price out of the market
English
Etymology
Usage began in the first half of the 1900s.
Verb
price out of the market (third-person singular simple present prices out of the market, present participle pricing out of the market, simple past and past participle priced out of the market)
- (intransitive) To charge an exorbitant price for a service or product so that no one will purchase it.
- He's pricing out of the market, asking for $100,000 for that shack!
- (transitive) To force competition out of business by offering lower or discount prices.
- Supermarkets are trying to price farmers' markets out of the market by offering lower prices.
See also
References
- Christine Ammer (1997–2013) “price out of the market”, in American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
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