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Discover LudwigThe phrase "offered a prize" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to describe a situation in which someone is offering a reward for a particular accomplishment. For example, "The school principal offered a prize to the student who could design the best experiment."
Exact(43)
Five years earlier the Academy of Sciences had offered a prize for a process to convert salt to soda ash.
They offered a prize for an imaginary interview between any two unacquainted contemporaries whose style and outlook were well known.
And, in the small-business market, tech-minded whizzkids will be offered a prize to invent comparison tools.
In 1714, Britain offered a prize of £20,000 — nearly $4.5 million today — to anyone who could invent a way to accurately determine a ship's longitude.
And in 1795 Napoleon offered a prize to preserve food for his army, which led to the canned food of today.
This year's World Series of Poker alone offered a prize pool exceeding $222 million, not counting the seven events to be contested next month in France.
Similar(15)
You offer a prize.
One idea is to offer a prize for whistleblowers.
Few theatrical productions, if any, offer a prize to audience members who have wet themselves.
How long before Netflix offers a prize for software that can improve on that?
Like, for example, the attack where you set up a website that purports to offer a prize.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com