- pay over the odds
- pay over the odds (for sth) UK INFORMAL► to pay more for something than it is really worth: »
Small businesses have always paid over the odds for office supplies.
Main Entry: ↑pay
Financial and business terms. 2012.
Small businesses have always paid over the odds for office supplies.
Financial and business terms. 2012.
pay over the odds — If you pay over the odds, you pay too much or you pay more for something than it is really worth. She s willing to pay over the odds for an original Kelly handbag to add to your collection … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
pay over the odds for sth — pay over the odds (for sth) UK INFORMAL ► to pay more for something than it is really worth: »Small businesses have always paid over the odds for office supplies. Main Entry: ↑pay … Financial and business terms
pay over the odds — British & Australian to pay more for something than it is really worth. It s a nice enough car but I m sure she paid over the odds for it. (often + for) … New idioms dictionary
over the odds — (informal) More than expected, normal, necessary, etc • • • Main Entry: ↑odd * * * over the odds british informal phrase more than the usual or expected price pay over the odds: The club will not pay over the odds to retain his services … Useful english dictionary
over the odds — British informal more than the usual or expected price pay over the odds: The club will not pay over the odds to retain his services. charge over the odds: They charge way over the odds for wine by the glass … English dictionary
Over the Edge: In Your House — Promotional poster featuring Ken Shamrock Information Promotion World Wrestling Federation … Wikipedia
odds — S3 [ɔdz US a:dz] n [plural] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(probability)¦ 2¦(difficulties)¦ 3 be at odds 4¦(horse racing etc)¦ 5 it makes no odds 6 pay over the odds ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1.) ¦(PROBABILITY)¦ the odds how lik … Dictionary of contemporary English
odds — noun (plural) 1 PROBABILITY how likely it is that something will or will not happen, especially when this can be stated in numbers: If you are male, the odds are about 1 in 12 of being colour blind. | the odds are (that) (=it is likely): Invest… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
pay — ▪ I. pay pay 1 [peɪ] noun [uncountable] the money someone receives for the job they do: • She got the job, but it meant a big pay cut. • an increase in hourly pay • All I want is a full day s work for a full day s pay … Financial and business terms
WWF Over the Edge — The generic Over the Edge logo used circa 1999 Over the Edge was a professional wrestling pay per view event that was to be produced every May by the American professional wrestling promotion the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The event was… … Wikipedia