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Discover LudwigThe phrase "is costed at" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used when discussing the price or value of something. An example sentence could be: "The new smartphone is costed at $999, but it is packed with advanced features."
Exact(3)
Sources in Decc say the firm favourite is the 10-mile barrier, which would span the entire estuary and is costed at about £14bn.
The plan is costed at about £16 18m, to be funded by market rents, as at Spitalfields, with a potential later phase planned to open up the atmospheric netherworld of basements that spread below the market halls.
Design work now will confirm the technologies and industrial capability needed to construct the mission, which is costed at over one billion euros.
Similar(57)
The drop in demand for electronic devices is costing at least 40 people their jobs at Cambridge-based CSR.
It is now being costed at £12m once maintenance is taken into account.
The plan was costed at $33bn, although many details are not yet clear.
She said the government's plan to take 12,000 Syrian refugees was costed at $700m.
The public benefits arising from the forests and meadows it will destroy have been costed at £1m per year.
Soundproofing for Cherry Bar has been costed at between $80,000 and $100,000 – a year's profit for this privately owned small business.
The impact of noise was costed at around £25 million per annum in 2000, and for the same year the impact on air quality was costed at between £119 million and £236 million per annum.
Placebo was costed at zero.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com