on a spree• In addition to the sugarcubes a large jelly had been made for the occasion, indicative of 1950s kidson a spree.• You took her petlamb Joseph out on a spree, didn't you?• We had such great funcollecting the toys because we bought them on days off when we were out on a spree.
From Longman Business Dictionary
spreespree /spriː/ noun [countableC]
spending/buying/takeover etc spree a short period of time during which someone spends a lot of money
Consumers went on a spending spree.
The company embarked on a takeover spree during the 1980s.
Originspree
(1700-1800) Perhaps from Scottish Englishspreath“attack to steal cattle”, from Scottish Gaelicspreidh“cattle”