All chaffer synonyms
chaf·fer
C c verb chaffer
- bicker — When people bicker, they argue or quarrel about unimportant things.
- bargain — Something that is a bargain is good value for money, usually because it has been sold at a lower price than normal.
- haggle — to bargain in a petty, quibbling, and often contentious manner: They spent hours haggling over the price of fish.
- squabble — to engage in a petty quarrel.
- dicker — If you say that people are dickering about something, you mean that they are arguing or disagreeing about it, often in a way that you think is foolish or unnecessary.
- bargain — Something that is a bargain is good value for money, usually because it has been sold at a lower price than normal.
- wrangle — to argue or dispute, especially in a noisy or angry manner.
- quibble — an instance of the use of ambiguous, prevaricating, or irrelevant language or arguments to evade a point at issue.
- argue — If one person argues with another, they speak angrily to each other about something that they disagree about. You can also say that two people argue.
- dispute — to engage in argument or debate.
- horse-trade — to bargain or trade shrewdly.
- chitchat — Chitchat is informal talk about things that are not very important.
- palaver — a conference or discussion.
- chat — When people chat, they talk to each other in an informal and friendly way.
- confabulate — to talk together; converse; chat
- chatter — If you chatter, you talk quickly and continuously, usually about things which are not important.
- discuss — to consider or examine by argument, comment, etc.; talk over or write about, especially to explore solutions; debate: to discuss the proposed law on taxes.
- talk — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
- speak — to utter words or articulate sounds with the ordinary voice; talk: He was too ill to speak.
- confab — A confab is an informal, private conversation.
- barter — If you barter goods, you exchange them for other goods, rather than selling them for money.
- negotiate — to deal or bargain with another or others, as in the preparation of a treaty or contract or in preliminaries to a business deal.
- palter — to talk or act insincerely or deceitfully; lie or use trickery.
- trade — the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
- huckster — a retailer of small articles, especially a peddler of fruits and vegetables; hawker.
- cavil — If you say that someone cavils at something, you mean that they make criticisms of it that you think are unimportant or unnecessary.
- deal — If you say that you need or have a great deal of or a good deal of a particular thing, you are emphasizing that you need or have a lot of it.
- beat down — When the sun beats down, it is very hot and bright.
- quarrel — a square-headed bolt or arrow, formerly used with a crossbow.
- converse — If you converse with someone, you talk to them. You can also say that two people converse.
- cut a deal — to come to an arrangement; make a deal