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Valued at
Answer for the clue "Valued at ", 5 letters:
worth
Alternative clues for the word worth
Word definitions for worth in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. preposition COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES be (well) worth the effort (= used to say that something is worth doing even though it is hard ) ▪ It’s a difficult place to get to, but it's well worth the effort. be worth a fortune informal: ▪ The building ...
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 7909 Housing Units (2000): 3534 Land area (2000): 399.997159 sq. miles (1035.987843 sq. km) Water area (2000): 1.713199 sq. miles (4.437166 sq. km) Total area (2000): 401.710358 sq. miles (1040.425009 sq. km) Located within: Iowa (IA), ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. 1 (context countable English) value. 2 (context uncountable English) merit, excellence. prep. 1 Having a value of; proper to be exchanged for. 2 deserving of. Etymology 2 vb. (context obsolete except in set phrases English) To be, become, ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"to come to be," now chiefly, if not solely, in the archaic expression woe worth the day , present subjunctive of Old English weorðan "to become, be, to befall," from Proto-Germanic *werthan "to become" (cognates: Old Saxon, Old Dutch werthan , Old Norse ...
Usage examples of worth.
Such, for instance, is that roue yonder, the very prince of Bath fops, Handsome Jack, whose vanity induces him to assert that his eyebrows are worth one hundred per annum to any young fellow in pursuit of a fortune: it should, however, be admitted, that his gentlemanly manners and great good-nature more than compensate for any little detractions on the score of self-conceit.
A few weeks later, Milton had had the business appraised and was met with a shock: the Zebra Room was worth less than when Lefty had acquired it in 1933.
But the syndicate members were bankers just like 518 KEN FOLLETT the Pilasters, and in their hearts they thought There but for the grace of God go L Besides, the cooperation of the partners was helpful in selling off the assets, and it was worth a small payment to retain their goodwill.
They handed over the assets of the Miranda family to the Santamaria Harbor Corporation, and that made the bonds worth something again.
And enough of the others succeed on the terms of the anthology to make it worth a look.
The officers on the Barracuda know the worth of their cause and their contribution to it.
O King of the age, considering how like may be the case of the barber bastinadoed but yesterday, in his worth and value, to that of Roomdroom, the reader of planets, that was a barber.
Told her of the family troubles, of the lore surrounding the solid gold beastie, that it was worth several thousand pounds, that it belonged to them.
She came into the trees after me, still glittering and beguiling for everything she was worth.
Sigmund shouted, he would not stop sleeping with Benji women, not until Fiona could give him a son, as any wife worth keeping would do.
It was a technology that would be worth uncounted billions to Bootstrap, in some unlikely future in which he made it back home and stayed out of jail.
It is not worth this pains in my own eyes--and thirsted for by my fellow men--it is a burthen I would willingly lay down.
If things are worth as much as the labour devoted to them, or if their value is at least proportionate to that labour, it is not that labour is a fixed and constant value exchangeable as such in all places and all times, it is because any value, whatever it may be, has its origin in labour.
From that point of view, Henrietta offered him nothing: it was no challenge to control her, she had nothing worth exploiting her for, and there was no satisfaction in 462 KEN FOLLETT humiliating someone as low down on the scale as a prostitute.
But if young people, before picking out their life partners, are thoroughly imbued with the idea that such qualities as energy, longevity, a sound constitution, public and private worth, are primarily due to heredity, and if they are taught to realize the fact that one marries not an individual but a family, the eugenist believes that better matings will be made, sometimes realized, sometimes insensibly.