A customer, generally in a supermarket who stares intently at the old LCD screens made by IBM. Their purpose is to find the slightest inconsistency with posted prices with what the item actually rings up. Obviously they have no problem with a item that rings up less than what was posted, but they become outraged at the fact that a particular item rang up 15¢ more. This intent staring leave them helpless and oblivious to the outside world. Such as, lets say at Wal-Mart (where the customers remove the bags from the carousel), they just let a pile of bags form before you have to specifically ask them to break their gaze and do something about it. Either that, or they brought a person shopping to help them in these helpless stages of shopping
Cashier 1: Dude, why was that crazy bitch yelling at you?
Cashier 2: Well, I had five items ring up with a total of $1.58 over the posted price. Her total was a fucking $347.38.
Cashier 1: How could she tell? She must have had a lot of items.
Cashier 2: That bitch was a Price Surveyor.
Cashier 2: Well, I had five items ring up with a total of $1.58 over the posted price. Her total was a fucking $347.38.
Cashier 1: How could she tell? She must have had a lot of items.
Cashier 2: That bitch was a Price Surveyor.
by 0DeafMute0 March 16, 2009
To pay "the iron price" means or implies stealing something. If you paid the iron price for something, it serves to say the item has been stolen.
It comes from a concept in the George R. R. Martin fantasy series A Song of Ice And Fire and subsequent HBO adaptation Game of Thrones, wherein a culture known as the "ironborn" seize things from those they have defeated, rather than paying for them or treating for them.
The opposite of the iron price is "the gold price" -- paying for possessions, which is considered shameful among the ironborn.
It comes from a concept in the George R. R. Martin fantasy series A Song of Ice And Fire and subsequent HBO adaptation Game of Thrones, wherein a culture known as the "ironborn" seize things from those they have defeated, rather than paying for them or treating for them.
The opposite of the iron price is "the gold price" -- paying for possessions, which is considered shameful among the ironborn.
Balon Greyjoy: "That bauble around your neck; did you pay the iron price for it, or the gold? ... Did you pull it from the neck of a corpse you made? ... Iron or Gold?"
Theon Greyjoy: "Gold..."
Theon Greyjoy: "Gold..."
by The Kingslayer May 07, 2013
Buyer: I want a bottle of water
Seller: Four dollars.
Buyer: Those crack prices!
Buyer: How 'bout a dollar!
Seller: Four dollars.
Buyer: Those crack prices!
Buyer: How 'bout a dollar!
by Robust April 28, 2006
The tickets to the gig are very costly. It will price out most of the people. Let's reduce the prices.
by uttam maharjan September 07, 2011
1) "Man, that was so price slash of you to drive me home last night."
2) "That party was so price slashing awesome!"
2) "That party was so price slashing awesome!"
by Chrissy August 24, 2004
Tony Price is one of the main characters in the new add-on to the super kool video game Grand Theft Auto IV!
aka Gay Tony
aka Gay Tony
by Toretto November 12, 2009
by Don god June 26, 2018