Pricy in a sentence as an adjective

In 2001, it was pricy to get a 15" 1280x1024 LCD monitor.

Blowing up a few of those, or other components gets pricy.

When land is pricy, there is no other logical option than to go up.

You can already get ridiculous amounts of x86 cores in a rack if you want, but those can get pricy to buy and to keep running.

Similarly 79p for a single audio track file which you only need to play on your iPod seems a little pricy.

It's definitely pricy if you order one at a time, but if you want a run of business cards costs come down to a couple dollars each.

It is a digital material sold to people who like to consume content via their pretty and pricy devices.

Some very pricy real estate in Washington, DC, the Spring Valley neighborhood, was once part of a chemical warfare station.

Cameras are pricy delicate devices requiring safe storage and well-padded bags.

A bottle of reasonably pricy champagne lead to a page full of gleaming reviews, and a copy of the information that was on the label anyway.

On top of that, they're still relatively pricy compared to other diagnostic procedures, and in Germany, a doctor or hospital who prescribes too many expensive procedures may get personally stuck with the cost, instead of being able to pass them on to the patient or insurer.

Pricy definitions

adjective

having a high price; "costly jewelry"; "high-priced merchandise"; "much too dear for my pocketbook"; "a pricey restaurant"

See also: costly high-priced pricey