worthwhile
worthwhile — adjective
1. Something that is worthwhile gives you enough benefit or satisfaction to make th
Something that is worthwhile gives you enough benefit or satisfaction to make the time, money, or energy that you spent on it feel fair and sensible.
Darius felt the three-month training was worthwhile when he got a promotion.
worthwhile in predicative position after 'be'
Is it worthwhile to spend so much on a handbag that you rarely use?
it + be + worthwhile + to-infinitive
Trang found her charity work in rural Vietnam hard but deeply worthwhile.
The elderly couple donated their savings to a worthwhile children's hospital.
Felix decided it was not worthwhile to argue with his brother over the money.
- valuable
Emphasises usefulness or importance rather than the balance of effort versus reward; a 'valuable lesson' is important, but not necessarily costly.
- rewarding
Focuses on the personal satisfaction gained from doing something; a job can be rewarding even if it pays little.
- beneficial
Highlights a positive effect or advantage, often in health, skills, or relationships, without the idea of sacrifice or investment.
文法句型
it + be + worthwhile + to-infinitive
it + be + worthwhile + gerund
worthwhile + noun
find + noun/gerund + worthwhile
用法筆記
Frequently used in the patterns 'it is worthwhile to do something' and 'it is worthwhile doing something'. When used attributively before a noun, it describes the noun itself as worth the investment (e.g. 'a worthwhile cause'). Distinguish from 'worth', which takes a gerund directly ('worth watching'), whereas 'worthwhile' acts as a full adjective that can appear before a noun ('a worthwhile film').