Buy Definition

bought, buying, buys
verb
bought, buying, buys
To get by paying or agreeing to pay money or some equivalent; purchase.
Webster's New World
To buy merchandise as a buyer.
Webster's New World
To be the means of purchasing.
All that money can buy.
Webster's New World
To get as by an exchange.
Buy victory with human lives.
Webster's New World
To buy something.
Webster's New World
Antonyms:
noun
buys
The act of buying; a purchase.
Webster's New World
Anything bought or buyable, esp. with reference to its worth as a bargain.
A good (or bad) buy.
Webster's New World
Something worth the price; bargain.
Webster's New World
Synonyms:
idiom
buy it
  • To be killed.
American Heritage
buy the farm
  • To die, especially suddenly or violently.
American Heritage
buy time
  • To increase the time available for a specific purpose:
American Heritage
buy in
  • to buy a share of or shares in
  • to buy back (an item) at an auction by a final, high bid when the other bids are much too low
Webster's New World
buy into
Webster's New World

Other Word Forms of Buy

Noun

Singular:
buy
Plural:
buys

Origin of Buy

  • From Middle English byen, biggen, buggen, from Old English bycġan (“to buy, pay for, acquire, redeem, ransom, procure, get done, sell”), from Proto-Germanic *bugjaną (“to buy”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *bhūgh- (“to bend”), or from Proto-Indo-European *bheugh- (“to take away, deliver”). Cognate with Scots by (“to buy, purchase”), Old Saxon buggian, buggean (“to buy”), Old Norse byggja (“to procure a wife, lend at interest, let out”), Gothic (bugjan, “to buy”).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English from Old English bycgan

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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