Price yourself/something out of the market idiom
Something is said to have been priced out of the market when the cost of that becomes too expensive that no one wants to buy it.
If a company prices itself out of the market, a service or product is charged so much that no one wants to buy it.
Gigantic retail chains all over the region are pricing local small shops out of the market.
The company is pricing itself out of the market. We have to bring down the price. If not, no one would buy our products.
Used to indicate something that is very expensive
Have a very high price
Be very expensive
To refer to a very high price.
It is often used in simple present tense.
There is no clear information about this expression.
If someone has a cast iron stomach, they have a strong stomach that can digest unusual food and even bad food without being ill.
Jimmy must have a cast-iron stomach, when he drank milk with lime juice and felt perfectly fine afterward.