释义 |
Examples:compulsory halt stock trading when prices fall to predetermined level—fall back (of water level or share prices)—(of water, prices etc) rise and fall—charge different prices according to the situation—upward momentum (e.g. in prices)—buying and selling at fair prices—downward fluctuation (of prices etc)—(of prices, rates etc) remain high—lower (prices, wages etc)—degree of reduction (in prices, numbers etc)—refers dramatic sale prices—lit. push up paper prices in Luoyang (idiom); fig. sensational popularity of a new book—rise (of prices, rivers)—commodity prices fixed by government (in a command economy)—bull market (prices appear be rising)—bull market (i.e. period of rising share prices)—drop sharply (e.g. stock prices)—bear market (i.e. period of falling share prices)—genuine goods at fair prices—upward trend (in prices)—(of sales, prices etc) fall—prices scissor (caught between low income and high prices)—raise prices by speculation—lit. wool comes from the sheep's back (idiom); One gets the benefit, but the price has been paid.—ask an enormous price (as first negotiating step)—dump (selling abroad more cheaply than cost price at home)—fig. the price is cheap but the product is beautiful; lit. a bargain buy—pay bride-price (payment to the bride's family in former times)—National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations, a computerized data system provide brokers with price quotations for securities traded over the counter—unified government purchase at fixed price (esp of farm products)—return to low level after a rise (in water level, price etc)—fig. topsy-turvy and inequitable, e.g. manufacturing and trading costs exceed the sale price (of some goods)—...shall prevail (as standard for rules, regulations, price etc)— |