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  2. Which is correct, "sales price" or "sale price"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/188801/which-is-correct-sales-price-or...

    Hence sale price, lease price or rental price. Complementary An equipment company would have engineering, manufacturing, marketing and sales department. If each of them are to be asked to propose a price on a piece of equipment, the prices would be engineering's sale price, manufacturing's sake price, marketing's sale price and sales' sale

  3. What is the difference between "clearance" and "sale"?

    english.stackexchange.com/.../what-is-the-difference-between-clearance-and-sale

    A clearance sale is usually intended to "clear the shelves of the sale items" because the store will no longer sell them. A normal sale is just a discount (usually for a specified length of time) and is intended only to increase sales of the sale items, which the store may or may not continue to sell (new models might be coming in soon, or a ...

  4. Price is an attribute of the item being priced. Rather it is the item itself that is cheaper. However, it is perfectly clear that the price attribute can be lower. Nonetheless. your observation is also correct: "cheaper price", "cheaper rate" etc. are common usage, and it sounds perfectly fine to my native speaker's ear.

  5. 19. "Sell" is a verb, an action, it requires conjugation: I sell, you sell, he sells.. I sold, you sold, and so on. "Sale" is a noun, it is not conjugated and usually would appear together with definite or undefinite article "the sale", "a sale". When person A sold something, A made a sale.

  6. Should it be "cheaper price" or "lower price"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/486705/should-it-be-cheaper-price-or-lower...

    charging or obtainable at a low price. a: a good cheap hotel. cheap tickets. b : purchasable below the going price or the real value. so, strictly speaking, prices cannot be cheap since there is usually no price for a price; goods and services can be cheap or expensive but prices, as you say, can only be low or high.

  7. single word requests - What is a product's normal price called...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/339782/what-is-a-products-normal-price-called

    In Britain a better term might be usual price. Regular always suggests to me the incidence of bowel movements. Actually most shops label such products in sales as £9.99, was £14.99 - though whether you believe them is up to you! (They are expected to conform to trading standards in the way they do this - but I'm sure there is still room for ...

  8. grammatical number - “Price of goods” vs “Prices of goods” -...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/485993/price-of-goods-vs-prices-of-goods

    1. Your statement "that goods is a singular group, and prices would only be acceptable if you put a modifying adjective that breaks the singular group into multiple groups such as “the prices of various goods in big cities,” is correct but over-prescriptive: the plural implies the individual prices of individual goods, whereas the singular ...

  9. Over or under half price - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/89749

    10. We're talking about the price, not the discount. £100 is less than half of £300, so it's less than half-price (or "under half price" if you prefer). For a sale price, where a single shop reduces the price to under half, it might advertise "More than 50% off" and emphasise the size of the discount. You're less likely to see that when ...

  10. adjectives - Is something "half price" or "half priced"? -...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/64034/is-something-half-price-or-half-priced

    2. Price can be a noun (the price of an item) or a verb (to set the price of an item). Moreover, the word priced can be used as an adjective, particularly in combination with other words (e.g., high-priced slacks) That would suggest that half-priced chocolate is also an acceptable form, where half-priced would be an adjective.

  11. Word for when people store scarce resources to increase demand...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/3168/word-for-when-people-store-scarce...

    New York State’s Price Gouging Law (General Business Law § 396-r) prohibits merchants from taking unfair advantage of consumers by selling goods or services that are “vital to the health, safety or welfare of consumers” for an "unconscionably excessive price" during an abnormal disruption of the market place or state of emergency.