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ransom
king's ransom
A very large sum of money. I've always wanted to vacation in Hawaii, but the plane tickets cost a king's ransom.
hold someone for ransom
to demand money for the return of a person who has been kidnapped. The kidnappers held me for ransom, but no one would pay. We will hold Timmy for ransom and hope that the police don't find us.
*king's ransom
Fig. a great deal of money. (To pay an amount as large as one might have to pay to get back a king held for ransom. *Typically: cost ~; pay ~; spend~.) I would like to buy a nice watch, but I don't want to pay a king's ransom for it. It's a lovely house. I bet it cost a king's ransom.
a king's ransom
a large amount of money
A visit to one of those amusement parks can cost a king's ransom. Usage notes: often used with worth or cost, as in the example
hold somebody to ransom
to force someone to do something by putting them in a situation where something bad will happen to them if they do not Some people regarded the miners' strike as the union holding the nation to ransom.
a king's ransom
a very large amount of money (not used with the ) She was wearing a diamond necklace which must have been worth a king's ransom.
king's ransom
A huge sum of money, as in That handmade rug must have cost a king's ransom. This metaphoric expression originally referred to the sum required to release a king from captivity. [Late 1400s]
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Euadne | | - | Greek Mythology |
Laetitia | | - | Late Roman, French |
ÉLodie | | e-lo-DEE | French |
Victoria | | vik-TAWR-ee-ə (English), vik-TO-ree-ah (German) | English, Spanish, Romanian, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Late Roman, Roman Mythology |
Duff | | DUF | Scottish |
Tamid | | - | Arabic |