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val·ue 1 /'val-yü/ n1 a: a fair return or equivalent in goods, services, or money for something exchangedreceived good value for the price2: monetary worth; esp: market valueval·ue·less adjvalue 2 vt val·ued, valu·ing: to estimate or determine the monetary value of
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster. 1996.
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I
noun
advantage, aestimatio, amount, appraisal, assessment, benefit, caliber, consequence, cost, desirability, effect, equivalent, esteem, estimate, estimation, excellence, expense, force, impact, importance, merit, price, purport, quality, quotation, significance, substance, superiority, use, usefulness, utility, valuation, worth, worthiness
associated concepts: acquisition value, actual cash value, actual market value, appraised value, assessed value, book value, cash market value, cash surrender value, current market value, face value, fair and reasonable value, fair market value, fair value, full cash value, good faith purchaser for value, gross value, highest market value, holder for value, instrument of value, insurable value, intrinsic value, market value, negotiable instrument, nominal value, nuisance value, par value, pecuniary value, present value, probative value, prospective value, purchaser for value, real value, reasonable value, relative value, rental value, reserve value, residual value, retention value, substantial value, sufficient value, surrender value, tangible value, taxable value, transfer for value, true value, value received
foreign phrases:
- Libertas non recipit aestimationem. — Freedom does not admit a valuation- Tantum bona valent, quantum vendipossunt — Goods are worth as much as they are sold for.- Res per pecuniam aestimatur, et non pecunia per rem. — The value of a thing is estimated according to its worth in money, but the value of money is not estimated by reference to property- Sapientia legis nummario pretio non est aestimanda. — The wisdom of the law cannot be computed in money valueII index amount (sum), assess (appraise), calculate, caliber (quality), charge (cost), charge (assess), cost (price), criticize (evaluate), degree (magnitude), emphasis, estimate (approximate cost), estimate, evaluate, expense (cost), gauge, honor, importance, judge, magnitude, materiality (consequence), measure, merit, par (face amount), prefer, price, quality (excellence), rate (noun), rate (verb), recommend, regard (esteem), regard (hold in esteem), significance, signification, utility (usefulness), weight (importance), worth
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
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n.(1) Worth; cost or price in money; the price a seller would give a buyer in a bona fide transaction in an open market.(2) Importance; utility.(3) A moral principle.v.(1) To estimate the worth of something.(2) To consider important.
The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell. 2008.
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n.1 What something is worth in monetary terms, or in money; a thing's market worth.2 The usefulness or desirability of something.3 Adequate contractual consideration.See also fair market value.
Webster's New World Law Dictionary. Susan Ellis Wild. 2000.
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The estimated or appraised worth of any object or property, calculated in money.
Dictionary from West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005.
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The estimated or appraised worth of any object or property, calculated in money.
Short Dictionary of (mostly American) Legal Terms and Abbreviations.