16Likes -
1 Post By pato389 -
3 Post By bhaisahab -
2 Post By MartinEnglish -
1 Post By TheParser -
2 Post By pato389 -
2 Post By Rover_KE -
2 Post By billmcd -
3 Post By Grumpy
-
price-wise
What's the meaning of price-wise? Can you please use it in a sentence and tell me the meaning?
Thanks a lot!
-
Re: price-wise

Originally Posted by
pato389
What's the meaning of price-wise? Can you please use it in a sentence and tell me the meaning?
Thanks a lot!
Can you give the context in which you found it?
-
Re: price-wise
wise as a suffix means "with regard to this"
so price-wise means regarding the price.
"The hotel isn't very pretty but price-wise it was fine for us".
You can use it with other words too.
"This has not been a good year sales-wise."
or
"Job-wise my life is going ok, I just need to find a girlfriend now!"
It's quite an unusual structure though so don't start using it too much!
-
Re: price-wise
***** NOT A TEACHER *****
Hello,
Just thought that you would like this example from A Treasury for Word Lovers (1983) by Morton S. Freeman, pages 321 - 322:
He says that people should not write (or even say) sentences like "Pricewise, we
have received no complaints from anyone." He recommends a sentence like "No
one has complained about our prices."
*****
Most teachers and books criticize this use of -wise. Others accept it only in
conversation or very informal writing -- and not too often. Still, there are people
(such as I) who have no problem with it.
Here is a bad example of mine:
News-wise, the [the name of a British newspaper] is not very good, but it's great
if you are looking for a photograph every day of a beautiful young lady!
[That newspaper publishes daily the photograph of some young lady who is not
fully clothed! Some people buy the newspaper for the photograph. They do not
care that the newspaper does not carry much serious news.]
James
-
Re: price-wise
Thanks a lot to you all. Now it's much clearer!
I'll tell you the context in which I found it. It was an interview:
Robert: The war has affected a lot of things...
Interviewer: Price-wise?
Robert: Price-wise, yes. The fuel prices have gone up (etc.)
You really helped me!
-
Re: price-wise

Originally Posted by
pato389
I'll tell you the context in which I found it. It was an interview:
Can you see that it would have been more helpful if you had given us this context in post #1 rather than #5?
Rover
-
Re: price-wise

Originally Posted by
TheParser
***** NOT A TEACHER *****
Hello,
Just thought that you would like this example from A Treasury for Word Lovers (1983) by Morton S. Freeman, pages 321 - 322:
He says that people should not write (or even say) sentences like "Pricewise, we
have received no complaints from anyone." He recommends a sentence like "No
one has complained about our prices."
*****
Most teachers and books criticize this use of -wise. Others accept it only in
conversation or very informal writing -- and not too often. Still, there are people
(such as I) who have no problem with it.
Here is a bad example of mine:
News-wise, the [the name of a British newspaper] is not very good, but it's great
if you are looking for a photograph every day of a beautiful young lady!
[That newspaper publishes daily the photograph of some young lady who is not
fully clothed! Some people buy the newspaper for the photograph. They do not
care that the newspaper does not carry much serious news.]
James
With all due respect to Mr. Freeman and his advice, I'm with you James. Use of the term "-wise" with a variety of nouns is commonly used both in print, in conversation and in advertisements. The term can, in most cases, be loosely substituted for "with regard to".
-
Re: price-wise
I'm afraid that, usage-wise, I'm a bit of a traditionalist on this, and, advice-wise, I agree wholeheartedly with Mr Freeman.
Similar Threads
-
By Will17 in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 4
Last Post: 29-May-2012, 16:18
-
By Will17 in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 7
Last Post: 01-May-2011, 15:50
-
By yiuho in forum General Language Discussions
Replies: 4
Last Post: 23-Nov-2009, 15:17
-
By thedaffodils in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 7
Last Post: 21-Jul-2008, 14:23
-
By jctgf in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 7
Last Post: 05-Jul-2008, 07:39
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules

Search Engine Optimization by
vBSEO 3.6.1