The governor may be an explicit commercial scenario:

- [ex 001 "I <u>bought</u>/<u>sold</u> the book [p en/for Cost] $10."]

- [ex 002 "I got a refund [p en/of Cost] $10."]

- [ss Cost--Locus]:
	- [ex 003 "The book is <u>priced</u>/<u>valued</u> [p en/at Cost--Locus] $10."]

	- [ex 004 "I bought it [p en/at Cost--Locus] a great price/rate."]

Or the [ss Cost] may be specified as an adjunct with a non-commerical governor:

- [ex 005 "You can ride the bus [p en/for Cost] <u>free</u>/<u>$1</u>."]

[ss Cost] is specifically about payment requested in exchange for goods or services (including income and revenue). 
If an amount of money is simply treated as property given, acquired, or possessed, then [ss Possession] is appropriate:

- [ex 006 "I bestowed the winner [p en/with Possession] <u>a bicycle</u>/<u>$100</u>. ([ss Possession]) ([exref 007 Possession])"]

See discussion of transfer, goods, and services at [ss Possession] and [ss Theme].

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This category was not present in v1, which had the broader category <i>Value</i>.
VerbNet ([Kipper et al., 2008](/bib/kipper_et_al_2008/), [Palmer et al., 2017](/bib/palmer_et_al_2017/)) has a similar category called <i>Asset</i>; we chose the name [ss Cost] to emphasize that it describes a relation rather than an entity type (it does not apply to money with a verb like <i>possess</i> or <i>transfer</i>, for instance).
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