She was much prized as a teacher of piano and singing, and a personal favourite in her native city.
According to Pericles, that woman was most to be prized of whom no one spoke, either in praise or blame.
I should have remembered that the conversation prized by Pericles and Plato, might appear contemptible, to this youthful Pallas, who so proudly seeks to conceal her precious wisdom from ears profane.
Fertility rewarded the labours of the husbandmen, and the smiling fields yielded pasturage to numerous horses, which Phoebus himself might have prized for strength, fleetness, and majestic beauty.
But the jewels her husband prized most in her wuz the calm light of patience, and love, and womanliness that shone on her face.
Sez I, "How the nations would have prized them trees!
If for the finer spirits of the age a classical education furnished a noble instrument of culture, for all too many it was prized simply as a badge of superiority.
One thing that he and his contemporaries prizedin Luther was just that bourgeois virtue that made him a model husband and father, faithfully performing a daily task for an adequate reward.
In many breeds where the value is regulated by the lightness of the weight, the one most prized by the owner is the one that too frequently dies.
The ones who could cook and tickle the palates of her mistress and master were highly prized and were seldon if ever offered for sale at the auction block.
In Greece and Italy blonde hair was as much prized as dark hair was among northern nations.
Pickled walnuts are a highly prized delicacy in households where "culturine" has not taken the place of old-fashioned household arts.
Their meat is highly prized in European countries and is becoming popular in America so that a good market is assured.
It may be the smallest conceivable, a flower bed only, yet is prized none the less for that.
Like living friends they too have their voice and physiognomies, and their company is prized as old acquaintances.
The animal was one of the Dean's much-prized Herefords, and the wound needed attention.
Well-preserved skins of that variety are worth 20 pounds apiece and are prized as rarities.
This hide is used for making a very superior quality of glove, much prized in California.
These conferences have been continued from then to the present time, and are known and prized in many lands.
I shall miss her greatly, and her dear letters to me, which I prized so highly; and you, who saw more of her than I could possibly, will feel her loss greatly.
Whenever they may be dispersed, there is not one among them that will ever be more comfortably lodged, or more highly prized by its possessor; and generations may pass away before some of them will again find a reader.
Booty, trophies of the chase or of the raid, come to be prized as evidence of pre-eminent force.
And at this there was much joy thr oughout , the host, because the marquis was one of the knights most highly prizedin all the world, and one whom the knights most loved, inasmuch as no one dealt with them more liberally than he.
The Marquis of Montferrat* is very worthy and valiant, and one of the most highly prized of living men.
Wealth, however, is too greatly prized to suffer from a theoretic treatment any appreciable diminution in general esteem, and there are necessarily few who will object to it because they are told it is an extra burden.
The two are not en rapport together; the merits of the one are not the merits prized by the other; the manner-language of the one is not the manner-language of the other.
If any particular power is much prized in an age, those possessed of that power will be imitated; those deficient in that power will be despised.
The farm was a part of her inherited life; but at that moment, she prized it as nothing beside that newly discovered wealth which she was rushing to cast away.
SEA-KALE is a strong-rooted perennial, the shoots of which are very highlyprized as a delicacy when blanched.
Sinica) is extensively naturalized in the South, and much prized for its large white bloom and shining foliage; not hardy in the North.
A hardy, tendril-climbing annual, universally prized as an outdoor garden plant; also forced to some extent by florists.
Every one knows that many of the native herbs of woods and glades are more attractive than some of the most prizedgarden flowers.
Mr. Hooper’s kindness and generosity are greatly appreciated, and the pictures will be highly prized as valuable souvenirs of our trip.
It is a neat little affair, much appreciated, and will be highly prized as a souvenir of our trip.
Mr. Hand generously gave our party specimens of gold, silver, and copper ore, which are highly prized as souvenirs.
Some are exceedingly numerous, others so rare and singular in their living-places that they are highly prized by conchologists.
Personally, I preserve in that closet some ancient drawings, the almost complete work of Steinlen, one of the most highly prized artists of the closed era.
We have long known and prized 'Flower, Fruit, and Thorn Pieces.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "prized" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.