The price is the cruncher. At $37,490 for the auto, and cheaper for the manual, it'sa bargain.
2.
a person or thing that crunches (numbers, bones, etc)
Computers used to be number crunchers used by scientists.
cruncher in American English
(ˈkrʌntʃər)
noun
1.
a person or thing that crunches
2. informal
a decisive blow, argument, event, or the like
Word origin
[1945–50; crunch + -er1]This word is first recorded in the period 1945–50. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: beeper, ergative, regression analysis, spin-off, taxi squad-er is a suffix used in forming nouns designating persons from the object of their occupationor labor (hatter; tiler; tinner; moonshiner), or from their place of origin or abode (Icelander; southerner; villager), or designating either persons or things from some special characteristic or circumstance(six-footer; three-master; teetotaler; fiver; tenner)
Examples of 'cruncher' in a sentence
cruncher
Call him an egg-head, number cruncher-in-chief or simply the stats man.
Times, Sunday Times (2014)
City sources describe him as a shy number-cruncher.
Times, Sunday Times (2016)
A predicted draw in this title cruncher.
The Sun (2012)
A word-cruncher that offers the basics: one font, one text size, one column width and a custom keyboard.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
She has been caricatured as a number cruncher with an alienating tendency to spout management jargon.