dirt cheap

dirt cheap

Rents won’t be dirt cheap, at about $3,205 a month for a two bedroom for a family of three earning $128,000.

From New York Daily News

Some towns have so many signs it seems like they must be dirt cheap.

From Chicago Daily Herald

You can fit dozens of them on a penny and the good news is that they’re dirt cheap to manufacture.

From Gizmodo

But it is dirt cheap to fly, costing in the “low thousands” of dollars to refurbish between flights.

From Ars Technica

Compared to many a mission in the offing, that’s dirt cheap.

From TechCrunch

It’s interesting that these dirt cheap devices aren’t using on-screen navigation keys.

From Ars Technica

Bandwidth has become dirt cheap; despite the fear-mongering about the “exaflood” and the “zettaflood” and (presumably) the “yottaflood,” bandwidth costs drop significantly every year.

From Ars Technica

It’s the instant democratization of virtual reality, made dirt cheap and readily available to literally hundreds of millions of people.

From Gizmodo

In previous years you could get a dirt cheap laptop but you likely would be left frustrated at its poor performance or its terrible screen.

From Huffington Post

Its really simple, but it’s so spicy and flavorous, and it’s dirt cheap.

From CNN

Not only are the shares dirt cheap, the company is trading on a 5.6% fully franked dividend yield.

From CNN

The internal combustion engine has been around for over a century, it’s dirt cheap and technological advances like direct injection and old tricks like turbocharging keep increasing efficiency.

From Wired

Cost of living is probably dirt cheap.

From CNN

But it’s a much more efficient way of converting electrical energy into light than making tungsten extremely hot (as in incandescents), and fluorescent proved dirt cheap to operate.

From Ars Technica

This apparatus is described as of wonderful efficiency and dirt cheap.

From Project Gutenberg

These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.