value meaning
EN


WValue
- Value or values may refer to:
FR value 

- NounPLvalues
- The quality (positive or negative) that renders something desirable or valuable.
- United were value for their win and Rooney could have had a hat-trick before half-time, with Paul Scholes also striking the post in the second half.
- The degree of importance given to something.
- WikiLeaks did not cause these uprisings but it certainly informed them. The dispatches revealed details of corruption and kleptocracy that many Tunisians suspected, […]. They also exposed the blatant discrepancy between the west's professed values and actual foreign policies.
- That which is valued or highly esteemed, as one's morals, morality, or belief system.
- He does not share his parents' values.
- family values
- The amount (of money or goods or services) that is considered to be a fair equivalent for something else.
- (music) The relative duration of a musical note.
- The value of a crotchet is twice that of a quaver.
- (art) The relative darkness or lightness of a color in (a specific area of) a painting etc.
- Numerical quantity measured or assigned or computed.
- The exact value of pi cannot be represented in decimal notation.
- Precise meaning; import.
- the value of a word; the value of a legal instrument
- (in the plural) The valuable ingredients to be obtained by treating a mass or compound; specifically, the precious metals contained in rock, gravel, etc.
- The vein carries good values.
- the values on the hanging walls
- OBS Esteem; regard.
- OBS valour; also spelled valew.
- The quality (positive or negative) that renders something desirable or valuable.
- VerbSGvaluesPRvaluingPT, PPvalued
- To estimate the value of; judge the worth of something.
- Economics is a messy discipline: too fluid to be a science, too rigorous to be an art. Perhaps it is fitting that economists’ most-used metric, gross domestic product (GDP), is a tangle too. [ …] But as a foundation for analysis it is highly subjective: it rests on difficult decisions about what counts as a territory, what counts as output and how to value it. Indeed, economists are still tweaking it.
- To fix or determine the value of; assign a value to, as of jewelry or art work.
- To regard highly; think much of; place importance upon.
- Gold was valued highly among the Romans.
- To hold dear.
- I value these old photographs.
- To estimate the value of; judge the worth of something.
- More Examples
- Used in the Middle of Sentence
- Whitemail, which also appears unfair to some, may enhance shareholder value if the outside investor is able to influence management in a more positive way than other shareholders could.
- United were value for their win and Rooney could have had a hat-trick before half-time, with Paul Scholes also striking the post in the second half.
- The much larger R values for ANOSIM between 2011 and pre-tsunami years (2005 to 2008) suggest that tsunami-induced changes in macrozoobenthic community structure were extraordinal.
- Used in the Ending of Sentence
- The uncommonness of the gem is what defines its value.
- Although acutely conscious of living in a 'wilderness,' they stoutheartedly refused to yield an inch to pioneer prejudices or frontier values.
- Are we sticking to these principles with our current decisions and statements, or are we descending into a state of near-permanent reaction and fudginess that betrays our core values?
- Used in the Middle of Sentence
Definition of value in English Dictionary
- Part-of-Speech Hierarchy
- Nouns
- Countable nouns
- Countable nouns
- Verbs
- Nouns
Source: Wiktionary

