The following case is worth giving, partly to show how difficult it is to avoid error.
This is important evidence that the aperea is not the parent of the guinea-pig; and is worth giving, as some authors erroneously suppose that the guinea-pig since being domesticated has become sterile when crossed with the aperea.
Another case is worth giving: the Lalande variety of the walnut-tree leafs between April 20th and May 15th, and its seedlings invariably inherit the same habit; whilst several other varieties of the walnut leaf in June.
Most breeders of highly improved or fancy birds value their own strain, and are most unwilling, at the risk, in their opinion, of deterioration, to make a cross.
The origin of this breed is so curious, both in itself and as throwing some light on the complex laws of inheritance that it is worth giving in detail.
As the goose has proved so little flexible in its organisation under long- continued domestication, the amount of variation which it has undergone may be worth giving.
As my results are deduced from special phenomena, namely, the subsequent aggregation of the protoplasm and the re-expansion of the tentacles, they seem to me worth giving.
Negative evidence is of little value; but the following facts may be worth giving:--Some cowslips which had been transplanted from the fields into a shrubbery were again transplanted into highly manured land.
As the Asclepiadous genus Stapelia is said to produce cleistogamic flowers, the following case may be worth giving.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "worth giving" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.