import
No. You offered the item and agreed to the sale.
$112.50
to find the sale price just ask my dad!
bargain
Divide sale price by full price. Example: item is $30 but is on sale for $15. 15/30=50%, so the item is 50% off
... called an "import"
No. You offered the item and agreed to the sale.
The stickered item on sale is a product that has a special sticker indicating a discounted price or promotion. It is being offered at a reduced price for a limited time.
Quantities offered for sale are things you sell to avoid foreclosure or bankruptcy.
A single item grown for sale is a crop. Corn, alfalfa, wheat, beans, and tobacco are examples of a single item grown for sale.
You don't have to have an item on sale for any length of time before it can be sold at a sale price. It can go immediately on sale.
When is the item being sold?
no, tyhey are not being offered for sale.
I have had the same situation where i found an item on a sale table but when i checked, it was placed there in error. The law applies to an item that is priced as on sale or has a sign that specifics a sale. The item must be sold by law at the price indicated even if in error.
A retailer has to charge you the sale price if the price that you choose in their store is on sale. They cannot hide from you the fact that the item is on sale.
The ukulele was created on Hawaii based on Portuguese instruments brought there in 1879. It was a year or two later that the instrument known as the ukulele was created and offered for sale.
Multiply the cost by 0.75 and that is the sale cost of the item.