different between expensiveness vs priciness

expensiveness

English

Etymology

expensive +? -ness

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?k?sp?ns?vn?s/, [?k-], [-?sp?ns?v?n?s], [-?v?n?s]

Noun

expensiveness (usually uncountable, plural expensivenesses)

  1. The state of being expensive; the entailing of great expense.
    • 1743, John Wesley, An Earnest Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion, London: G. Whitfield, 1796, A Farther Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion, Part II, III.1, p. 212, [1]
      Surely you cannot be ignorant, that the sinfulness of fine apparel lies chiefly in the expensiveness. In that it is robbing God and the Poor; it is defrauding the fatherless and the widow; it is wasting the food of the hungry, and with-holding his raiment from the naked, to consume it on our own lusts.
    • 1922, Emily Post, Etiquette in Society, in Business, in Politics, and at Home, Chapter 14: Formal Dinners, [2]
      Enchanting dining-rooms and tables have been achieved with an outlay amounting to comparatively nothing. ΒΆ There is a dining-room in a certain small New York house that is quite as inviting as it is lacking in expensiveness.

Translations

expensiveness From the web:



priciness

English

Alternative forms

  • priceyness

Etymology

pricy +? -ness

Noun

priciness (uncountable)

  1. The quality of being pricy, that is, expensive.

Synonyms

  • (quality of being pricy): expensiveness, costliness

priciness From the web:

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