A dollar value of something close to the the annual US GDP wold not surprise me.
From the economist.com
If you put all there programming together it wold measureup to the USA network.
From the orlandosentinel.com
But then, don't forget, the rest of the wold is going to be an even bigger market.
From the forbes.com
It would be cheap because it wold just be a fairly simple fight and effects scene.
From the orlandosentinel.com
Don't clean the streets just because it's a Jubilee, it wold be an insult.
From the expressandstar.com
I suspect that any attempt to move Congress around wold eventually meet the same fate.
From the economist.com
It wold be like trying to run the latest version of PhotoShop on a Windows 95 machine.
From the positivesharing.com
I wold love to possibly introduce this into our school which is grades per-k thru 5th.
From the psychcentral.com
As majority shareholder the government wold only get lower dividends and invest less.
From the nbr.co.nz
More examples
A tract of open rolling country (especially upland)
WOLD-FM is a Classic Rock formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Marion, Virginia, serving the Marion/Saltville/Tazewell area. WOLD-FM is owned and operated by T.E.C.O. Broadcasting, Inc.
The Wolds is a term used in England to describe a range of hills which consists of open country overlying a base of limestone or chalk. There are at least two such areas, both remnants of a much larger chalk system. ...
(Wolds (HM Prison)) HM Prison Wolds is a Category C men's private prison, located south west of Everthorpe,(near Brough) in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The prison is operated by G4S, and is situated next to HMP Everthorpe.
An unforested or deforested plain, a grassland, a moor; A wood or forest, especially a wooded upland
(Wolds (yd)) Wolds The (only) range of hills in the East Riding of Yorkshire (known as the Yorkshire Wolds).
Noun: Forest, wood, grove, but also bushes or foliage. Also used to describe an upland region of moorland. Similar to German Der Wald, a forest or woodland, and probably also related to veld and veldt, though I don't usually think of treeness in that context. (Ah, as I suspected! ...
Noun - 1. a treeless, rolling plain, especially a high one; a moor 2. an herb (Reseda luteola) related to mignonette, growing in Europe, and to some extent in America used by dyers to give a yellow color; also called dyer's broom, dyer's rocket, dyer's weed, wild woad (N.B. may also be spelled weld)