|
Từ điển Oxford Advanced Learner 8th
sell
sell [sell sells sold selling] verb, noun BrE [sel] NAmE [sel] verb (sold, soldBrE [səʊld] ; NAmE [soʊld] ) EXCHANGE FOR MONEY 1. transitive, intransitive to give sth to sb in exchange for money •~ sth (to sb) (for sth) I sold my car to James for £800. •~ sb sth (for sth) I sold James my car for £800. •~ (sth) (at sth) They sold the business at a profit/loss (= they gained/lost money when they sold it). •We offered them a good price but they wouldn't sell. OFFER FOR SALE 2. transitive ~ sth to offer sth for people to buy • Most supermarkets sell a range of organic products. • Do you sell stamps? •to sell insurance compare ↑cross-selling BE BOUGHT 3. transitive, intransitive to be bought by people in the way or in the numbers mentioned; to be offered at the price mentioned •~ (sth) The magazine sells 300 000 copies a week. • Their last album sold millions. •The book sold well and was reprinted many times. •The new design just didn't sell (= nobody bought it). •~ for/at sth The pens sell for just 50p each. PERSUADE 4. intransitive, transitive to make people want to buy sth •You may not like it but advertising sells. •~ sth It is quality not price that sells our products. 5. transitive ~ sth/yourself (to sb) to persuade sb that sth is a good idea, service, product, etc; to persuade sb that you are the right person for a job, position, etc • Now we have to try and sell the idea to management. • You really have to sell yourself at a job interview. TAKE MONEY/REWARD 6. transitive ~ yourself (to sb) (disapproving)to accept money or a reward from sb for doing sth that is against your principles Syn: ↑prostitute see also ↑sale more at go/sell like hot cakes at ↑hot adj., sell sb/buy a pup at ↑pup Verb forms: Word Origin: Old English sellan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Old Norse selja ‘give up, sell’. Early use included the sense ‘give, hand (something) over voluntarily following a request’. Thesaurus: sell verb 1. T, I •I sold my car to Jim for £800. sell sth off • • auction sth off • • sell up • |especially BrE auction • |finance liquidate • sell sth/sell sth off/auction sth off/auction sth to sb/a place sell sth/auction sth off/auction sth for £100, $47, etc. sell/sell off/auction/liquidate property/assets 2. T •The shop sells a range of products. trade • • deal in sth • • export • • import • • handle • • stock • • carry • |business retail • |old-fashioned disapproving peddle • • hawk • sell/trade/deal in/export/import/handle/stock/retail goods sell/trade/deal in shares/futures/stocks/bonds/securities sell/deal in furniture/antiques/property sell/carry/stock/retail a range/line of goods 3. I •The painting sold for £8 000 at auction. cost • • go • |business trade • • retail • |especially spoken be • sth sells/trades/retails at £9.95 sth sells/goes/retails for £9.95 Example Bank: •It will be hard to sell 3 000 tickets. •Many banks are willing to buy and sell shares on behalf of customers. •She sold her car to a friend. •Some of these cars are actually being sold at a loss. •The company has been forced to sell land to recoup some of the losses. •The novel was expected to sell between 1 000 and 1 500 copies. •The painting was sold at auction for $11.3 million. •The property proved hard to sell. •They are still trying to sell their house. •They sold their house for $847 000. •This medicine is sold over the counter. •We sell these little notebooks at €1 each. •Your broker has the right to sell your shares. •He works for a company that sells insurance. •Most grocery stores sell a range of organic products. •They sold the business at a profit/loss. •We offered them a good price but they wouldn't sell. Idioms: ↑sell somebody down the river ▪ ↑sell somebody short ▪ ↑sell your body ▪ ↑sell your soul ▪ ↑sold on something Derived: ↑sell out ▪ ↑sell something off ▪ ↑sell something on ▪ ↑sell something up ▪ ↑sell up ▪ ↑sold out noun singular (informal) something that is not as good as it seemed to be • The band only played for about half an hour— it was a real sell. see also ↑hard sell Word Origin: Old English sellan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Old Norse selja ‘give up, sell’. Early use included the sense ‘give, hand (something) over voluntarily following a request’.
|
|
▼ Từ liên quan / Related words
Related search result for "sell"
|
|