Worth, a.
1. Valuable; of worthy; estimable; also, worth while. [Obs.]
It was not worth to make it wise. --Chaucer.
2. Equal in value to; furnishing an equivalent for; proper to be exchanged for.
A ring he hath of mine worth forty ducats. --Shak.
All our doings without charity are nothing worth. --Bk. of Com. Prayer.
If your arguments produce no conviction, they are worth nothing to me. --Beattie.
3. Deserving of; -- in a good or bad sense, but chiefly in a good sense.
To reign is worth ambition, though in hell. --Milton.
This is life indeed, life worth preserving. --Addison.
4. Having possessions equal to; having wealth or estate to the value of.
At Geneva are merchants reckoned worth twenty hundred crowns. --Addison.
Worth while, or Worth the while. See under While, n.