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单词 price
释义

price


price

P0552200 (prīs)n.1. The amount as of money or goods, asked for or given in exchange for something else.2. The cost at which something is obtained: believes that the price of success is hard work.3. The cost of bribing someone: maintained that every person has a price.4. A reward offered for the capture or killing of a person: a felon with a price on his head.5. Archaic Value or worth.tr.v. priced, pric·ing, pric·es 1. To fix or establish a price for: shoes that are priced at sixty dollars.2. To find out the price of: spent the day pricing dresses.Idiom: price out of the market To eliminate the demand for (goods or services) by setting prices too high.
[Middle English pris, from Old French, from Latin pretium; see per- in Indo-European roots.]
price′a·ble adj.pric′er n.

price

(praɪs) n1. the sum in money or goods for which anything is or may be bought or sold2. the cost at which anything is obtained3. the cost of bribing a person4. a sum of money offered or given as a reward for a capture or killing5. value or worth, esp high worth6. (Gambling, except Cards) gambling another word for odds7. at any price whatever the price or cost8. at a price at a high price9. beyond price without price invaluable or priceless10. the price of someone Irish what someone deserves, esp a fitting punishment: it's just the price of him. 11. what price something? what are the chances of something happening now?vb (tr) 12. to fix or establish the price of13. to ascertain or discover the price of14. (Commerce) price out of the market to charge so highly for as to prevent the sale, hire, etc, of[C13 pris, from Old French, from Latin pretium price, value, wage] ˈpricer n

price

(praɪs)

n., v. priced, pric•ing. 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: to put a price on someone's head. 3. an amount of money for which a person will forsake principles or obligations: They claim that every politician has his price. 4. that which must be given, done, or undergone in order to obtain a thing. 5. Archaic. value or worth. v.t. 6. to fix the price of. 7. to ask or find out the price of. [1175–1225; Middle English pris(e) < Old French < Latin pretium price, value, worth]

Price

(praɪs)

n. 1. (Edward) Reynolds, born 1933, U.S. novelist. 2. (Mary) Le•on•tyne (ˈli ənˌtin) born 1927, U.S. soprano.

price

– cost">cost1. 'price' and 'cost'

The price or cost of something is the amount of money you must pay to buy it.

The price of oil doubled in a few months.They are worried about the rising cost of food.

You can also use cost to refer to the amount of money needed to do or make something.

The cost of raising a child is very high.The building was recently restored at a cost of £500,000.

Be Careful!
Don't use 'price' in this way. Don't say, for example, 'The price of raising a child is very high.'

2. 'costs'

You use the plural noun costs when you are referring to the total amount of money needed to run something such as a business.

We need to cut our costs in order to make a profit.Stores have had to raise their prices to cover increased costs.
3. 'cost' used as a verb

You use cost as a verb to talk about the amount of money that you must pay for something.

The dress costs $200.How much do these new phones cost?

You can use cost with two objects to say how much money someone pays for something on a particular occasion. The past tense and -ed participle of cost is cost.

A two-day stay there cost me $125.How much did that haircut cost you?

Be Careful!
Don't use 'to' after cost in a sentence like this. Don't say, for example, 'How much did that haircut cost to you?'


price

– prize">prize1. 'price'

The price /praɪs/ of something is the amount of money that you must pay to buy it.

The price of a cup of coffee is almost five dollars.The price is shown on the label.See price - cost
2. 'prize'

A prize /praɪz/ is something given to someone for winning a competition or game, or for doing good work.

He won a prize in a painting competition.She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace.

price


Past participle: priced
Gerund: pricing
Imperative
price
price
Present
I price
you price
he/she/it prices
we price
you price
they price
Preterite
I priced
you priced
he/she/it priced
we priced
you priced
they priced
Present Continuous
I am pricing
you are pricing
he/she/it is pricing
we are pricing
you are pricing
they are pricing
Present Perfect
I have priced
you have priced
he/she/it has priced
we have priced
you have priced
they have priced
Past Continuous
I was pricing
you were pricing
he/she/it was pricing
we were pricing
you were pricing
they were pricing
Past Perfect
I had priced
you had priced
he/she/it had priced
we had priced
you had priced
they had priced
Future
I will price
you will price
he/she/it will price
we will price
you will price
they will price
Future Perfect
I will have priced
you will have priced
he/she/it will have priced
we will have priced
you will have priced
they will have priced
Future Continuous
I will be pricing
you will be pricing
he/she/it will be pricing
we will be pricing
you will be pricing
they will be pricing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been pricing
you have been pricing
he/she/it has been pricing
we have been pricing
you have been pricing
they have been pricing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been pricing
you will have been pricing
he/she/it will have been pricing
we will have been pricing
you will have been pricing
they will have been pricing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been pricing
you had been pricing
he/she/it had been pricing
we had been pricing
you had been pricing
they had been pricing
Conditional
I would price
you would price
he/she/it would price
we would price
you would price
they would price
Past Conditional
I would have priced
you would have priced
he/she/it would have priced
we would have priced
you would have priced
they would have priced
Thesaurus
Noun1.price - the property of having material worth (often indicated by the amount of money something would bring if sold)price - the property of having material worth (often indicated by the amount of money something would bring if sold); "the fluctuating monetary value of gold and silver"; "he puts a high price on his services"; "he couldn't calculate the cost of the collection"monetary value, costvalue - the quality (positive or negative) that renders something desirable or valuable; "the Shakespearean Shylock is of dubious value in the modern world"average cost - total cost for all units bought (or produced) divided by the number of unitsdifferential cost, incremental cost, marginal cost - the increase or decrease in costs as a result of one more or one less unit of outputexpensiveness - the quality of being high-pricedassessment - the market value set on assetsinexpensiveness - the quality of being affordable
2.price - the amount of money needed to purchase somethingprice - the amount of money needed to purchase something; "the price of gasoline"; "he got his new car on excellent terms"; "how much is the damage?"terms, damagecost - the total spent for goods or services including money and time and laborasking price, selling price - the price at which something is offered for salebid price - (stock market) the price at which a broker is willing to buy a certain securityclosing price - (stock market) the price of the last transaction completed during a day's trading sessionfactory price - price charged for goods picked up at the factoryhighway robbery - an exorbitant price; "what they are asking for gas these days is highway robbery"purchase price - the price at which something is actually purchasedcash price, spot price - the current delivery price of a commodity traded in the spot marketsupport level - (stock market) the price at which a certain security becomes attractive to investorsvaluation - assessed price; "the valuation of this property is much too high"
3.price - value measured by what must be given or done or undergone to obtain somethingprice - value measured by what must be given or done or undergone to obtain something; "the cost in human life was enormous"; "the price of success is hard work"; "what price glory?"toll, costvalue - the quality (positive or negative) that renders something desirable or valuable; "the Shakespearean Shylock is of dubious value in the modern world"death toll - the number of deaths resulting from some particular cause such as an accident or a battle or a natural disaster
4.price - the high value or worth of something; "her price is far above rubies"worth - the quality that renders something desirable or valuable or useful
5.price - a monetary reward for helping to catch a criminal; "the cattle thief has a price on his head"reward - the offer of money for helping to find a criminal or for returning lost property
6.price - cost of bribing someone; "they say that every politician has a price"cost - the total spent for goods or services including money and time and labor
7.Price - United States operatic soprano (born 1927)Leontyne Price, Mary Leontyne Price
Verb1.price - determine the price of; "The grocer priced his wares high"set, determine - fix conclusively or authoritatively; "set the rules"mark up - increase the price ofrig, manipulate - manipulate in a fraudulent manner; "rig prices"overprice - price excessively highunderquote - offer for sale at a price lower than the market price
2.price - ascertain or learn the price of; "Have you priced personal computers lately?"ascertain - learn or discover with certainty

price

noun1. cost, value, rate, charge, bill, figure, worth, damage (informal), amount, estimate, fee, payment, expense, assessment, expenditure, valuation, face value, outlay, asking price a sharp increase in the price of petrol What's the price on that one?2. consequences, penalty, cost, result, sacrifice, toll, forfeit He's paying the price for pushing his body so hard.3. reward, bounty, compensation, premium, recompense He is still at large despite the high price on his head.verb1. evaluate, value, estimate, rate, cost, assess, put a price on The shares are priced at 330p.at any price whatever the cost, regardless, no matter what the cost, anyhow, cost what it may, expense no object We want the hostages home at any price.beyond price priceless, treasured, precious, invaluable, inestimable, without price, of incalculable value a treasure that was beyond priceQuotations
"There's no such thing as a free lunch" [Milton Friedman book title]
Proverbs
"You don't get something for nothing"

price

noun1. An amount paid or to be paid for a purchase:charge, cost.Informal: tab.2. A loss sustained in the accomplishment of or as the result of something:cost, expense, sacrifice, toll.
Translations
价格给...标价问...的价格代价

price

(prais) noun1. the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost. The price of the book was $10. 價格 价格2. what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something. Loss of freedom is often the price of success. 代價 代价 verb1. to mark a price on. I haven't priced these articles yet. 給...標價 给...标价2. to find out the price of. He went into the furniture shop to price the beds. 問...的價格 问...的价格ˈpriceless adjective1. too valuable to have a price. priceless jewels. 無價的,貴重的 无价的,贵重的 2. very funny. a priceless story. 極有趣的,極荒唐的 极有趣的,极荒唐的 ˈpricey adjective expensive. 昂貴的 昂贵的at a price at a high price. We can get dinner at this hotel – at a price. 以極高的代價 以极高的代价beyond/without price very precious. Good health is beyond price. 極其珍貴的 极其珍贵的

price

价格zhCN
  • What is included in the price? → 租车价钱内包含了哪些项目?
  • Is comprehensive insurance coverage included in the price? (US)
    Is fully comprehensive insurance included in the price? (UK) → 租车费内是否包含了全责保险费?
  • Is hot water included in the price? → 价格内包含了热水吗?
  • Does the price include boots? → 价格内是否包含了靴子?
  • Does the price include poles? → 价格内是否包含了雪杖?
  • Please write down the price → 请把价钱写下来

price


See:
  • a price on (one's) head
  • a price on head
  • a price on somebody's head
  • a price on someone's head
  • a set price
  • asking price
  • at a price
  • at all costs
  • at any cost
  • at any price
  • beyond price
  • beyond/without price
  • Cheap at half the price
  • cheap at the price
  • cheap at twice the price
  • come at a price
  • cutthroat prices
  • drive a price down
  • drive a price up
  • drive a/the/(something's) price down
  • drive a/the/(something's) price up
  • drive down a/the/(something's) price
  • Every man has his price
  • every man/everyone has his price
  • everyone has their price
  • for a price
  • get a price on (one's) head
  • have a price on (one's) head
  • name a/the/(one's) price (for something)
  • not at any price
  • of great price
  • pay the price
  • pay the price, to
  • pay the price/penalty
  • pearl of great price, a
  • price (oneself, someone, or something) out of the market
  • price down
  • price is right, the
  • price on one's head
  • price one has to pay
  • price out
  • price out of the market
  • price up
  • price yourself out of the market
  • price yourself/something out of the market
  • put (something) at
  • put a price (tag) on (something)
  • put a price on (someone's) head
  • put a price on something
  • quote a price
  • quote a price (for something)
  • quote a price of (some amount of money)
  • roll back
  • roll prices back
  • sell for (something)
  • sell for a certain price
  • set a/the/(one's) price (for something)
  • set price
  • starting price
  • the price (one) has to pay
  • the price is right
  • thing you don't want is dear at any price
  • what does that have to do with the price of tea in China
  • what price
  • What price (something)?
  • what price...?
  • What price?
  • What's that got to do with the price of cheese?
  • What's that got to do with the price of eggs?
  • What's that got to do with the price of fish?
  • What's that got to do with the price of meat?
  • What's that got to do with the price of tea in China?

price


price,

amount of money for which a unit of goods or services is exchanged. Price is equivalent to market value and may or may not measure the intrinsic value of the goods or services to the buyer or seller. Most economists hold that, in the long run, price in a competitive market will equal the cost of production. Such a long-term equilibrium price is called the normal price. In the short run, however, the market price will be determined by supply and demand without reference to cost. The price of an individual item changes with time as well as in its relation to the prices of other goods. In general, prices are closely related to the amount of currency in circulation. If money is plentiful compared with the supply of goods, prices are high and money has less value and is "cheap"; when the opposite condition prevails, goods are cheap and money has greater value and is "dear." The general price level may therefore be influenced by the action of government agencies (such as, in the United States, the Federal Reserve Board) that regulate the supply of currency. Because of the relation of the general price level to the business cycle, government action is usually designed to steer a middle course between the inflationary effects of a too plentiful currency and the deflationary effects of a glut of goods. Stabilization of prices would ensure that the dollar used in repaying a loan would have the same value as the dollar borrowed. The price level is an average of prices of a number of commodities that are important in the economy. It is generally converted into an index, with a particular year designated as the norm and given a value of 100. By comparing the value of an index at different dates, it is possible to ascertain whether prices are rising or falling. Common indexes used by U.S. government economists include the consumer price index and the wholesale price index. Historically, prices have tended to move upward; the wholesale price index, for example, more than doubled between 1930 and 1970. For the history of prices, classic works are Thomas Tooke, A History of Prices … . from 1793 to 1856 (6 vol., 1838–57; repr. 1928) and J. E. T. Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England (7 vol., 1866–1902; repr. 1963).

Price

 

the monetary expression of the value of a commodity; an economic category that is used as an indirect measurement of the amount of socially necessary work time expended on the production of commodities. The scientific theory of price was formulated by K. Marx, who revealed the composition of prices and the laws governing their formation and movement. In Marx’ words, “Price is the money name of the labor realized in a commodity . . ., the index of the magnitude of commodity’s value” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nded., vol. 23, p. 111).

Price levels, price relationships, and their dynamics are based on the law of value. At the same time, price dynamics are also influenced by other factors, such as changes in the value of gold or in the quantity of paper money in circulation, the relation between supply and demand, and various social factors, which may cause discrepancies between price and value: “the possibility . . . of a quantitative incongruity between price and magnitude of value, or the deviation of the former from the latter, is inherent in the price form itself” (K. Marx, ibid., p. 112). In the overall social context, however, these deviations cancel each other out, and the sum total of prices coincides with the sum total of commodity values. Price levels for specific commodities are established with due regard to their varying quality and end use.

Prices were first instituted at the time of the decline of the primitive communal system, when the social division of labor led to a stable exchange system and the concurrent need to single out a special commodity—namely, money—that would express the value of all other commodities.

Prices were established spontaneously: at first, in the process of exchange, certain prices were set on products of the joint labor of members of the community; subsequently, prices were established for products of the labor of private landowners and craftsmen, slave laborers (in slaveholding societies), and serfs (under feudalism). Most of the products of labor, however, were either directly consumed by the producers or handed over in their natural form to the slaveholders or feudal lords; such products were not commodities and had no price.

In the capitalist economic system, price has taken on a universal character. Virtually all the products of labor are changed into commodities having a certain value and price, and the same is true of man’s labor power, whose value and prices are monetarily expressed in wages. Many commodities that have no value of their own acquire a certain price (the price of land, for example, or of stocks). Price is an expression of capitalist production relations; it promotes the production and realization of surplus value, which is both the substance and the means of exploitation of hired labor by capital.

With the development of capitalism, price undergoes changes, being directly affected by changes in value. In the initial stage of capitalism, price was based on commodities’ market value, which reflected the expenditures involved in the production and reproduction of the bulk of a given commodity. The market price fluctuated around market value and ultimately reflected the level of and the quantitative changes in value. The applicable price formula here is Pc = c + v + m, where Pc represents prices directly based on the value of commodities, c is the transferred value of the means of production expended in manufacturing the commodities, and v + m represents the newly created value, consisting of the value created by necessary labor (v) plus surplus value (m).

When the capitalist mode of production prevailed over and transformed the technological base of all the basic areas of production, the fact that market prices were pegged to value resulted in unequal rates of profit from equal amounts of capital; this was due to differences in the organic composition of capital employed in different branches. As a result of transfusions of capital, these differences were smoothed over by means of steady deviations of price from value and the establishment of an average rate of profit. Prices and their fluctuations were now based directly on the price of production (Pp): Pp = C + rC, where C = c + v, representing commodity production costs, or the capitalist’s outlays on the means of production and labor power (expenditures on raw materials, supplies, amortization, wages, and overhead) expended in the commodity manufacturing process, r’ is the average rate of profit, and C stands for capital advanced for production of the commodity (including the full value of fixed capital—for example, of buildings and installations).

As shown by K. Marx in Das Kapital and elsewhere, the modification of value in the price of production does not alter the law of value: in the branches where the index of the organic composition of capital is low, commodity prices fall consistently below value; where the index of the organic composition of capital is high, prices are consistently above value. On the whole, the sum total of prices continues to express the sum total of commodity values. The shift to production prices is the specific method by which capitalism ensures the economic feasibility of expanded reproduction in branches where the index of the organic composition of capital is high.

Monopoly prices are an increasingly common feature of the stage of imperialism. It is by means of monopoly prices that the monopolies, drawing upon their economic strength, realize monopoly superprofits. In the following formula, Pm = monopoly price: Pm = C + rC + M, where M is the monopoly superprofit, or the excess over average profit. The predominance of monopoly prices leads to the further deviation of market prices from value; such prices are higher than production prices in the case of monopolized commodities, and below value for certain capitalists—specifically, for outsiders who are unable to realize an average profit, for craftsmen, for workers who sell their labor, and for the exploited peoples of the colonies, semicolonies, and economically backward countries.

The dominance of monopolies, like state-monopoly regulation of prices, means an extension of the confines of nonequivalent exchange. Even under monopoly prices, however, the law of value continues to operate. Monopolies regularly make use of nonequivalent exchange and of price inflation in order to increase their profits, as well as to step up the exploitation of the working class and of economically backward nations.

World prices are based on the international price of production as it develops on the world market.

Planned prices, which are an inherent feature of the socialist economic system, express the regular patterns of economic relations based on socialist ownership. Like commodity-money relations, price has now lost its universal character: labor power is not a commodity and has no cost; there is no selling of land, timber, or minerals, and there is no stock market. Planned prices, whose value content remains intact, continue to be the monetary expression of the value of commodities. In addition to the law of value, certain specific laws of socialism, such as the fundamental economic law of socialism and the law of planned development, simultaneously influence price-setting and price dynamics. The prices of certain commodities may be deliberately set above or below cost. This is dictated by what may be required in any given case by socialist state policy as applied to prices.

Planned prices were first instituted in the period of transition from capitalism to socialism; they were established by the agencies of the proletarian state in opposition to the speculative prices of the free market and to the prices set by the capitalists and private traders. As the socialist state took over the regulation of commodity-money relations and of the price system, as capitalist arrangements were eliminated, and as small-scale forms of commodity trading were changed, the range of application of planned prices continued to grow.

Under advanced socialism, prices play an increasingly greater role in the planned management of the national economy. Price becomes a powerful lever of economic management in the hands of the socialist state. Prices are intentionally used as an instrument to increase the efficiency and raise the technological level of production and to ensure the steady growth of the population’s real income.

The Twenty-fifth Congress of the CPSU (1976) resolved that prices must be used more actively as a stimulus to accelerate the rate of scientific and technological progress, to update and improve the quality of production, and to make rational use of material resources.

Planned prices have several functions: (1) an accounting function—that is, a means of reporting and measuring the socially necessary expenditures of labor on the production and marketing of commodities, whereby planned prices can be used as an instrument of economic planning computations and as a norm for expenditures of social labor; (2) a stimulating function—a lever to influence the rate and efficiency of technological progress, to improve product quality, to lower the prime cost of production, and to increase the efficiency of social production; and (3) a re-distributive function—a means of redistributing income on the basis of deviation of prices from the value of commodities in order to solve social problems and meet the demands of profit-and-loss accounting (for example, setting relatively low prices on commodities classified as children’s goods, on meat, milk, and potatoes, and on housing services, while setting high prices on alcoholic beverages and luxury goods; or using accounting prices for enterprises operating under dissimilar natural conditions).

Planned prices are based on the value of commodities and on the socially necessary expenditures of labor on commodity production and marketing. Prices may also be directly based on some modification of value. After the 1967 reform of wholesale prices, differential norms of profitability were adopted for different branches, these norms being calculated as percentages of the value of fixed production assets and of standard-rate circulating capital. The level of profit in prices is planned in such a way that a normally functioning enterprise can, as a rule, use its profits to make payments to the budget for its production assets; profits may also be used to pay the interest on loans, or they may be assigned to the economic incentive fund.

The price system in socialist society includes several different classes and types of domestic prices:

(1) Wholesale prices, which include (a) enterprise wholesale prices on industrial products that compensate costs and ensure a standard profit; (b) industry wholesale prices, which are the prices that consumers pay for products (for various types of commodities, these prices include the costs and profits of sales organizations in addition to the enterprise wholesale price, and in some instances they also include the turnover tax—specifically, in the case of popular consumer goods, petroleum products, gas, and electric power); (c) accounting prices, which are differentiated by enterprise or group of enterprises on the basis of objectively different production conditions (in such instances, consumers are generally charged uniform prices); (d) wholesale prices of agricultural equipment, mineral fertilizers, and other means of production sold to kolkhozes and sovkhozes (these prices may be lower than wholesale prices for industrial enterprises); (e) prices of finished construction projects (the estimated cost of construction can also function as the price); (f) electric power rates charged to enterprises and organizations; (g) rates charged for freight shipments by rail, truck, water, air, or pipeline; and (h) markups and discounts on supplies of materials and machinery, sales, trade, and procurements, as well as discounts and markups by the All-Union Board for the Supply of Farm Machinery, Fuel, and Fertilizers (Soiuzsel’khoztekhnika). Special types of wholesale prices include ceiling prices (that is, maximum permissible prices), which are determined in the planning stage of new technology; contractual prices for research and development work; and payment rates for the natural resources used by enterprises (for example, rates of compensation for geological prospecting expenditures, stumpage rates, and water charges).

(2) State purchase prices paid for agricultural products, game, and fish, as well as for mushrooms, berries, and other products purchased by state procurement organizations from kolkhozes, sovkhozes, and private individuals.

(3) Retail prices paid by individuals for consumer goods and services. Such prices include (a) state retail prices, or the prices paid by individuals for commodities sold by state and cooperative trade enterprises; (b) prices and rates charged for such consumer services as home maintenance, housing and public utilities, and entertainment; (c) rates charged for passenger transport and communication services; (d) prices of goods sold on commission (that is, products purchased from individuals by consumer cooperatives and sold in specialty shops at prices approximating kolkhoz market prices); and (e) kolkhoz market prices, which are influenced by the levels of demand for and supply of the products of private subsidiary farm plots and kolkhozes.

In terms of effective duration, prices may be classified as permanent prices, temporary prices (such as the temporary wholesale prices of fundamentally new technology produced in the USSR for the first time), temporary wholesale and retail prices on novelty items, seasonal prices (for early vegetables, fruit, and potatoes), graduated prices (that is, prices that are lowered, in stages of predetermined duration, with the gradual expansion of production, reduced production costs, and product obsolescence), and prices that are established for a set period.

Depending on the extent to which prices include shipping costs (see FRANCO), the following categories are distinguished: free delivery to consumer (for example, for electric power and gas), free to building site (for construction materials, in various regions of the USSR), free on rail, station of consignee (for example, for rolled ferrous metals and petroleum products), free on rail, supplier’s station (for example, for coal, nonferrous metals, and machine-building products), and ex supplier’s warehouse (for example, for peat).

Prices may be uniform throughout the country (wholesale prices on rolled nonferrous metals and machine-building products) or they may apply to a geographic belt (wholesale prices on various petroleum products and cement; retail prices on certain foodstuffs), to a zone (wholesale prices on coal and iron ore; state purchase prices on agricultural products), or to a republic (prices are uniform throughout the Union republics). The category of local prices (which are established by local agencies) includes charges for most of the common consumer services and wholesale and retail prices of toys and various other products.

The economic content, functions, and basic types of prices in the other socialist countries are the same as in the USSR. In some countries, where different methods of fixing prices are used, three categories of prices are distinguished: centrally established firm prices on basic goods and services; fixed-ceiling prices, which are maintained in certain limited areas; and free prices, which are established by mutual agreement.

REFERENCES

See references under .

IU. V. IAKOVETS

Price


Price

(prīs), Ernest Arthur, early 20th-century English biochemist. See: Carr-Price reaction.

PRICE

(prīs) [An acronym for protection, rest, ice, compression, elevation] A regimen that supports healing in overuse injuries.

price


Tax Sale

A transfer of real property in exchange for money to satisfy charges imposed thereupon by the government that have remained unpaid after the legal period for their payment has expired.

Tax sales are authorized by state statutes to collect taxes that are long overdue to the state government from negligent or unwilling individuals.

Requirements

Any sale of real property for delinquent taxes must be conducted in compliance with legally imposed requirements, or it is not valid. Ordinarily the tax collector is required to make and publish a list of property on which taxes have not been paid. Such a list must contain an adequate description of each parcel of land to be sold, the owner's name, the amount due, and the period of time for which the taxes are due. The interest permitted by law on the delinquent taxes, penalties for default in payment, and the costs incurred for the sale may be included in the amount due. Certain states mandate that this delinquency list must be filed or recorded in the office of the county clerk, and statutes may indicate specifically the newspapers in which the list is to be published.

Notice

The purpose of a notice of a tax sale is to warn the owner of the property that it will be sold and to furnish information to prospective buyers. Failure to provide notice to the owner renders any subsequent sale of the property invalid. This rule is consistent with due process requirements that any individual must be given notice and opportunity to defend himself or herself before being deprived of his or her property. The notice given to the owner must adequately describe the property, the amount of tax owed, and for what years it is due.

Manner

State statutes regulate the manner in which tax sales may be conducted. Ordinarily the sale is open to the public in order to ascertain that a fair price for the property will be obtained in the open market. A private sale is valid, however, when authorized by statute.

Price

The general rule is that land offered at a tax sale must bring at least the total amount of taxes due on it, plus legal costs and charges. In some jurisdictions, a sale for a smaller amount is invalid.

In the event that the land is sold at the tax sale for a price that exceeds the amount owed, the sale might be valid, depending upon the state; however, the excess must be given to the delinquent taxpayer.

Buyer

Any individual who is not disqualified by statute may purchase land at a tax sale provided he or she is the highest bidder. Upon payment of the amount bid, the buyer will be given a tax deed that serves as proof of his or her ownership of the property. Certain states mandate that a tax sale be confirmed in a court proceeding before the purchaser actually takes title or ownership to the property.

A state, county, Municipal Corporation, or other governmental unit may buy land sold at a tax sale only if authorized by statute.

Redemption

The owner of property that is the subject of a tax sale is given a statutory right of redemption—that is, if, within a certain period, the owner pays the back taxes plus any other legal charges due, he or she will regain complete ownership of the property free of the prior tax debt. The public policy behind such a statute is to provide the taxpayer with every reasonable opportunity to redeem property since Forfeiture of land has always been regarded as a drastic remedy. Generally any individual interested in the property sold for taxes is entitled to redeem it if his or her interest in the property will be affected by the purchaser taking complete ownership of the land, such as in the case of an individual who has a life estate in the property.

Redemption must occur within the time and in the manner specified by the statute.

Sale Prohibited

Courts can proscribe a tax sale in cases where (1) a sale would be unlawful, so that the buyer's ownership of the land would be open to question; (2) the taxes have been paid; (3) the levy or assessment was unlawful or fraudulent; or (4) the valuation was grossly excessive.

Where errors or irregularities exist in the assessment that could have been rectified if promptly brought to the attention of the proper authorities, the tax sale will not be enjoined if such errors have no effect upon the substantial justice of the tax or the liability of the property for its satisfaction.

Further readings

Lilienthal, Christopher. 2003. "Tax Sale Set Aside: Officials Failed to Examine Past Due Taxes: County and Township Tax Offices Failed to Use 'Common Sense Business Practices'." Pennsylvania Law Weekly (March 31).

Sacks, Michael E. 1998. "Escape Clause in Tax Sale Law Under Review by High Court." Pennsylvania Law Weekly (November 9).

Stone, Lin. 1998. How to Buy Land at Tax Sales. Ed. by James Criswell. Kansas City, Mo.: Truman.

price

in the law of sale, the money consideration for the transfer of property. In a contract of sale of goods, the price may be fixed by the contract or may be left to be fixed in a manner agreed by the contract or it may be determined by the course of dealing of the parties. Failing any of the foregoing, the buyer must pay a reasonable price. What constitutes a reasonable price is a question of fact dependent on the circumstances of each particular case. The price may be left to the decision of arbiters, maybe fixed by some public standard or maybe left to the decision of one of the parties. Where there is an agreement to sell at valuation by a third party and he cannot or does not make a valuation, the agreement is avoided; but if the goods or any part of them have been delivered and appropriated by the buyer, he must pay a reasonable price for them. Where the third party is prevented from making the valuation by the fault of the seller or buyer, the party not at fault may maintain an action for damages against the party at fault. Unless a different intention appears from the terms of the contract, stipulations as to time of payment are not of the essence of a contract of sale. Various statutes relating to competition or consumer protection affect the price at which goods can be sold or advertised, see e.g. PRICE MARKING.

PRICE, contracts. The consideration in money given for the purchase of a thing.
2. There are three requisites to the quality of a price in order to make a sale.
3.-1. It must be serious, and such as may be demanded: if, therefore, a person were to sell me an article, and by the agreement, reduced to writing, he were to release me from the payment, the transaction would no longer be a sale, but a gift, Poth. Vente, n. 18.
4.-2. The second quality of a price is, that the price be certain and determinate; but what may be rendered certain is considered as certain if, therefore, I sell a thing at a price to be fixed by a third person, this is sufficiently certain, provided the third person make a valuation and fix the price. Poth. Vente, n. 23, 24.
5.-3. The third quality of a price is, that it consists in money, to be paid down, or at a future time, for if it be of any thing else, it will no longer be a price, nor the contract a sale, but exchange or barter. Poth. Vente, n. 30; 16 Toull. n. 147.
6. The true price of a thing is that for which things of a like nature and quality are usually sold in the place where situated, if real property; or in the place where exposed to sale, if personal. Poth. Contr. de Vente, n. 243. The first price or cost of a thing does not always afford a sure criterion of its value. It may have been bought very dear or very cheap. Marsh. Ins. 620, et seq.; Ayliffe's Pand. 447; Merlin, Repert. h.t.; 4 Pick. 179; 8 Pick. 252; 16 Pick. 227.
7. In a declaration in trover it is usual, when the chattel found is a living one, to lay it as of such a price when dead, of such a value. 8 Wentw. Pl. 372, n; 2 Lilly's Ab. 629. Vide Bouv. Inst. Index, h.t.; Adjustment; Inadequacy of price; Pretium affectionis.

price


Price

The value of a thing with real or perceived worth. Price represents the amount of value the market has assigned, fairly or unfairly, to a good or service. Normally, prices are expressed in terms of money, but practices such as countertrade and PIK securities indicate that prices may be expressed in goods: "four chickens for two sheep." Price is a necessary component of trade.

Prices tend to be regulated by the law of supply and demand; that is, a price of a good or service increases with smaller supply and/or greater demand. A corollary to this is the idea that commoditization drives prices down because it increases supply (sometimes vastly) while leaving demand the same. Prices likewise rise when the value of money declines. Governments can and have controlled the prices of certain goods and services by subsidy or decree. This is usually an anti-inflationary measure and tends to distort, rather than eliminate, the law of supply and demand. It is thus not generally sustainable as a mechanism for controlling price.

price

The dollar amount at which a security trades. Stocks are nearly always quoted fully (that is, $25 means $25 per share), while bonds are ordinarily quoted as a percentage of par value (that is, 98 represents $980 per $1,000 par bond).

price

the money value of a unit of a GOOD, SERVICE, FINANCIAL SECURITY or ASSET which a buyer is required to pay a seller to purchase the item. Usually the price of a product is fixed by the seller in advance on the basis of the costs of producing and selling the product and the seller's desired profit margin. In other cases, however, prices are variable, being determined by prevailing demand and supply conditions as with the sale, for example, of a STOCK or SHARE, a house or items sold at an auction.

Because a purchase involves a money outlay on the part of buyers who operate within a budget constraint, the price of a product is an important factor in the buying decision. It may well be the paramount consideration in many cases, but for some purchases other elements in the MARKETING MIX (product quality and performance etc.) may be equally if not more important. Thus, although many products (especially COMMODITY-TYPE PRODUCTS) tend to be sold at low, competitive prices, many others can be sold at higher prices, providing customers with a variety of price-quality trade-offs and other product attributes. See MARKET STRUCTURE, MONOPOLY, BUYER'S MARKET, SELLER'S MARKET, PRICING, PRICING OBJECTIVES, PRICING METHODS, FOUR P'S OF MARKETING.

price

the money value of a unit of a GOOD, SERVICE, ASSET or FACTOR INPUT. In some markets (for example, see PERFECT COMPETITION), price will be determined entirely by the forces of DEMAND and SUPPLY. By contrast, in other markets (for example, MONOPOLY markets) powerful suppliers have considerable discretion over the price that they charge. In certain circumstances, prices may be subjected to governmental PRICE CONTROL or regulated by means of PRICES AND INCOMES POLICY. See also EQUILIBRIUM MARKET PRICE, ADMINISTERED PRICE.

price

An amount of money exchanged for something of value.

PRICE


AcronymDefinition
PRICEProtection, Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation
PRICEParametric Review of Information for Costing and Evaluation
PRICEPinpoint, Record, Involve, Coach, Evaluate (from the book Personal Excellence)
PRICEProgram Review of Information for Costing & Evaluation
PRICEPredicting Responses for Inhaled Corticosteroid Efficacy (clinical trial)
PRICEProtect, Rest, Immobilize, Cold, Elevate (sprains and strains treatment)
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