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be worth
verb as in bring in
verb as in cost
verb as in rank
Strongest match
Example Sentences
Trump allies, including Howard Lutnick, a Wall Street executive he tapped for commerce secretary, have acknowledged that tariffs could cause short-term pain for consumers but will be worth the eventual gains for U.S. manufacturers.
Agreed, he’s a 26-year-old superstar who would be worth every penny.
The question is not whether chairman Mark Walter and his Guggenheim ownership group have the money to spend on Soto — or any other top free-agent target this winter — but if they feel the investment would be worth the gaudy price tag.
When her mother went into care, she had to sign over her own home to the council, Mrs Crisp said, and the authority "loaned her the amount of money that they deemed her property to be worth", which was £180,000.
Mr Howells speculated that, by next year, the Bitcoin on his hard drive could be worth £1bn.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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