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View synonyms for worth

worth

1

[ wurth ]

preposition

  1. good or important enough to justify (what is specified):

    advice worth taking;

    a place worth visiting.

  2. having a value of, or equal in value to, as in money:

    This vase is worth 12 dollars.

  3. having property to the value or amount of:

    They are worth millions.



noun

  1. excellence of character or quality as commanding esteem:

    women of worth.

  2. usefulness or importance, as to the world, to a person, or for a purpose:

    Your worth to the world is inestimable.

  3. value, as in money.
  4. a quantity of something of a specified value:

    ten cents' worth of candy.

  5. wealth; riches; property or possessions:

    net worth.

worth

2

[ wurth ]

verb (used without object)

, Archaic.
  1. to happen or betide:

    woe worth the day.

Worth

3

[ wurth ]

noun

  1. a town in NE Illinois.

worth

1

/ wɜːθ /

adjective

  1. worthy of; meriting or justifying

    an idea worth some thought

    it's not worth discussing

  2. having a value of

    the book is worth 30 pounds

  3. for all one is worth
    for all one is worth to the utmost; to the full extent of one's powers or ability
  4. worth one's weight in gold
    worth one's weight in gold extremely helpful, kind, etc


noun

  1. high quality; excellence
  2. value, price
  3. the amount or quantity of something of a specified value

    five pounds worth of petrol

Worth

2

/ wɜːθ; vɔrt /

noun

  1. WorthCharles Frederick18251895MEnglishFASHION, BEAUTY, ETC: fashion designer Charles Frederick. 1825–95, English couturier, who founded Parisian haute couture

worth

3

/ wɜːθ /

verb

  1. archaic.
    intr to happen or betide (esp in the phrase woe worth the day )

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Word History and Origins

Origin of worth1

First recorded before 900; Middle English; Old English weorth, worth, wurth; cognate with Old High German werd, Old Frisian werth, Old Norse verthr, Gothic wairths

Origin of worth2

First recorded before 900; Middle English worthen, Old English wurthan, weorthan, wyrthan; cognate with German werden, Old Norse vertha, Gothic wairthan “to become,” Latin vertere “to turn”; verse

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Word History and Origins

Origin of worth1

Old English weorth; related to Old Saxon, Old High German werth (German Wert ), Old Norse verthr, Gothic wairths

Origin of worth2

Old English weorthan; related to Old Frisian wertha, Old Saxon, Old High German werthan (German werden ), Old Norse vertha, Gothic wairthan, Latin vertere to turn

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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. for all one is worth, Informal. to the utmost:

    He ran for all he was worth.

  2. for what it’s worth, whether or not (what is stated) is useful or important enough to justify:

    For what it’s worth, I think you should apologize to him.

More idioms and phrases containing worth

  • for all one is worth
  • game is not worth the candle
  • get one's money's worth
  • not worth a damn
  • picture is worth a thousand words

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Synonym Study

See desert. See value.

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Example Sentences

It’s worth noting that there are plenty of ways to use your skills to combat climate change.

From Vox

So, if you’re looking to stay ahead of the competition, the game of signing up for new social media platforms is worth the candle.

For what it’s worth, the Harvard economist Ricardo Hausmann is an advisor to the Guaidó government, such as it is.

Its 12% stake in the company, purchased for $245 million, was worth more than $4 billion at the initial offering price of $120.

From Fortune

For what it’s worth, this single game raised Rodgers’s ranking in our QB Elo ratings from 12th in the league before the season to seventh after Week 1.

Freedom of speech, then, is sometimes not worth the trouble that comes with it.

So I started to think about anything in my life that would be worth people giving it any amount of time.

Where the U.S. once sought to train several divisions worth, the latest effort is for just 3,000 troops.

There is reference after reference to the “black community,” “black worth ethic,” and adherence to the “black value system.”

It would definitely be wrong for TLC to encourage us to gawk at these men but their story is worth investigating nonetheless.

Not a few of these are extremely beautiful, and are well worth growing on this account, quite apart from their peculiarity.

They are unique; that lady there is the Du Barry—a portrait worth, alone, six thousand francs.

He remembered how his father had execrated this noble enemy, even at the time he declared his worth.

In 1205 wheat was worth 12 pence per bushel, which was cheap, as there had been some years of famine previous thereto.

They represented, as has been explained, the operation of the system of natural liberty by which every man got what he is worth.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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