2be a snipBritish EnglishBrE informalCHEAP to be surprisingly cheap 极其廉价
At £20 for a dozen, they’re a snip.
20 英镑一打,真便宜。
Examples from the Corpus
be a snip• Lochsong was a snip at the weights in last year's Tote-Portland Handicap but no horse stands out this time.• The new computer packageis a snip at only £599 plustax.• After a cut, the plugis snipped out by a special enzyme, the moleculeslink up and the clot forms.• The rest was snipped off, using fine scissors.• At £80, this is a snip.• For Diana, a heavy tweedjacket for draughty Balmoral would be a snip at £9.95.
Examples from the Corpus
snip• For Diana, a heavytweedjacket for draughty Balmoral would be a snip at £9.95.• Below: S. brichardi - a snip at Where to start?• But she carried in her purse a snip from a Londonnewspaper.• But you and I both know all it would take to wreck your career is one errantsnip of the scissors.• It merely made a quick snip.• In this case, the husband had searched the garden on his hands and knees, clipping the longer grass with snips!• But he talked about the garden and the way Colette attacked the roses with snips.
From Longman Business Dictionary
snipsnip /snɪp/ noun
be a snipBritish EnglishBrE informal to be surprisingly cheap