cheap

[ cheep ]
/ tʃip /

adjective, cheap·er, cheap·est.

adverb

at a low price; at small cost: He is willing to sell cheap.

Idioms for cheap

    cheap at twice the price, exceedingly inexpensive: I found this old chair for eight dollars—it would be cheap at twice the price.
    on the cheap, Informal. inexpensively; economically: She enjoys traveling on the cheap.

Origin of cheap

before 900; Middle English cheep (short for phrases, as good cheep cheap, literally, good bargain), Old English cēap bargain, market, trade; cognate with German Kauf, Old Norse kaup; all < Latin caupō innkeeper, tradesman; see chapman

synonym study for cheap

1, 4. Cheap, inexpensive agree in their suggestion of low cost. Cheap now usually suggests shoddiness, inferiority, showy imitation, complete unworthiness, and the like: a cheap kind of fur. Inexpensive emphasizes lowness of price (although more expensive than cheap ) and suggests that the value is fully equal to the cost: an inexpensive dress. It is often used as an evasion for the more specific cheap.

OTHER WORDS FROM cheap

Example sentences from the Web for cheaply

British Dictionary definitions for cheaply

cheap
/ (tʃiːp) /

adjective

noun

on the cheap British informal at a low cost

adverb

at very little cost

Derived forms of cheap

cheapish, adjective cheaply, adverb cheapness, noun

Word Origin for cheap

Old English ceap barter, bargain, price, property; related to Old Norse kaup bargain, Old High German kouf trade, Latin caupō innkeeper

Idioms and Phrases with cheaply

cheap