spave

spave
(SPAYV)
v.
To spend money on items priced below normal retail cost and thus save the difference.
spaver n.
Example Citation:
People will risk their lives to spave — spend to save — at Ikea. The most dangerous part is getting your flatpack off the self-service warehouse shelves. You can almost hear varicose veins popping as the weight bears down on shoppers. As I loaded my trolleys with 23 packs of Tundra-laminated floorboards I wondered if the casualty rate was high. Surely, like that scene from On the Waterfront, where dock workers are crushed under pallets of banana boxes, Ikea customers regularly face death by falling flat-packed sofa.
— Kate Muir, "Fraught & social," The Times (London), December 1, 2001
Earliest Citation:
For the non-beachbound, Kings Dominion, Williamsburg and Busch Gardens are favorite destinations. But did you know that the No. 1 tourist spot in the Washington region is the Potomac Mills megamall? So watch out for the "spavers" headed southbound on Interstate 95.
— Adrienne T. Washington, "Beach means rejuvenation for everyone," The Washington Times, May 24, 1996
Notes:
People who spave — a blend of "spend" and "save" — have an unofficial motto: The more you buy, the more you save. This sounds at first like some twisted brand of mathematics — call it Retail Math or Shopaholic Math. But the spaving secret is to purchase something — in particular, an item that you would have bought anyway — at a reduced price. For example, if you go to the mall and see an item you need that normally costs $50 on sale for $25, you'd save $25. Nothing wrong with that.
Problems arise when the shopper confuses the "reducing expenses" sense of "saving" with the "accumulating money" sense. The shopper would figure that, although he only needs one of them, if he were to buy two of the sale item, then he'd have "saved" a whopping $50. "Heck, I'm making money here," he says to himself. "Why not buy four of them and save $100?" The amount not spent becomes the target, and he enters the mathematical la-la land of the out-of-control spaver.
Related Words: Category:

New words. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • spave — …   Useful english dictionary

  • Spaventa — Spavẹnta,   Bertrando, italienischer Philosoph, * Bomba (Provinz Chieti) 27. 6. 1817, ✝ Neapel 20. 2. 1882; war Professor in Modena, Bologna und seit 1861 in Neapel. Gegen die einflussreiche, an V. Gioberti orientierte zeitgenössische Richtung… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Delhi College of Engineering — Infobox University name = Delhi College of Engineering motto = Service before self established = 1940 type = Public director = Dr P.B Sharma faculty = 110 (approx.) undergrad = 2000 (full time) 200 (part time) postgrad = 450 (full time) 55 (part… …   Wikipedia

  • Iririki — The privately lease held island of Iririki is located in Mele Bay, a free 3 minute ferry ride from the Vanuatu capital Port Vila. The whole island is leased to the Iririki Island Resort and no ni Vanuatu live on the island.HistoryIririki Island… …   Wikipedia

  • Retail — anchor store BAM battery boutique big box store Black Friday bricks and mortar cash mob checkout line ra …   New words

  • Wal-Mart effect — n. The economic effects attributable to the Wal Mart retail chain, including local effects such as forcing smaller competitors out of business and driving down wages, and broader effects such as helping to keep inflation low and productivity high …   New words

  • Wal-Martian — (wawl.MAR.shun) n. 1. A person who does most of their shopping at Wal Mart. 2. A person who works at Wal Mart. Also: walmartian. adj. Relating to such a person. Example Citation: Having conquered America, [Wal Mart] has set its sights on the rest …   New words

  • big-box store — n. A large format store, typically one that has a plain, box like exterior and at least 100,000 square feet of retail space. big boxing pp. Example Citation: Manufacturers such as RCA and Sony, which used to depend on department stores to get… …   New words

  • kidfluence — (KID.floo.uns) n. The direct and indirect influence that kids have on their parents purchasing decisions. Example Citation: Children also exert substantial indirect influence on parental purchases when they suggest a retail outlet, such as Let s… …   New words

  • nag factor — (NAG fak.tur) n. The degree to which parents purchasing decisions are based on being nagged by their children. Example Citation: Marketing and advertising to children has become a specialty unto itself, agrees David Walsh, a psychologist and… …   New words

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”