Price or value; what you would have to pay to buy something; something's worth.
Pretium in Latin means "price" or "value." In finance and economics, it usually refers to the agreed-upon price or value of a financial asset or transaction.
The expression "est operae pretium" is used, with the infinitive of a verb as the subject, to mean that the action of that verb is worth while, as in operam dare operae pretium est; studying is worth doing. Omnia vincit amor is another, unrelated expression meaning love conquers all things.
pretium
Found in late and medieval Latin as 'appretiare' meaning 'to value' derived from 'pretium' meaning price. By the 1800's becoming to mean 'received with gratitude'
There is no specific word for priceless, but "no price" is haud pretium.
not really go for intel pretium
It comes from the Latin pretium 'price, which has also given us the English words precious, price, prize, etc.
One Latin equivalent of the English word 'value' may be aestimatio. Its meaning is 'estimated worth. It's a feminine gender noun. Another equivalent may be pretium. Its meaning is 'price'. It's a masculine gender noun.
Whether quae interfuere now also mentioned when nullum fault price
abyssus ego sum latin. vos should operor vestri homework instead of asking alius populus. pretium
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
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