Advertisement
Advertisement
cost
1[ kawst, kost ]
noun
- the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything:
the high cost of a good meal.
Synonyms: outlay, expenditure, expense, charge
- an outlay or expenditure of money, time, labor, trouble, etc.:
What will the cost be to me?
- a sacrifice, loss, or penalty:
to work at the cost of one's health.
Synonyms: detriment
- costs, Law.
- money allowed to a successful party in a lawsuit in compensation for legal expenses incurred, chargeable to the unsuccessful party.
- money due to a court or one of its officers for services in a cause.
verb (used with object)
- to require the payment of (money or something else of value) in an exchange:
That camera cost $200.
- to result in or entail the loss of:
Carelessness costs lives.
- to cause to lose or suffer:
The accident cost her a broken leg.
- to entail (effort or inconvenience):
Courtesy costs little.
- to cause to pay or sacrifice:
That request will cost us two weeks' extra work.
- to estimate or determine the cost of (manufactured articles, new processes, etc.):
We have costed the manufacture of each item.
verb (used without object)
- to estimate or determine costs, as of manufacturing something.
verb phrase
- to calculate the cost of (a project, product, etc.) in advance:
The firm that hired him just costed out a major construction project last month.
cost-
2- variant of costo- before a vowel:
costate.
cost
/ kɒst /
noun
- the price paid or required for acquiring, producing, or maintaining something, usually measured in money, time, or energy; expense or expenditure; outlay
- suffering or sacrifice; loss; penalty
count the cost to your health
I know to my cost
- the amount paid for a commodity by its seller
to sell at cost
- ( as modifier )
the cost price
- plural law the expenses of judicial proceedings
- at any cost or at all costsregardless of cost or sacrifice involved
- at the cost ofat the expense of losing
verb
- tr to be obtained or obtainable in exchange for (money or something equivalent); be priced at
the ride cost one pound
- to cause or require the expenditure, loss, or sacrifice (of)
the accident cost him dearly
- to estimate the cost of (a product, process, etc) for the purposes of pricing, budgeting, control, etc
Derived Forms
- ˈcostless, adjective
Other Words From
- costless adjective
- costless·ness noun
- re·cost verb (used with object) recost recosting
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cost1
Idioms and Phrases
- at all costs, regardless of the effort involved; by any means necessary: Also at any cost.
The stolen painting must be recovered at all costs.
More idioms and phrases containing cost
see arm and a leg, cost an ; at all costs ; pretty penny, cost a .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Kanukollu said they have cut down on power consumption from the LED lights by 50% and reduced the cost of manufacturing by 60% per tube.
Now teams are international, talent is international, more and more companies are building remote first — although you’d seen that before given the costs of the Bay.
Still, that’s a fraction of the costs incurred by out-of-control wildfires.
To many people, these changes look like the necessary costs of progress.
While it’s tough to imagine that AMP will fade away completely within the next couple of years, AMP’s privacy issues combined with the cost of maintaining it might spell the end of it being a widely used practice.
Using standard methods, the cost of printing DNA could run upwards of a billion dollars or more, depending on the strand.
“The sensation these objects presented receded as their cost increased,” notes Rabinowitz.
Like him, they identified the Airbus A320 as an airplane extremely well fitted to low cost airline operations in Asia.
Malaysian-based entrepreneur Tony Fernandes has turned AirAsia into the most successful low cost airline in southeast Asia.
But the F-35 has been plagued with massive delays and cost overruns—mostly due to design defects and software issues.
Mrs. Wurzel was quite right; they had been supplied, regardless of cost, from Messrs. Rochet and Stole's well-known establishment.
They feel that the system has few advantages to offer in return for the cost it entails upon them.
He became a doctor in two hours, and it only cost him twenty dollars to complete his education.
The estimated cost of the alterations is put at £16,000 including fittings.
A clock was put above the spot where the fountain stood, in April, 1852, which cost £60.
Advertisement
More About Cost
What is a basic definition of cost?
Cost means a price that must be paid for something or a sacrifice. Cost is used as a verb to mean to require a payment or to cause the loss of something. Cost has several other senses as a noun and a verb.
Cost most often refers to a specific amount of money that a seller wants for the item they are selling. However, cost is also used more generally to mean whatever the price of an item is. If the price is high or expensive, it is said to be costly.
- Real-life examples: A pack of gum may have a cost of $1. The cost of a college education is usually very high. When a store is having a sale, it usually lowers the cost of the things it sells.
- Used in a sentence: The cost to repair the repair was unreasonably high.
Cost is also a sacrifice, loss, or damage.
- Real-life examples: The cost of staying up all night is usually being tired the next day. The cost of eating too much is often a stomachache. The cost of driving too fast is often a speeding ticket and sometimes a car accident.
- Used in a sentence: The demon offered him endless riches at the cost of his soul.
As a verb, cost means to require a payment in exchange for something, such as a service or a product. The payment can be money but also anything that has value.
- Real-life examples: Stores will use price tags to tell customers how much items cost. A hotel in Monopoly costs four houses and some extra money. A parent may tell their child that a piece of cake costs a hug.
- Used in a sentence: The new computer costs $800.
Cost is also used to mean to result in the loss of something or to cause to suffer something.
- Real-life examples: Stress and a poor diet will cost a person their good health. Drunk driving will more than likely cost a person their driver’s license or worse. Succeeding at a job usually costs time and energy.
- Used in a sentence: His obsession with getting revenge cost him his job and his family.
Where does cost come from?
The first records of cost come from around 1200. It ultimately comes from the Latin verb constāre, meaning “to stand together” or “to cost.”
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to cost?
- costly (adjective)
- costless (adjective)
- costlessness (noun)
- recost (verb)
What are some synonyms for cost?
What are some words that share a root or word element with cost?
What are some words that often get used in discussing cost?
How is cost used in real life?
Cost is a very common word that often refers to the prices a person pays or the sacrifices that they make.
BREAKING via @EdwardLawrence: @CDCDirector says the pandemic will cost the nation $8 trillion in health related costs and $15 trillion – $20 trillion in economic impact
— Lydia Moynihan (@LJMoynihan) December 2, 2020
Knocked out some serious work last night but it cost me sleep #naptime
— Tyler Eifert (@tylereifert) May 4, 2011
Tax evaders & Money Launderers will be made to realise that they will have to pay a heavy cost for their deviant behaviour.
— Ministry of Finance (@FinMinIndia) April 7, 2017
Try using cost!
Is cost used correctly in the following sentence?
Keshawn tried to bargain with the seller to lower the cost of the table he wanted.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse