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Bargain   /bˈɑrgən/  /bˈɑrgɪn/   Listen
noun
Bargain  n.  
1.
An agreement between parties concerning the sale of property; or a contract by which one party binds himself to transfer the right to some property for a consideration, and the other party binds himself to receive the property and pay the consideration. "A contract is a bargain that is legally binding."
2.
An agreement or stipulation; mutual pledge. "And whon your honors mean to solemnize The bargain of your faith."
3.
A purchase; also ( when not qualified), a gainful transaction; an advantageous purchase; as, to buy a thing at a bargain.
4.
The thing stipulated or purchased; also, anything bought cheap. "She was too fond of her most filthy bargain."
Bargain and sale (Law), a species of conveyance, by which the bargainor contracts to convey the lands to the bargainee, and becomes by such contract a trustee for and seized to the use of the bargainee. The statute then completes the purchase; i. e., the bargain vests the use, and the statute vests the possession.
Into the bargain, over and above what is stipulated; besides.
To sell bargains, to make saucy (usually indelicate) repartees. (Obs.)
To strike a bargain, to reach or ratify an agreement. "A bargain was struck."
Synonyms: Contract; stipulation; purchase; engagement.



verb
Bargain  v. t.  (past & past part. bargained; pres. part. bargaining)  To transfer for a consideration; to barter; to trade; as, to bargain one horse for another.
To bargain away, to dispose of in a bargain; usually with a sense of loss or disadvantage; as, to bargain away one's birthright. "The heir... had somehow bargained away the estate."



Bargain  v. i.  To make a bargain; to make a contract for the exchange of property or services; followed by with and for; as, to bargain with a farmer for a cow. "So worthless peasants bargain for their wives."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Bargain" Quotes from Famous Books



... an average more than seven leagues [2] a day. It sounds simple enough but it took no end of argument and persuasion on the part of our friends in Arequipa to convince these worthy arrieros that they were not going to be everlastingly ruined by this bargain. The trouble was that they owned their mules, knew the great danger of crossing the deserts that lay between us and Mt. Coropuna, and feared to travel on unknown trails. Like most muleteers, they were afraid of unfamiliar ...
— Inca Land - Explorations in the Highlands of Peru • Hiram Bingham

... over those bronze faces, he could pick out the scowling husbands who hated him because their wives hated them. He could see Ben Ali, the master of two beauties from Teheran and the handsome dancing girl from Cairo; there was Amriph, who basked erstwhile in the sunshine of a bargain from Damascus and a seraph from Bagdad, but who now groped about in the blackness of their contempt; and others, all of whom felt in their bitter hearts that their misery was due to the prowess ...
— The Man From Brodney's • George Barr McCutcheon

... The bargain was stuck then and there and the transfer from Jones' pockets to those of McDuff effected. Unfortunately, however, Jones next day discovered that Holahan harbored no ill-will against him and that the supposed officer was nothing of the kind. Rising in ...
— The Confessions of Artemas Quibble • Arthur Train

... this is done the title to the flock does not pass until they have been counted, but, nevertheless, the purchaser can hold the seller to the bargain if he does not make delivery, even though the purchase money has not passed, and by a like right the seller can hold the buyer if he does ...
— Roman Farm Management - The Treatises Of Cato And Varro • Marcus Porcius Cato

... analogue on this side of the Atlantic, when his life, and his newspapers, are full of vulgar and ephemeral distractions, how much harder must it have been for a Euripidean enthusiast, or a student of Socrates or Protagoras, to descend for long days to solid earth in order to strike a bargain with a Thracian chieftain or to assess some poor devil's damages in drachmae! Let us honour, not pity or despise them, for having thought it right to do so, for having deliberately determined to infuse into public affairs, in themselves so drab and dull, so deficient in the ...
— The Legacy of Greece • Various


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