| utility definitions |
| # | Definition | Sets |
| 1 | usefulness | 24 sets |
| 2 | n. fitness for some desirable practical purpose. | 10 sets |
| 3 | usefulness, something useful | 9 sets |
| 4 | the quality of being of practical use | 9 sets |
| 5 | the capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction | 8 sets |
| 6 | ability or capacity of a good or service to be useful and give satisfaction to someone | 6 sets |
| 7 | the amount of satisfaction one gets from a good or service | 5 sets |
| 8 | fitness for some desirable practical purpose. | 5 sets |
| 9 | a subjective measure of value | 5 sets |
| 10 | energy bill based on the electric meter reading per month | 4 sets |
| 11 | the pleasure, usefulness, or satisfaction we get from using a product | 4 sets |
| 12 | the pleasure, happiness, or satisfaction obtained from consuming a good or service | 4 sets |
| 13 | capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction | 4 sets |
| 14 | the sense of well-being, satisfaction, or pleasure a person derives from consuming a good or service | 3 sets |
| 15 | the instance of being useful | 3 sets |
| 16 | the subjective, personal value of each attribute in decision making | 3 sets |
| 17 | satisfaction | 3 sets |
| 18 | a household service, such as electricity, telephone, or water | 3 sets |
| 19 | the quality of bringing satisfaction or happiness | 3 sets |
| 20 | useful | 3 sets |
| 21 | in the context of psychological testing and assessment, a reference to how useful a test or assessment technique is for a particular purpose, 6, 189–190, 192–193, 209 benefits influencing, 212–215 clinical, 208 comparative, 208 costs influencing, 210–212 decision theory and, 189–190, 192–193 diagnostic, 208 questions related to, 208–209 reliability and validity influencing, 209–210 theory, 189 | 3 sets |
| 22 | the quality of bringing satisfaction or happiness. | 2 sets |
| 23 | refers to the added value or usefulness of a product | 2 sets |
| 24 | something useful | 2 sets |
| 25 | the satisfaction, or reward, a product yields relative to its alternatives. the basis of choice. | 2 sets |
| 26 | benefits or customer value received by users of the product | 2 sets |
| 27 | the want-satisfying potential of a good, idea, or service | 2 sets |
| 28 | the capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction; something must have utility to have value | 2 sets |
| 29 | basic mission prefix u | 2 sets |
| 30 | the level of satisfaction from consumption or sense of well-being | 2 sets |
| 31 | pleasure, happiness, or satisfaction obtained from consuming a good or service | 2 sets |
| 32 | the sense of well being, satisfaction, or pleasure a person derives from consuming a good or service | 2 sets |
| 33 | the want-satisfying power of a good or service; the satisfaction or pleasure a consumer obtains from the consumption of a good or service. | 2 sets |
| 34 | the want-satisfying power of a good or service; the satisfaction or pleasure a consumer obtains from the consumption of a good or service (or from the consumption of a collection of goods and services) | 2 sets |
| 35 | the satisfaction received from consumption; sense of well-being | 2 sets |
| 36 | usefulness gained from consuming a product. | 2 sets |
| 37 | modified mission prefix u | 2 sets |
| 38 | usefulness to a person | 2 sets |
| 39 | n. something useful | 2 sets |
| 40 | a measure of the satisfaction received from possessing or consuming goods and services | 2 sets |