0 present participle of prize
1 to think that someone or something is very valuable or important:
2 to use force to lift something off something else, for example by pressing a tool against a fixed point; to separate things using force:
There was in this a late-modern valuing of open and flexible selfhood, a prizing of responsiveness to change that alienated many conservatives.
In actual fact, our counterparts from developing countries have the feeling that we are prizing open their markets rather than placing their development at the heart of our policy.
Prizing for loves can be different, depending on the theme.
Praise was held for their experimenting with this newer sound, incorporating aspects of jazz, punk, metal, and dissonance while prizing technical work and complete originality.
In bright tobacco regions, prizing was replaced by stacking wrapped hands into loose piles to be sold at auction.
However, all prizing must be determined in advance of the competition and can not be influenced by the fees or number of participants.
Sometimes, they make up all of the heat source, with chefs often prizing characteristics of certain woods.
The only exceptions are when the foreign flag is displayed in an embassy or consulate and in prizing ceremonies of sport competitions won by foreign athletes.