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The phrase "a big mark up" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing pricing, particularly in the context of retail or business, to indicate a significant increase in price over the cost.
Example: "The store has a big mark up on their electronics, making it difficult for customers to find affordable options."
Alternatives: "a large markup" or "a significant price increase".
Similar(57)
At £99.95, the Zap Light was sold at a big mark-up to prices available in America, where it can be bought for just $36.
So now the CBN is trying to curb smuggling in a less disruptive way, by hounding the banks that supply the black market with dollars.Many Nigerian banks earn the bulk of their profits by "round-tripping"—buying dollars from the central bank at the official rate and reselling them to smugglers for a big mark-up.
She added: "Opaque data and limited benchmarks for comparison mean the department has no idea if BT is being reasonable or adding in big mark ups.
"Opaque data and limited benchmarks for comparison mean the [DCMS] has no idea if BT is being reasonable or adding in big mark ups," she said.
"Opaque data and limited benchmarks for comparison means the department has no idea if BT is being reasonable or adding in big mark ups," said Labour MP Margaret Hodge, who is the chair of Parliament's Public Accounts Committee.
As a young graduate, Lee passed up safe jobs at multinational companies in order to make a big mark at a smaller firm.
If the last bit is true, then someone should tell them that's a pretty big mark-up.
Mr Papantoniou is preparing to punish wholesalers who put big mark-ups on television sets and washing machines after the drachma's devaluation.Mr Papadopoulos and the other Pasok barons are eagerly waiting for Mr Papantoniou to trip up.
Go back to your morning coffee because the Mylo 2 will probably disappear as quickly as the Mylo 1 thanks to Sony's short-sighted product marketing and focus on the big mark-ups they get from televisions!
UC Irvine law professor Michele Goodwin said that almost all companies that process human tissue have big mark-ups, including some "that make this look like this is nothing," she said.
The firm lost charitable discounts from suppliers - of UK equipment in particular - when it ceased to be a charity, but said suppliers observed them still working in the charitable market, saw that ' the customers are still the same' and that price lists showed no big mark-ups, so ' they are coming round'.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com