GNU Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  1.       
    
    Utility , n. [OE. utilite, F. utilité, L. utilitas, fr. utilis useful. See Utile.]
    1913 Webster
    1. The quality or state of being useful; usefulness; production of good; profitableness to some valuable end; as, the utility of manure upon land; the utility of the sciences; the utility of medicines.
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      The utility of the enterprises was, however, so great and obvious that all opposition proved useless.
      Macaulay.

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    2. (Polit. Econ.) Adaptation to satisfy the desires or wants; intrinsic value. See Note under Value, 2.
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      Value in use is utility, and nothing else, and in political economy should be called by that name and no other.
      F. A. Walker.

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    3. Happiness; the greatest good, or happiness, of the greatest number, -- the foundation of utilitarianism.
      J. S. Mill.

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      Syn. -- Usefulness; advantageous; benefit; profit; avail; service. -- Utility, Usefulness. Usefulness has an Anglo-Saxon prefix, utility is Latin; and hence the former is used chiefly of things in the concrete, while the latter is employed more in a general and abstract sense. Thus, we speak of the utility of an invention, and the usefulness of the thing invented; of the utility of an institution, and the usefulness of an individual. So beauty and utility (not usefulness) are brought into comparison. Still, the words are often used interchangeably.

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