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Cheap   /tʃip/   Listen
adjective
Cheap  adj.  
1.
Having a low price in market; of small cost or price, as compared with the usual price or the real value. "Where there are a great sellers to a few buyers, there the thing to be sold will be cheap."
2.
Of comparatively small value; common; mean. "You grow cheap in every subject's eye."
Dog cheap, very cheap, a phrase formed probably by the catachrestical transposition of good cheap. (Colloq.)



adverb
Cheap  adv.  Cheaply.



noun
Cheap  n.  A bargain; a purchase; cheapness. (Obs.) "The sack that thou hast drunk me would have bought me lights as good cheap at the dearest chandler's in Europe."



verb
Cheap  v. i.  To buy; to bargain. (Obs.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Cheap" Quotes from Famous Books



... shook her head, as she put the paper shade over the cheap lamp, and then went to the window to close the inner shutters ...
— The White Sister • F. Marion Crawford

... of his 'air; and he's cheap as dirt, sir, at four-ten! It's a throwin' of him away at the price; and I shouldn't do it, but I've got more dawgs than I've room for; so I'm obligated to make a sacrifice. Four-ten, sir! 'Ad the distemper, and everythink, and a reg'lar good ...
— The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green • Cuthbert Bede

... is not given for scholarships, professorships, libraries, or buildings. It is given for the support of the institution, to make instruction independent, learned and cheap; given to invite the youth to come here, and to give them the best opportunities of cultivation at lessened expense, to lay foundations of learning and mental enlargement for any department in life. It will maintain ten learned professors ...
— The History of Dartmouth College • Baxter Perry Smith

... whatever human ingenuity can make, and she will also distribute. One of the first things she intends to do is to tap the stream of food, fuel and lumber destined for the South, and now laid up in the winter in Philadelphia by the closing of the Delaware, and send it to the Southern consumer by her cheap water-transport. Connected with this enterprise will be the multiplication of her steam colliers, ultimately scattering the crop of breadstuffs to the South Atlantic and Gulf States (if not the Eastern), and ...
— Lippincott's Magazine, Volume 11, No. 26, May, 1873 • Various

... goats, calves, pigs, poultry; vegetables and fruit—quartered melons, with green rind, black seeds, and rosy flesh, great golden pumpkins, onions in festoons, figs in pyramids; boots, head-gear, and rough shop-made clothing, for either sex; cheap jewellery also; and every manner of requisite for the household, from pots and pans of wrought copper, brass lamps, iron bedsteads and husk-filled bedding, to portraits in brilliant oleograph of King and Queen and the inevitable Garibaldi. The din was stupendous. ...
— The Lady Paramount • Henry Harland


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