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Prize   /praɪz/   Listen
Prize

noun
1.
Something given for victory or superiority in a contest or competition or for winning a lottery.  Synonym: award.
2.
Goods or money obtained illegally.  Synonyms: booty, dirty money, loot, pillage, plunder, swag.
3.
Something given as a token of victory.  Synonym: trophy.
verb
1.
Hold dear.  Synonyms: appreciate, treasure, value.
2.
To move or force, especially in an effort to get something open.  Synonyms: jimmy, lever, prise, pry.  "Raccoons managed to pry the lid off the garbage pail"
3.
Regard highly; think much of.  Synonyms: esteem, prise, respect, value.  "We prize his creativity"
adjective
1.
Of superior grade.  Synonyms: choice, prime, quality, select.  "Prime beef" , "Prize carnations" , "Quality paper" , "Select peaches"



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"Prize" Quotes from Famous Books



... stupid, inartistic, unimaginative and enslaving; there could not be four better French reasons for detesting it. Nor have the French ever enjoyed the savage forms of sport which stimulate the blood of more apathetic or more brutal races. Neither prize-fighting nor bull-fighting is of the soil in France, and Frenchmen do not settle their private differences impromptu with their fists: they do it, logically and with deliberation, on the duelling-ground. But when a national danger threatens, ...
— Fighting France - From Dunkerque to Belport • Edith Wharton

... dwellers in the depths, and in the falling flake of sunshine laughed to see a stately aldermanic flounder, that came paddling after a chicken-bone, put to rout by a satanic sculpin, whereat an eel swiftly snaked the prize away, and the frost-fish, collecting at a chance of civil war, mingled in the melee, tooth and nail, or rather fin and tail. Then the vapors would darken round them again, till, with the stray rays caught and refracted in their fleece, it seemed like ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864 - A Magazine Of Literature, Art, And Politics • Various

... The repetitions at such long intervals lose, of course, any such significance as the critical might feel inclined to attribute; but in Punch's nonage the self-same engravings have more than once been actually used a second time, such as "Deaf Burke"—the celebrated prize-fighter of Windmill Street—who was shown twice in the first volume, certainly not for his beauty's sake; a drawing by Hine, which was similarly employed in the same year; and in 1842 a cut by Gagniet, which had been bought from a French ...
— The History of "Punch" • M. H. Spielmann

... pointed to where a hundredweight of gold was sticking out from a rock. It was so heavy that they had to chop it in two with their axes before they could lift it into the buggy. It was afterwards sold for L4,000. So splendid a prize, obtained in so easy a manner, was a temptation too dazzling to be resisted; and the stream of people along the Bathurst road was now ...
— History of Australia and New Zealand - From 1606 to 1890 • Alexander Sutherland

... seized hold of it and found that it was the cub-dead! His random shot had pierced its brain, and it had died without a struggle. The cave or opening in the rocks was not very deep, and after a long time he succeeded in dragging his prize ...
— History of the Donner Party • C.F. McGlashan


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