price £39.99


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The Oxford Dictionary of English is published on Thursday, [color=red]price £39.99.

Is [color=red]price £39.99 fine? What about “priced at £39.99”?

“priced at” I think it is used in passive .
The car is priced at £39.99 (the car is sold with the price £39.99).

You can say “priced at”, but it’s not necessary, and it would be a little unusual in that sentence. The author is writing telegraphically in that sentence, because we don’t need all the prepositions, the tense and other information, and it’s journalism, so he’s keeping it short.

Thank you, Jamie.

The Oxford Dictionary of English is published on Thursday [color=green]at the price of £39.99.
Is this fine too?

I think there should be a colon between price and £39.99 .

There doesn’t have to be a colon. The author punctuated correctly.

The Oxford Dictionary of English is published on Thursday [color=red]at the price of £39.99.
I wonder if this is fine too?

Yes. Wear an evening gown when you say it, and I’ll arrive in a tuxedo.

Thank you, Jamie.