Bargain
a bargain (noun, verb) - 1. (noun) a purchase at a low price, 2. (noun) an agreement, 3. (verb) negotiating about the price of goods to be bought, discussing the price before agreeing on the price of goods sold
a bargain price
a good bargain
a bargain hunter
hunting for bargains
bargain purchases
missed a fabulous bargain
I don't intend to let them bargain with me
drive a hard bargain
sounds like a bargain
a Faustian bargain
keep to your side of the bargain
keep your side of the bargain
pleaded with them to keep their side of the bargain
dependent on them meeting their side of the bargain
strike a bargain between employers and the union
a rundown house but a bargain
she got a real bargain on the house
always selling their stock at bargain prices but never making a profit
a bargain by many people's standards
a real bargain
know a bargain when they see one
an extortionate bargain
bargain with the vendors in the market
bargain with the dealers
revalue the original bargain between the parties
has never been a time like this to pick up a bargain
like to bargain for what you want
a bargain basement in a store
bargain with journalists to keep their firms' names out of the national press
Example sentences:
* Everyone thinks she got a real bargain on the house she bought.
* I don't intend to let them bargain with me.
* That's a bargain by many people's standards.
* The sale sounds like a bargain.
* I told him lunch was $19.50 and it was a good bargain.
* The house was run down, but Jane decided on it because it was beautiful and a bargain.
* But if they were always selling their stock at genuine bargain prices, they would never make any money.
* Our message is that there has never been a time like this to pick up a bargain, their spokesperson said.
* Like to bargain for what you want.
* Bargaining between buyers and sellers was expected, as fixed prices were not yet common.
* But all the promises of money for the building, which has been earmarked for Beaumont Street, in Darlington, are dependent on the fund raising committee meeting its side of the bargain.
* We have raised more than the amount stipulated, and we plead with them to keep their side of the bargain.
* When we got to the market, for the first time he allowed me to bargain with the dealers.
* A credit agreement could be re-opened, if the court thought just, on the grounds that the bargain was extortionate, on the debtor's application to the High Court, a county court or a sheriff court.
* Downtown Crossing features two department stores: Jordan Marsh, with its sixth-floor enchanted village for children, and Filene's store, famous for its bargain basement.
* Women who not only worked hard, earned a living, but who carried a gun into the bargain.
* Generally dealing managers have had to bargain with journalists to keep their firms' names out of the national press.
* He had a client who thought he had missed a fabulous bargain when he refused to buy a paste cross from an impoverished Russian aristocrat.
* And when Mrs Amabel Dallam remembered to pay her for all those wedding chemises she might just take a few shillings to a certain bazaar in Leeds where she'd heard good dress-lengths were to be had at bargain prices and make herself a new dress for Christmas.
* Thus, the purpose of a rent review clause is not to revalue the original bargain between the parties, but to give the landlord the income which he would have got, on the terms on which he would have let, if he had had the property in hand on the rent review date.
* Well look at those , two hundred and fifty five that's a big that's a bargain isn't it?
* Whereas in America the unions have seen it as an intrusion on their rights to collectively bargain, even though they haven't been very active in trying to organise them themselves.






