Amortize in a sentence as a verb

No. They use their scale to amortize their OS development work over tens of millions of units.

ARM sells in huge volumes, but how is selling $1 embedded chips going to help them amortize the cost of their high end stuff?

When you amortize that $2000 bike out per use, the difference between it and the $1500 bike can seem rather insignificant.

Unless you can predict the future, you can't tell if that investment will get amortize out and yield something useful.

At larger scale, you could amortize all of that management time and automate the majority of it, but at a few bucks here and there it's simply not worth it.

If you amortize my subscription payment over all the articles I actually read in depth, I wouldn't be surprised to find I pay $1/article, but I think the subscription is well worth it overall.

The vast majority of R&D cost is recovered in the US because it is one of the few markets in the developed world where drug companies can charge enough money to amortize their R&D costs.

It's generally not the call of the person tasked with maintaining it, and even if it is, "cost will amortize quickly" isn't necessarily good enough on a large project with limited funding.

Amortize definitions

verb

liquidate gradually

See also: amortise