Cheap Definition–adjective | 1. | costing very little; relatively low in price; inexpensive: a cheap dress. |
| 2. | costing little labor or trouble: Words are cheap.
3e8
span> |
| 3. | charging low prices: a very cheap store. |
| 4. | of little account; of small value; mean; shoddy: cheap conduct; cheap workmanship. |
| 5. | embarrassed; sheepish: He felt cheap about his mistake. |
| 6. | obtainable at a low rate of interest: when money is cheap. |
| 7. | of decreased value or purchasing power, as currency depreciated due to inflation. |
| 8. | stingy; miserly: He's too cheap to buy his own brother a cup of coffee. |
–adverb | 9. | at a low price; at small cost: He is willing to sell cheap. |
—Idioms| 10. | cheap at twice the price, exceedingly inexpensive: I found this old chair for eight dollars—it would be cheap at twice the price. |
| 11. | on the cheap, Informal. inexpensively; economically: She enjoys traveling on the cheap. |
| From Dictionary
Term Definition–noun | 1. | a word or group of words designating something, esp. in a particular field, as atom in physics, quie
931
tism in theology, adze in carpentry, or district leader in politics. |
| 2. | any word or group of words considered as a member of a construction or utterance. |
| 3. | the time or period through which something lasts. |
| 4. | a period of time to which limits have been set: elected for a term of four years. |
| 5. | one of two or more divisions of a school year, during which instruction is regularly provided. |
| 6. | an appointed or set time or date, as for the payment of rent, interest, wages, etc. |
| 7. | terms, | a. | conditions with regard to payment, price, charge, rates, wages, etc.: reasonable terms. |
| b. | conditions or stipulations limiting what is proposed to be granted or done: the terms of a treaty. |
| c. | footing or standing; relations: on good terms with someone. |
| d. | Obsolete. state, situation, or circumstances. |
|
| 8. | Algebra, Arithmetic. | a. | each of the members of which an exp
e82
ression, a series of quantities, or the like, is composed, as one of two or more parts of an algebraic expression. |
| b. | a mathematical expression of the form axp, axpyq, etc., where a, p, and q are numbers and x and y are variables. |
|
| 9. | Logic. | a. | the subject or predicate of a categorical proposition. |
| b. | the word or expression denoting the subject or predicate of a categorical proposition. |
|
| 10. | Also called terminus. a figure, esp. of Terminus, in the form of a herm, used by the ancient Romans as a boundary marker; terminal figure. |
| 11. | Law. | a. | an estate or interest in land or the like, to be enjoyed for a fixed period. |
| b. | the duration of an estate. |
| c. | each of the periods during which certain courts of law hold their sessions. |
|
| 12. | completion of pregnancy; parturition. |
| 13. | Archaic. | a. | end, conclusion, or termination. |
|
–verb (used with object) | 14. | to apply a particular term or name to; name; call; designate. |
—Idioms| 15. | bring to terms, to force to agree to stated demands or conditions; bring into submission: After a long struggle, we brought them to terms. |
| 16. | come to terms, | a. | to reach an agreement; make an arrangement: to come to terms with a creditor. |
| b. | to become resigned or accustomed: to come to terms with one's life. |
|
| 17. | eat one's terms, British Informal. to study for the bar; be a law student.
| 18. | in terms of, with regard to; concerning: The book offers nothing in terms of a satisfactory conclusion. |
| From Dictionary
Paper Definition–noun | 1. | a substance made from wood pulp, rags, straw, or other fibrous material, usually in thin sheets, used to bear writing or printing, for wrapping things, etc. |
| 2. | a piece, sheet, or leaf of this. |
| 3. | something resembling this substance, as papyrus. |
| 4. | a written or printed document or the like. |
| 5. | stationery; writing paper. |
| 6. | a newspaper or journal. |
| 7. | an essay, article, or dissertation on a particular topic: a paper on early Mayan artifacts. |
| 8. | Often, papers. a document establishing or verifying identity, status, or the like: citizenship papers. |
| 9. | negotiable notes, bills, etc., as commercial paper or paper money: Only silver, please, no paper. |
| 14. | a sheet or card of paper with pins or needles stuck through it in rows. |
| 15. | a set of questions for an examination, an individual set of written answers to them, or any written piece of schoolwork. |
| 16. | Slang. a free pass to an entertainment. |
–verb (used with object) | 17. | to cover with wallpaper or apply wallpaper to: They papered the bedroom last summer. |
| 18. | to line or cover with paper. |
| 19. | to distribute handbills, posters, etc., throughout: to paper a neighborhood with campaign literature. |
| 20. | to fold, enclose, or wrap in paper. |
| 22. | Informal. to deluge with documents, esp. those requiring one to comply with certain technical procedures, as a means of legal harassment: He papered the plaintiff to force a settlement. |
| 23. | Slang. to fill (a theater or the like) with spectators by giving away free tickets or passes. |
| 24. | Archaic. | a. | to write or set down on paper. |
| b. | to describe in writing. |
|
–verb (used without object) | 25. | to apply wallpaper to walls. |
–adjective | 26. | made of paper or paperlike material: a paper bag. |
| 27. | paperlike; thin, flimsy, or frail. |
| 28. | of, pertaining to, or noting routine clerical duties. |
| 29. | pertaining to or carried on by means of letters, articles, books, etc.: a paper war. |
| 30. | written or printed on paper. |
| 31. | existing in theory or principle only and not in reality: paper profits. |
| 32. | indicating the first event of a series, as a wedding annivers
5ae
ary. |
| 33. | Slang. including many patrons admitted on free passes, as an audience for a theatrical performance: It's a paper house tonight. |
—Verb phrase| 34. | paper over, to patch up or attempt to conceal (a difference, disagreement, etc.) so as to preserve a friendship, present a unified opinion, etc.: to paper over a dispute. |
—Idiom| 35. | on paper, | a. | in written or printed form. |
| b. | in theory rather than in practice. |
| c. | existing only in a preliminary state; in a plan or design: The university building program is still only on paper. |
|
From DictionaryRelated topics from Britannicastraw the stalks of grasses, particularly of such cereal grasses as wheat, oats, rye, barley, and buckwheat. When used collectively, the term straw denotes such stalks in the aggregate after the drying ...
Demorest, Ellen Louise Curtis American businesswoman, widely credited with the invention of the mass-produced paper pattern for clothing.Madagascar Two major cyclones hit Madagascar in January and March 2004, killing 295 people, ruining rice fields, and destroying infrastructure. High world oil prices and a collapse of the Malagasy franc helped ...
publishing, history of The British press was slower to emerge as a popular, sensational medium, but a major turning point came in 1855 when the stamp tax was abolished. This was preceded in 1853 by the abolition of the ...
United States A trained political scientist and historian, Wilson believed that the president should be the leader of public opinion, the chief formulator of legislative policy, and virtually sovereign in the ...
Media and Publishing The European book industry continued to suffer a period of considerable uncertainty in 1995. In the U.K. a variety of strategic responses were adopted in response to sluggish sales, the breakdown of ...
Economic Affairs The American public's preoccupation with the presidential election, a sometimes murky economic outlook, and continuing unrest abroad resulted in investors' spending much of 2004 waiting for ...
elastomer If latex is allowed to evaporate naturally, the film of rubber that forms can be dried and pressed into usable articles such as bottles, shoes, and balls. South American Indians made such objects in ...
Media and Publishing While the Net Book Agreement (NBA) all but completely collapsed in the U.K., during 1996--in part because of the threat posed by a flood of cheap U.S. titles coming from The Netherlands--Belgium, ...
Europe, history of Economically, Europe emerged from World War I much weakened, partly by the purchases that had had to be made in the United States. Even in 1914 the United States had been the world's leading economic ...
|
Related topics from Ask NewsU.S. backstops money market funds
More Rushing Around: Money Markets and Asset-Backed Commercial Paper
Seeking Alpha - Found Sep. 19, 2008 Commercial paper market. Separately, the Open Market Desk will purchase short term agency paper ... One week and two week libor are very cheap at ...
|
|
Thermal paper for producing labels capable of any warehouse.
Orbitaloc - Found Aug. 12, 2008 ... thermal paper the ideal label medium for handling the demanding requirements of long-term ... printers and particularly in cheap, lightweight
|
|
Thermal paper for producing labels capable of any warehouse.
Marketing Article Bank - Found Aug. 9, 2008 ... thermal paper the ideal label medium for handling the demanding requirements of long-term ... of Bluetooth Mouse - By : R.Snapper Cheap ...
|
|
Thermal paper for producing labels capable of any warehouse. Posted ...
ArticleAddict - Found Aug. 8, 2008 ... thermal paper the ideal label medium for handling the demanding requirements of long-term ... printers and particularly in cheap, lightweight
|
|
Cheap Payday Cash Advance: obtain instant finances at reasonable ...
UPublish.info - Found Jul. 9, 2008 RSS Feed Downloads: 2 Article Summary: Cheap cash payday advance are short term loans which ... you get respite from the lengthy paper work.
|
|
Thermal paper of lightweight devices such as adding machines and ...
Articles Bridge - Found Jun. 21, 2008 ... thermal paper the ideal label medium for handling the demanding requirements of long-term ... printers and particularly in cheap, lightweight
|
|
The end of an era
Globe and Mail - Found 43 minutes ago ... during the credit bubble, the investment banks relied on cheap short-term funding in the ... But then the bubble burst, commercial paper became
|
|
The end of an era
Report On Business - Found 1 hour ago ... during the credit bubble, the investment banks relied on cheap short-term funding in the ... But then the bubble burst, commercial paper became
|
|
Memo to Bernhard: If you want to attack Palin, do it like a grown-up
Globe and Mail - Found 4 hours ago You &in your &cheap New Vision cheap-ass plastic ... diary so hard her pen tears through the paper. ... Woman an Uncle Tom, that is a term, among ...
|
|
|
Related topics from Technorati |
|
|
|