The preposition with the word value? - English Language Usage Stack . . . With or having means the shares are valued at x At means the shares were valued at x when he bought them For means the price he paid for them which as WS2 points out in comments might be different from the nominal price Note that all of these differences are really subtle, and no one would really be confused if you used them interchangeably
Is there an English transitive verb meaning to make someone something . . . The thing is valued [by animate subjects] for the property Your examples are an attempt to bestow animation on properties, which mangles the language You want value to be included, but your sentences do not express value only, they express additional senses
What do you call the male equivalent to Cougar (woman)? What is the male equivalent to the term "cougar"? Clarifying The term "cougar" describes an older woman seeking younger men So a male equivalent would be an older man seek
articles - Has a value of vs. has the value of - English Language . . . It might be that 'the value of X' is largely reserved for X a physical notional referent ('the value of a Spanish milled dollar' 'the value of that limit', with 'has a value of x' being the normal choice for 'takes the value x 2 73'