BOGOF
See also: bogof
English
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editNoun
editBOGOF (plural BOGOFs)
- (chiefly UK) Abbreviation of buy one, get one free. (a retail promotion in which consumers may purchase two items for the usual price of one)
- 2002, "Nothing to be Smug About", Alex Brummer, London Evening Standard, 13 November.
- At the Big Food Group, the new team headed by Bill Grimsey was quick to discover that turning the company around might be more difficult than it thought because of double counting of revenues as a result of bogof (buy one, get one free) promotions
- 2002, "Nothing to be Smug About", Alex Brummer, London Evening Standard, 13 November.
- (chiefly UK) An item promoted in this way.
Quotations
edit- 2005, "Labour's two-for-one whammy", Ian Duncan Smith, The Guardian, 20 April
- The other day in the supermarket, I found myself surrounded by "buy one, get one free" promotions, tempting everyone to fill their baskets with things they hadn't intended to buy. Just like the supermarket, New Labour is running Britain's first BOGOF election campaign.
Synonyms
editpromotion
See also
editFurther reading
edit- Word of the Week article on the word "BOGOF"—on the MacMillan Essential Dictionary Resource Site.