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worthy
1[ wur-thee ]
adjective
- having adequate or great merit, character, or value:
a worthy successor.
- of commendable excellence or merit; deserving of one's time, attention, interest, work, trouble, etc.:
a book worthy of praise;
a person worthy to lead.
Synonyms: honorable, upright, exemplary, excellent, estimable, worthwhile, meritorious, deserving
noun
- a person of eminent worth, merit, or position:
The town worthies included two doctors.
-worthy
2- a combining form of worthy, occurring in adjectives that have the general sense “deserving of, fit for” ( blameworthy; newsworthy; noteworthy; trustworthy ), “capable of travel in or on” ( airworthy; roadworthy; seaworthy ), as specified by the first word of the compound.
worthy
/ ˈwɜːðɪ /
adjective
- postpositive; often foll by of or an infinitive having sufficient merit or value (for something or someone specified); deserving
- having worth, value, or merit
noun
- facetious.a person of distinguished character, merit, or importance
Derived Forms
- ˈworthily, adverb
- ˈworthiness, noun
Other Words From
- wor·thi·ly adverb
- wor·thi·ness noun
- pre·wor·thi·ly adverb
- pre·wor·thy adjective
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
India won the unofficial series of three matches 1-0 and Hassett reported back to the Australian cricket authorities that the Indians were worthy of an official Test series.
“Excluding them from sports sends a terrible message that they are not worthy of being treated the same as cisgender teammates and classmates,” she said.
The worthy effort to emphasize that much of the artist’s inventive genius — unfurling in thousands of manuscript pages, rather than oil paint and tempera — makes the dull staging a perhaps unavoidable conceit.
One source told me – in a line worthy of the sitcom Yes Minister – that the trio might “decide to decide, decide to delay deciding, or… decide not to decide”.
From de Waal's 1982 book "Chimpanzee Politics" to 2019's "Mama's Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What they Tell Us about Ourselves," attitudes about whether animals might have thoughts worthy of scientific exploration changed dramatically.
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