splurger

splurger

(ˈsplɜːdʒə)
n
a person who splurges
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
stressed splurger DO YOU find yourself parting with money after a particularly demanding day at work, or when you're feeling frazzled?
Sleeveless top PS14.99 @ DaisyStreet Dress 185 Marella House Of Fraser Jewel dress PS75 @ Phase Eight SPLURGER ESPLURG leopard-print knit is the most stylish way to keep cosy this autumn.
Currently home to Manchester's big spenders offering high end names like Jimmy Choo, D&G, Prada and Yves Saint Laurent, Flannels looks set to provide some stiff competition to our very own splurger's paradise, Cricket, while the distressed, edgy designs for men and women from London-based brand All Saints will be loved by fans of hip club and street wear.
She told Kiss magazine: "I'm no splurger. The first thing I bought was a laptop and then I felt like a real writer."
If you are a splurger who often goes into the red, it is worth looking about for the best overdraft rate.
McKinsey's 2018 Middle East Sentiment Survey classifies shoppers into five categories based on their behaviour -- savvy cost-cutters, thrifty brand loyalists, selective splurgers, trade-down converts and multichannel shoppers.
McKinsey's 2018 Middle East Sentiment Survey classifies shoppers into five categories based on their behaviour: Savvy cost-cutters, thrifty brand loyalists, selective splurgers, trade-down converts and multichannel shoppers.
McKinsey's 2018 Middle East Sentiment Survey classifies shoppers into five categories based on their behaviour - savvy cost-cutters, thrifty brand loyalists, selective splurgers, trade-down converts and multichannel shoppers.
THE fashion industry is being hammered by the recession and even its notoriously big splurgers are tightening their crocodile skin belts.
And, finally, just 0.4 per cent of the UK people constitute the "splurgers," who cannot help impulse buying to the point of ruin.
"We're not huge splurgers, we don't buy 5,000 dollar pairs of jeans.
The survey showed that men were the biggest splurgers online, with some 15 per cent confessing to have splashed out pounds 5,000 or more on a single item, whereas less than half of the women surveyed had spent more than pounds 100 on a single purchase.