different between price vs scalping

price

English

Alternative forms

  • prize (obsolete) [16th–19th c.]

Etymology

From Middle English price (price, prize, value, excellence), borrowed from Old French pris, preis, from Latin pretium (worth, price, money spent, wages, reward); compare praise, precious, appraise, appreciate, depreciate, etc.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -a?s
  • (UK, US): enPR: pr?s, IPA(key): /p?a?s/
  • (Canadian raising): IPA(key): /p???s/

Noun

price (plural prices)

  1. The cost required to gain possession of something.
  2. The cost of an action or deed.
  3. Value; estimation; excellence; worth.
    • 1611, Bible (King James Version), Proverbs xxxi. 10
      Her price is far above rubies.
    • new treasures still, of countless price

Hyponyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Descendants

  • ? Irish: praghas

Translations

Verb

price (third-person singular simple present prices, present participle pricing, simple past and past participle priced)

  1. (transitive) To determine the monetary value of (an item); to put a price on.
  2. (transitive, obsolete) To pay the price of; to make reparation for.
    • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, I.ix:
      Thou damned wight, / The author of this fact, we here behold, / What iustice can but iudge against thee right, / With thine owne bloud to price his bloud, here shed in sight.
  3. (transitive, obsolete) To set a price on; to value; to prize.
  4. (transitive, colloquial, dated) To ask the price of.
    to price eggs

Derived terms

  • budget-priced

Translations

Further reading

  • price in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • price in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

Anagrams

  • Cripe, recip.

Latin

Noun

price

  1. ablative singular of prex

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scalping

English

Etymology 1

Verb

scalping

  1. present participle of scalp

Etymology 2

From scalp (noun) +? -ing.

Noun

scalping (plural scalpings)

  1. The action by which someone is scalped.
  2. (finance) A fraudulent form of market manipulation in which a person buys shares immediately before recommending the shares to others, thus driving the price up.
  3. (finance) A legitimate method of arbitrage of small price gaps created by the bid-ask spread.

Translations

Anagrams

  • clasping, placings

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