each year.
    • The cut-price tickets will be going on sale from March 7 for travel from March 14 and will be sent to householders by post.
    • While it will not be compulsory to carry the cards, young people will be offered a series of inducements - such as cut-price CDs and cinema tickets - to encourage their use.
    • Christmas is just around the corner and the cut-price tickets would also make an excellent Christmas present.
    Synonyms
    inexpensive, low-priced, low-price, low-cost, economical, economic, competitive, affordable, reasonable, reasonably priced, moderately priced, keenly priced, budget, economy, cheap and cheerful, bargain, cut-rate, half-price, sale-price, sale, reduced, on special offer, marked down, discounted, discount, rock-bottom, giveaway
    1. 1.1 Offering goods at reduced prices.
      削价销售货物的
      cut-price supermarkets

      低价超市。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Drugs are being sold at cut-rate prices, without any thought to profit or effect on the market.
      • Only weeks after introducing the hotly disputed entrance charge, they have embarked on a cut-price promotion with a supermarket.
      • None of these things guarantee loyalty in the face of cut-rate competition, though.
      • Housing associations fear however, that if their asset base is that vulnerable to forced cut-price sales, financiers will be less than willing to help with further loans.
      • Ministers are considering forcing supermarkets to stop the cut-price offers, which are regularly snapped up by bargain-hunting shoppers across the country.
      • A predictable cut-price sale back to the City Ground ended a long nightmare.
      • Is it tokenism, or just one small piece of evidence that the cut-price, cut-throat world of supermarkets is trying to appeal to a more ethical consumer?
      • At worst, these cut-price sales might be dealt with under the ‘remainders and disposal of surplus stock’ clause of the author's contract.
      • They say they won't invest in massive fiber-optic upgrades, wiring broadband to millions of American homes, if they have to share these networks with competitors at cut-rate prices.
      • The company reported a fall in profits yesterday after seeing its cut-price sales strategy come under pressure from supermarket rivals.
      • And they would most definitely not hang out with a lesbian and her stoner friends in a cut-rate video store.
      • Then I killed some time at Rainbow, a cut-rate grocery store that was recently went bankrupt.
      • A cider firm and a cut-price supermarket are among those competing to hire his services, proof that Monkey has risen above the brand and acquired his own identity.
      • That's the cut-rate store where perfectly good clothes, shoes and toys inexplicably end up costing far less than originally intended.
      • Or the fact that the country's national strategic reserve of maize was sold off wholesale at cut-rate prices two years ago in a series of dodgy transactions.
      • Christie knows that the continuity in playing personnel is a major strength and it's not one he plans to undermine with a cut-price garage sale.
      • Now, as the buildings await redevelopment, they are mostly cut-price DVD stores or charity shops.
      • The company already has over 135 stores in the UK, where it is the leading cut-price retailer.
      • From there, he hopes to launch an internet-based business, offering services at cut-rate prices to British firms.
      • Using that tort settlement, the big brands have hampered tiny cut-rate rivals and raised prices with near impunity.
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更新时间:2024/12/26 11:53:15