overcharged

  • 41overcharge — noun / əυvətʃɑ:dʒ/ a charge which is higher than it should be ● to pay back an overcharge ■ verb /ˌəυvə tʃɑ:dʒ/ to ask too much money ● They overcharged us for our meals. ● We asked for a refund because we’d been overcharged …

    Marketing dictionary in english

  • 42overcharge — noun / əυvətʃɑ:dʒ/ a charge which is higher than it should be ● to pay back an overcharge ■ verb /ˌəυvə tʃɑ:dʒ/ to ask someone for too much money ● They overcharged us for our meals. ● We asked for a refund because we’d been overcharged …

    Dictionary of banking and finance

  • 43clip joint — noun a place of entertainment where high prices are charged for poor entertainment • Hypernyms: ↑spot * * * noun Etymology: clip (III) slang 1. : a place of public entertainment (as a café or nightclub) that makes a practice of defr …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 44o|ver|charge — «verb. OH vuhr CHAHRJ; noun. OH vuhr CHAHRJ», verb, charged, charg|ing, noun. –v.t. 1. to charge too high a price: »The grocer overcharged you for the eggs. 2. to load too heavily; fill too full: »The overcharged old musket burst. 3. Figurative.… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 45SALE — (Heb. מְכִירָה, mekhirah). Sale may be defined as the permanent transfer for consideration of existing legal rights from one person to another. The consideration may be in money or in kind. By extension the term sale is also used to denote a… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 46duty bound — {adj. phr.} Forced to act by what you believe is right. * /Abraham Lincoln walked miles once to return a few pennies that he had overcharged a woman because he felt duty bound to do it./ * /John felt duty bound to report that he had broken the… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 47duty bound — {adj. phr.} Forced to act by what you believe is right. * /Abraham Lincoln walked miles once to return a few pennies that he had overcharged a woman because he felt duty bound to do it./ * /John felt duty bound to report that he had broken the… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 48artificial globe — Globe Globe (gl[=o]b), n. [L. globus, perh. akin to L. glomus a ball of yarn, and E. clump, golf: cf. F. globe.] 1. A round or spherical body, solid or hollow; a body whose surface is in every part equidistant from the center; a ball; a sphere.… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 49Cynara Scolymus — Globe Globe (gl[=o]b), n. [L. globus, perh. akin to L. glomus a ball of yarn, and E. clump, golf: cf. F. globe.] 1. A round or spherical body, solid or hollow; a body whose surface is in every part equidistant from the center; a ball; a sphere.… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 50G globosa — Globe Globe (gl[=o]b), n. [L. globus, perh. akin to L. glomus a ball of yarn, and E. clump, golf: cf. F. globe.] 1. A round or spherical body, solid or hollow; a body whose surface is in every part equidistant from the center; a ball; a sphere.… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English