Purchase /(?; 48)/
Pur·chase
Purchase
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Purchased; p. pr. & vb. n. Purchasing
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To pursue and obtain; to acquire by seeking; to gain, obtain, or acquire.
That loves the thing he can not purchase.
Your accent is Something finer than you could purchase in so removed a dwelling.
His faults . . . hereditary Rather than purchased.
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To obtain by paying money or its equivalent; to buy for a price; as, to purchase land, or a house.
The field which Abraham purchased of the sons of Heth.
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To obtain by any outlay, as of labor, danger, or sacrifice, etc.; as, to purchase favor with flattery.
One poor retiring minute . . . Would purchase thee a thousand thousand friends.
A world who would not purchase with a bruise?
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To expiate by a fine or forfeit. [Obs.]
Not tears nor prayers shall purchase out abuses.
- To acquire by any means except descent or inheritance. (Law)
- To apply to (anything) a device for obtaining a mechanical advantage; to get a purchase upon, or apply a purchase to; as, to purchase a cannon.
Purchase
v. i.
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To put forth effort to obtain anything; to strive; to exert one's self. [Obs.]
Duke John of Brabant purchased greatly that the Earl of Flanders should have his daughter in marriage.
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To acquire wealth or property. [Obs.]
Sure our lawyers Would not purchase half so fast.
Purchase
n.
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The act of seeking, getting, or obtaining anything. [Obs.]
I'll . . . get meat to have thee, Or lose my life in the purchase.
- The act of seeking and acquiring property.
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The acquisition of title to, or properly in, anything for a price; buying for money or its equivalent.
It is foolish to lay out money in the purchase of repentance.
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That which is obtained, got, or acquired, in any manner, honestly or dishonestly; property; possession; acquisition.
We met with little purchase upon this coast, except two small vessels of Golconda.
A beauty-waning and distressed widow . . . Made prize and purchase of his lustful eye.
- That which is obtained for a price in money or its equivalent.
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Any mechanical hold, or advantage, applied to the raising or removing of heavy bodies, as by a lever, a tackle, capstan, and the like; also, the apparatus, tackle, or device by which the advantage is gained.
A politician, to do great things, looks for a power -- what our workmen call a purchase.
- Acquisition of lands or tenements by other means than descent or inheritance, namely, by one's own act or agreement. (Law)
Phrases & Compounds
- Purchase criminal
- robbery.
- Purchase money
- the money paid, or contracted to be paid, for anything bought.
- Worth [so many] years' purchase
- a phrase by which the value or cost of a thing is expressed in the length of time required for the income to amount to the purchasing price; as, he bought the estate at a twenty years' purchase. To say one's life is not worth a day's purchase in the same as saying one will not live a day, or is in imminent peril.