But we notice that as the discussion and investigation goes on, and the new facts are brought out, its value as a remedial agent is depreciated.
But in the light of recent scientific investigations, its claims have been challenged and its value denied.
The more he can extract from his property the greater is its value, because every thing he takes is, by the very act of taking it, fashioned to aid further production.
With the decline in its value, man has always become enslaved.
The consequences are seen in the extensive abandonment of land and the decline of its value.
The price of a commodity is its value in exchange expressed in the quantum of some other definite commodity, against which it is exchanged or to be exchanged.
If certain of their component elements, lands, for instance, belonging to a fidei commissum, are incapable of entering immediately into the market, at least the revenue they yield is measured by its value in exchange.
The productiveness of labor is estimated in the case of the former, according to the value in exchange of its result; in the case of the latter, according to its value in use.
But from the stand-point of private economy, as well as from that of the whole people, we say that capital is preserved, increased or diminished according as its value is preserved, increased or diminished.
The economic valuation of goods, however, is by no means exhausted, so far as the isolated individual housekeeper is concerned, by the mere establishing of its value in use.
A rent certain in money is not in the least affected by them, either in its rate or in its value.
Both these salts are employed as sources of nitrogen; but nitrate of potash owes also a certain proportion of its value to the potash it contains.
He does not make it quite clear," says Mr. Malthus, "whether he adopts for his principle of value the quantity of the producing labor or its value.
When, therefore, your hat will purchase x quantity of labor instead of half x, the inference is irresistible that your hat has doubled its value.
But, if not by variations in its value, then of necessity by variations in its quantity, for no other variations are possible.
The demand for money is regulated entirely by its value, and its value by its quantity.
Without such an influx there can be no increase of quantity, no fall in its value, no rise in the general price of goods.
It was certainly not a great labor of human intelligence which brought about these great results; it was the triumph of this idea over the whole consciousness, and the heroic courage of the man, which gave it its value.
Ode of Pindar, sufficiently illustrates the nature of this notation, although the interposition of the staff between the musical notes and the words deprives the illustration of a part of its value.
The music is pleasing rather than deep, and the popularity of French opera in Germany, for example, is mainly due to its value as a relief to the often undue elaboration of the original German article.
These have reference to its value in the naval stores industry.
The contrast in color between the springwood and the summerwood is the basis of the figure of this pine which gives it much of its value as an interior finish material, including doors.
Of late people in localities where cedar grows in any abundance have awakened to its value, and cedar fences are rapidly disappearing, owing to the high prices now paid for the wood, and the excellent demand.
Chestnut oak possesses good fuming properties, and this constitutes much of its value as furniture material.
In most states timberland is assessed on the basis of its value, timber and land together.
The land there is taxed annually on its value, without timber.
Further, the mechanical effect of this manure in opening and loosening the soil, allowing air and warmth to enter more freely, adds greatly to its value.
This property, known as "felting," gives to wool a great part of its value, and is its chief distinction from hair.
Its value is therefore strategic as well as industrial, for by means of it gun-boats may readily pass from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes.
Its value is due in part to the fact that the wood is soft, clear, and easily worked, and in part to the accessibility of the forests.
It may ruin the design; that is to say, it may deprive the picture of its valueas a whole; and it is as a whole, as an organisation of forms, that a work of art provokes the most tremendous emotions.
That which is good as an end will retain some, at any rate, of its value in complete isolation: it will retain all its value as an end.
This defect robs his perspicuous and subtle reasoning of much of its value; for it has ever been a maxim that faultless logic can win but little credit for conclusions that are based on premises notoriously false.
Its value, if tested by the results of its actual application to labour, would in some cases be immense, in other cases very small, and in others it would be a minus quantity.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "its value" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.