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worth


6 definitions found

worth - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  Worth \Worth\, v. i. [OE. worthen, wur[thorn]en, to become, AS.
     weor[eth]an; akin to OS. wer[eth]an, D. worden, G. werden,
     OHG. werdan, Icel. ver[eth]a, Sw. varda, Goth. wa['i]rpan, L.
     vertere to turn, Skr. v[.r]t, v. i., to turn, to roll, to
     become. [root]143. Cf. Verse, -ward, Weird.]
     To be; to become; to betide; -- now used only in the phrases,
     woe worth the day, woe worth the man, etc., in which the verb
     is in the imperative, and the nouns day, man, etc., are in
     the dative. Woe be to the day, woe be to the man, etc., are
     equivalent phrases.
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           I counsel . . . to let the cat worthe.   --Piers
                                                    Plowman.
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           He worth upon [got upon] his steed gray. --Chaucer.
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  Worth \Worth\, a. [OE. worth, wur[thorn], AS. weor[eth], wurE;
     akin to OFries. werth, OS. wer[eth], D. waard, OHG. werd, G.
     wert, werth, Icel. ver[eth]r, Sw. v[aum]rd, Dan. v[ae]rd,
     Goth. wa['i]rps, and perhaps to E. wary. Cf. Stalwart,
     Ware an article of merchandise, Worship.]
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     1. Valuable; of worthy; estimable; also, worth while. [Obs.]
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              It was not worth to make it wise.     --Chaucer.
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     2. Equal in value to; furnishing an equivalent for; proper to
        be exchanged for.
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              A ring he hath of mine worth forty ducats. --Shak.
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              All our doings without charity are nothing worth.
                                                    --Bk. of Com.
                                                    Prayer.
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              If your arguments produce no conviction, they are
              worth nothing to me.                  --Beattie.
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     3. Deserving of; -- in a good or bad sense, but chiefly in a
        good sense.
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              To reign is worth ambition, though in hell.
                                                    --Milton.
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              This is life indeed, life worth preserving.
                                                    --Addison.
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     4. Having possessions equal to; having wealth or estate to
        the value of.
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              At Geneva are merchants reckoned worth twenty
              hundred crowns.                       --Addison.
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     Worth while, or Worth the while. See under While, n.
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  Worth \Worth\, n. [OE. worth, wur[thorn], AS. weor[eth],
     wur[eth]; weor[eth], wur[eth], adj. See Worth, a.]
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     1. That quality of a thing which renders it valuable or
        useful; sum of valuable qualities which render anything
        useful and sought; value; hence, often, value as expressed
        in a standard, as money; equivalent in exchange; price.
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              What 's worth in anything
              But so much money as 't will bring?   --Hudibras.
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     2. Value in respect of moral or personal qualities;
        excellence; virtue; eminence; desert; merit; usefulness;
        as, a man or magistrate of great worth.
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              To be of worth, and worthy estimation. --Shak.
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              As none but she, who in that court did dwell,
              Could know such worth, or worth describe so well.
                                                    --Waller.
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              To think how modest worth neglected lies.
                                                    --Shenstone.
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     Syn: Desert; merit; excellence; price; rate.
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worth - WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) :

  worth
      adj 1: worthy of being treated in a particular way; "an idea
             worth considering"; "the deserving poor" (often used
             ironically) [syn: deserving, worth(p)]
      2: having a specified value; "not worth his salt"; "worth her
         weight in gold"
      n 1: an indefinite quantity of something having a specified
           value; "10 dollars worth of gasoline"
      2: the quality that renders something desirable or valuable or
         useful [ant: ineptitude, worthlessness]
      3: French couturier (born in England) regarded as the founder of
         Parisian haute couture; noted for introducing the bustle
         (1825-1895) [syn: Worth, Charles Frederick Worth]

worth - U.S. Gazetteer (1990) :

  Worth, IL (village, FIPS 83518)
    Location: 41.68730 N, 87.79255 W
    Population (1990): 11208 (4500 housing units)
    Area: 6.2 sq km (land), 0.1 sq km (water)
    Zip code(s): 60482
  Worth, MO (town, FIPS 81070)
    Location: 40.40550 N, 94.44684 W
    Population (1990): 103 (45 housing units)
    Area: 0.6 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
    Zip code(s): 64499

worth - Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 :

  140 Moby Thesaurus words for "worth":
     accent, account, ad valorem, advantage, advantageousness,
     agreeableness, appraised, approbation, approval, assessed,
     auspiciousness, avail, behalf, behoof, beneficialness, benefit,
     benevolence, benignity, blessed with, caliber, class, cogency,
     concern, concernment, consequence, consequentiality, consideration,
     convenience, conversion factor, credit, dearness, desert, emphasis,
     enfeoffed, esteem, estimation, evaluated, excellence, expedience,
     extraordinary worth, face, face value, fairness, favor,
     favorableness, fineness, first-rateness, fortune, good for,
     goodliness, goodness, grace, great price, great value, having,
     having and holding, healthiness, helpfulness, high order,
     high rank, holding, honor, import, importance, in possession of,
     interest, invaluableness, kindness, landed, landholding,
     landowning, mark, market value, master of, materiality, merit,
     moment, net worth, niceness, note, occupying, owning, par value,
     paramountcy, pennyworth, percentage, perfection, pleasantness,
     point, possessed of, possessing, precedence, preciousness,
     preeminence, price, priced, pricelessness, primacy, priority,
     prized, pro rata, profit, profitableness, propertied, property,
     property-owning, quality, rate, rated, regard, resources, respect,
     rewardingness, riches, seized of, self-importance, service,
     significance, skillfulness, soundness, stature, stress, substance,
     superiority, supremacy, tenured, use, usefulness, utility,
     validity, valuableness, valuation, value, value received, valued,
     valued at, virtue, virtuousness, weight, wholeness