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The phrase "at three figures" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a numerical value that is in the range of 100 to 999, often in contexts like finance or statistics.
Example: "The cost of the project was estimated to be at three figures, making it affordable for our budget."
Alternatives: "in the hundreds" or "within three digits".
Exact(1)
"Teams are looking at three figures.
Similar(59)
At four figures, some of them have very status-y prices.
I wouldn't be the person to consult, but you would be looking at five figures, I would have thought".
The social network Digg was valued at nine figures a few years ago and sold for six figures a few days ago.
While a more traditional tote or hold-all designer bag often comes in at four figures, these clutches are significantly cheaper – around the £200 mark.
A mass of riflemen in sombreros fill its center, aiming at two figures to the left, both featureless and half obscured by gun smoke.
These machines are not for quarters: purchases are measured in dollar amounts that typically start at two figures and go up.
An e-commerce relationship with AOL starts at seven figures, a price that merchants swallow hard and pay because being exposed to even a small fraction of the service's 22 million subscribers could be a boon.
Kors' reach to teenagers comes, in part, from his mid-range handbags – the most popular are all under £310, which sounds like a lot until it is compared with most designer handbags, which tend to come in at four figures.
They could hire a couple of people or an agency to put something together, but all of a sudden you're looking at six figures before you can even start working on it.
Bernanke, who left the Fed in January, has been hiring himself out as a speaker at six figures a pop.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com