Exorbitant in a sentence as an adjective

Well, and even at that, $5k isn't really exorbitant.

Then you pay fees which are exorbitant by comparison with what you will get almost anywhere else.

"I never recommend this it's normally a way to make sure you pay an exorbitant price for a domain.

Or if you want to get that benefit without paying the exorbitant rates to outsource the math, you can roll up your own sleeves.

Wrong, we researchers are not double-dipping, just because the publishers are charging exorbitant sums doesn't mean we see a dime of it.

The real question is: how much of that money has already been multiplied tenfold, through exits, IPOs or exorbitant profits?

Finally, we pay again through exorbitant real estate prices because our transport infrastructure, in this country, is so poor.

Access to banking is more difficult because of similar reasons, so people use check cashing services, which cost exorbitant amounts.

This is the next frontier for terrible service, exorbitant prices and regulated monopolies...

I'd rather someone was deterring Telstra from levying such exorbitant charges in the first place than wasting my tax dollars locking someone up for such a minor crime.

To compliance/legal departments, paying exorbitant fees to qualified vendors is saving money in their risk analyses.

Which I guess isn't so terrible; once someone else labours mightily to learn all that very-hard math, you can hire her at an exorbitant rate to make use of the calculating techniques she has learned.

Always there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power that was going to gobble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it by furnishing the exorbitant funds demanded.

$30 more than Dell charges for a similar-capacity battery, but this does include labor and the MPB gets 7+ hours of life with it[5].I do not believe your assertion of "exorbitant fees" is supportable.

It's not an option for women like me."Great, so if a woman marries she loses independence and her own income, and then people don't know why women don't want to marry?Same thing here:"Romantic commitment seems to represent burden and drudgery, from the exorbitant costs of buying property in Japan to the uncertain expectations of a spouse and in-laws"

Exorbitant definitions

adjective

greatly exceeding bounds of reason or moderation; "exorbitant rent"; "extortionate prices"; "spends an outrageous amount on entertainment"; "usurious interest rate"; "unconscionable spending"

See also: extortionate outrageous steep unconscionable usurious