Having a specified cost or value assigned to it. Often used to indicate something is expensive or reasonably valued.
From Middle English 'pris' borrowed from Old French 'pris', ultimately from Latin 'pretium' meaning value or price. The past participle form developed in English to describe items that have had a price set or determined.
The word 'priced' reveals how commerce shapes language - we've turned the noun 'price' into a verb and then into an adjective, showing our obsession with valuation. Interestingly, 'overpriced' and 'underpriced' are far more common than the simple 'priced', suggesting we're always making comparative judgments about value.
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