price oneself out of the market |
to charge so much money for goods or services that one loses customers. |
price support |
the maintenance of certain price levels by means of public subsidy or by government surplus purchasing. |
price war |
a situation in which competitive businesses lower their prices, often repeatedly, usu. attempting to drive each other out of business. |
prick |
a small mark or puncture made by something with a sharp or pointed end or edge. [9 definitions] |
pricker |
that which pricks, such as a thorn or a pricking tool. |
prickle |
a small, sharp, pointed growth or extension, such as a plant thorn. [6 definitions] |
prickly |
having small, sharp, pointed growths or extensions; full of prickles. [4 definitions] |
prickly heat |
inflammation of the sweat glands; miliaria. |
prickly pear |
any of various cactuses that have large, bristly, flattened stem joints, and bear brilliant flowers and sometimes edible fruit. [2 definitions] |
prick up one's ears |
to suddenly become attentive and interested. [2 definitions] |
pride |
an inherent feeling of dignity and worth. [7 definitions] |
pride and joy |
something or someone highly valued or loved. |
priedieu |
a low stand with a small desk top and a ledge at the bottom on which to kneel in prayer. |
prier |
someone who inquires about or investigates something curiously or nosily; snoop. |
priest |
a clergyman who performs religious rituals or leads a congregation in worship. [3 definitions] |
priestess |
a female priest, esp. in certain ancient cultures. |
priesthood |
priests as a group. [2 definitions] |
priestly |
of, concerning, or befitting a priest. |
prig |
one who is considered to be too strict, conservative, or smug in his or her conduct or standards of behavior. |
prim |
formally correct and decorous, often to excess. |
prima ballerina |
the principal female dancer in a ballet company. |