释义 |
selling
sell C0188700 (sĕl)v. sold (sōld), sell·ing, sells v.tr.1. To exchange or deliver for money or its equivalent: We sold our old car for a modest sum.2. To offer or have available for sale: The store sells health foods.3. To give up or surrender in exchange for a price or reward: sell one's soul to the devil.4. To be purchased in (a certain quantity); achieve sales of: a book that sold a million copies.5. a. To bring about or encourage sales of; promote: Good publicity sold the product.b. To cause to be accepted; advocate successfully: We sold the proposal to the school committee.6. To persuade (another) to recognize the worth or desirability of something: They sold me on the idea.v.intr.1. To exchange ownership for money or its equivalent; engage in selling: Are any of the fruit vendors still selling?2. To be sold or be on sale: Grapes are selling high this season.3. To attract prospective buyers; be popular on the market: an item that doesn't sell.4. To be approved of; gain acceptance: an idea that just wouldn't sell.n.1. An act or instance of selling: ordered a sell of his shares in the company.2. Something that sells or gains acceptance in a particular way: Their program to raise taxes will be a difficult sell.3. Slang A deception; a hoax.Phrasal Verbs: sell off To get rid of by selling, often at reduced prices. sell out1. To sell all of a supply of something: We have sold out of that model.2. To cause (someone) to have sold an entire supply of something: The bakery is sold out of those pastries.3. To be entirely sold: Her new novel has sold out.4. Slang To betray one's principles or colleagues: He sold out to the other side. sell through To be purchased as a retail item by a customer: The clothes are in the store, but they aren't selling through.Idioms: sell a bill of goods Informal To take unfair advantage of. sell down the river Informal To betray the trust or faith of. sell short1. To contract for the sale of securities or commodities one expects to own at a later date and at more advantageous terms.2. To underestimate the true value or worth of: Don't sell your colleague short; she's a smart lawyer. [Middle English sellen, from Old English sellan, to give, sell.] sell′a·ble adj.selling (ˈsɛlɪŋ) n1. a. the act of offering something for saleb. (as modifier): a selling price. 2. (as modifier): a selling price. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | selling - the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of moneymarketing, merchandisingbait and switch - a deceptive way of selling that involves advertising a product at a very low price in order to attract customers who are then persuaded to switch to a more expensive productprivate treaty - a sale of property at a price agreed on by the seller and buyer without an intervening agencybootlegging - the act of making or transporting alcoholic liquor for sale illegally; "the Prohibition amendment made bootlegging profitable"bootlegging - the act of selling illegally or without permission; "the bootlegging of videotapes is common in Asia"capitalisation, capitalization - the sale of capital stockcommerce, commercialism, mercantilism - transactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services)marketing - the commercial processes involved in promoting and selling and distributing a product or service; "most companies have a manager in charge of marketing"retail - the selling of goods to consumers; usually in small quantities and not for resalewholesale - the selling of goods to merchants; usually in large quantities for resale to consumerssale - a particular instance of selling; "he has just made his first sale"; "they had to complete the sale before the banks closed"syndication - selling (an article or cartoon) for publication in many magazines or newspapers at the same time; "he received a comfortable income from the syndication of his work"dumping - selling goods abroad at a price below that charged in the domestic marketdutch auction - a method of selling in which the price is reduced until a buyer is foundretailing - the activities involved in selling commodities directly to consumerstelecommerce, telemarketing, teleselling - the use of the telephone as an interactive medium for promotion and salespeddling, vending, vendition, hawking - the act of selling goods for a livingresale - the selling of something purchasedsale - the general activity of selling; "they tried to boost sales"; "laws limit the sale of handguns" | TranslationsIdiomsSeesellMedicalSeeSELLselling
SellTo relinquish ownership of some asset in exchange for some monetary compensation. Selling may take any of several forms. In a cash sale, the seller receives cash or a cash equivalent immediately in exchange for the asset. In a credit sale, the seller surrenders ownership immediately in exchange for future payment, often with interest. An example of a sale is a simple transaction involving widgets. If the seller is willing to accept $2 per widget and the buyer wishes to purchase 100 widgets, then the seller gives to the buyer 100 widgets and in their place receives $200. See also: Buy.selling the process of persuading potential BUYERS to purchase products. This process is undertaken by a firm's SALES REPRESENTATIVES who visit buyers, or by sales assistants in retail shops or by wholesalers. See PERSONAL SELLING, SALES FORCE, KEY ACCOUNT MANAGEMENT.selling Related to selling: Personal sellingSynonyms for sellingnoun the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of moneySynonymsRelated Words- bait and switch
- private treaty
- bootlegging
- capitalisation
- capitalization
- commerce
- commercialism
- mercantilism
- marketing
- retail
- wholesale
- sale
- syndication
- dumping
- dutch auction
- retailing
- telecommerce
- telemarketing
- teleselling
- peddling
- vending
- vendition
- hawking
- resale
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