doorbuster

/ˈdȯr-ˌbə-stər/ (ame, mw)

doorbuster — 名詞

1. A product that a shop sells at an extremely low price for a short time, mainly t

1.名詞B1
釋義

破盤商品;超低價品

商店為吸引顧客而低價出售的商品

A product that a shop sells at an extremely low price for a short time, mainly to get people into the store, where the business hopes they will also buy other items at normal prices.

例句

The electronics store offered a doorbuster deal on the latest gaming console for Black Friday.

這家電子用品店在黑色星期五那天針對最新的遊戲主機推出了破盤商品。

collocation: doorbuster deal

Shoppers camped outside the mall overnight hoping to grab the doorbuster items before they sold out.

購物者在購物中心外露宿過夜,希望能搶到特價商品,以免被搶購一空。

collocation: doorbuster items / sold out

同義詞
  • loss leader

    A product sold at a loss to attract customers; more specific — doorbusters may or may not be sold at an actual loss.

  • special offer

    A broader term covering any temporary price reduction, not necessarily an extremely low price meant to lure people into the store.

  • discount item

    General; may refer to any reduced-price product without the urgency or door-opening strategy implied by doorbuster.

文法句型

doorbuster + noun (used attributively)

用法筆記

Common in advertising and news reports about major shopping events such as Black Friday, Cyber Monday, or end-of-season clearance sales. Frequently used as an adjective before nouns like deal, price, item, special, and sale.

常見錯誤

The store is doorbusting all electronics this weekend.
The store is offering doorbuster deals on all electronics this weekend.
💡doorbuster is a noun and an attributive modifier, not a verb.
I bought a doorbuster from the street vendor.
I bought a doorbuster from the department store during the sale.
💡doorbusters are officially advertised promotions from established retailers, not random items from street vendors.