expensive

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin expensivus, from expendere, compare expense. In the sense of "high price" displaced dear.

Pronunciation

  • (General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɪkˈspɛnsɪv/, /ɛkˈspɛnsɪv/
  • (file)
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Adjective

expensive (comparative more expensive, superlative most expensive)

  1. Having a high price or cost.
    • 2006, Edwin Black, chapter 1, in Internal Combustion:
      If successful, Edison and Fordin 1914would move society away from the ever more expensive and then universally known killing hazards of gasoline cars: [].
    • 2013 June 22, “T time”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8841, page 68:
      [] a new study of how Starbucks has largely avoided paying tax in Britain [] shows that current tax rules make it easy for all sorts of firms to generate [] “stateless income”: []. [] the firm has in effect turned the process of making an expensive cup of coffee into intellectual property.
  2. (computing) Taking a lot of system time or resources.
    an unnecessarily expensive choice of algorithm

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