different between bosted vs costed

bosted

English

Verb

bosted

  1. simple past tense and past participle of bost

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From bo +? sted

Noun

bosted n (definite singular bostedet, indefinite plural bosteder, definite plural bostedene)

  1. (place of) abode or residence

See also

  • bustad (Nynorsk)

References

  • “bosted” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

bosted From the web:

  • what boosted the development of towns and cities
  • what boosted the civilian economy
  • what boosted exploration of the atlantic ocean
  • what boost means
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  • boasted in spanish
  • what do boosted
  • boosted in english


costed

English

Verb

costed

  1. simple past tense and past participle of cost
    We costed the project at $1,000,000. (simple past tense)
    We've costed the project at £1,000,000. (past participle)

Usage notes

  • The only non-proscribed use is in the sense of "to give a cost to". Where Standard English is expected, use cost instead for non-specialized past-tense and past-participle uses such as answering the question "How much did it cost?"
  • Occasionally replaced with noun or verb forms of price, where commonly accepted, as in, "The event's hosting was priced at $1,000,000."

Adjective

costed (not comparable)

  1. Having a specified (type of) cost
    This was a badly costed project.

Further reading

  • costed at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • scoted

costed From the web:

  • costed meaning
  • costed what does it mean
  • what movie cost the most to make
  • what is costed bom
  • what does costed out mean
  • what hurricane cost the most money
  • what is cost risk
  • what are costed requisitions
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