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fixed price

noun

  1. a price established by a seller, by agreement or by authority, as the price to be charged invariably.


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Other Words From

  • fixed-price adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of fixed price1

First recorded in 1905–10
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Example Sentences

As the name suggests, stablecoins are cryptocurrencies with a fixed price.

The contract is for a fixed price, and TBC has to hit specific milestones to receive all of its payments.

A traditional IPO, whereby banks arrange for institutions to get first dibs on the stock for a fixed price, would likely be anathema to many crypto enthusiasts and Coinbase employees.

From Fortune

The situation is murkier, though, when it comes to PFOF for options—contracts that give investors the right to buy or sell shares at a fixed price in the future.

From Fortune

The contract would be for a fixed price, and TBC would have to hit specific milestones to receive all of its payments.

Handing the job to the less qualified team, after Northrop and Grumman refused to sign a fixed-price contract, doomed the program.

And instead of offering customers a fixed price, it is effectively offering them cash.

In exchange, homeowners were offered a fixed price for electricity for several years.

He gave him twelve thousand livres a year, besides paying a fixed price for each of his works.

That it was operating at a fixed price for the spot month only, made it of no value to the trade during this period.

Experience proved that a maximum fixed price at which coffee could be traded in would have produced much better results.

A proclamation made by Mulla Shakur, forbidding the hoarding of provisions, or their sale above a fixed price, was disregarded.

But he never paid more than a fixed price for all articles of the same class, whatever their intrinsic value.

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