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Expensive

Expensive is an adjective used to describe something that costs a high price relative to a particular reference point, such as a buyer's income, the prices of comparable goods, or a general standard of affordability. What counts as expensive can be subjective and vary by context, culture, and individual finances. The term often implies high cost rather than poor quality, though in many markets price and perceived value are linked through brand reputation, craftsmanship, or scarcity.

In economics, the price of an item reflects production costs, demand, competition, and perceived value. An expensive

Culturally, expensive goods are frequently associated with luxury, status, or exclusivity, and they can serve as

Etymology: expensive derives from expense and the suffix -ive, from the verb expendere (to spend) through Latin

See also: affordable, luxury goods, pricing strategy, consumer behavior.

item
may
indicate
high
marginal
cost,
limited
supply,
or
strong
demand,
and
it
can
influence
consumer
choices
through
opportunity
costs—spending
on
one
item
means
forgoing
others.
Price
sensitivity,
income
distribution,
and
inflation
also
affect
what
different
households
consider
expensive.
signals
in
social
interactions.
Marketers
may
use
premium
pricing,
aesthetic
quality,
or
scarcity
to
reinforce
this
perception.
Conversely,
some
items
are
expensive
due
to
external
factors
such
as
taxes,
tariffs,
or
distribution
costs
rather
than
inherent
value.
and
Norman
French,
entering
English
in
the
medieval
period.