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单词 count
释义

count


count 1

C0683700 (kount)v. count·ed, count·ing, counts v.tr.1. a. To name or list (the units of a group or collection) one by one in order to determine a total; number.b. To recite numerals in ascending order up to and including: count three before firing.c. To include in a reckoning; take account of: ten dogs, counting the puppies.2. Informal a. To include by or as if by counting: Count me in.b. To exclude by or as if by counting: Count me out.3. To believe or consider to be; deem: Count yourself lucky.v.intr.1. To recite or list numbers in order or enumerate items by units or groups: counted by tens.2. a. To have importance: You really count with me.b. To have a specified importance or value: Their opinions count for little. Each basket counts for two points.3. Music To keep time by counting beats.n.1. The act of counting or calculating.2. a. A number reached by counting.b. The totality of specific items in a particular sample: a white blood cell count.3. Law Any of the separate and distinct charges or causes of action in an indictment or complaint.4. Sports The counting from one to ten seconds, during which time a boxer who has been knocked down must rise or be declared the loser.5. Baseball The number of balls and strikes that an umpire has called against a batter.Phrasal Verbs: count down To recite numerals in descending order, as during a countdown. count off To recite numbers in turn, as when dividing people or things into groups : The 24 children counted off by twos, forming a dozen pairs. count on1. To rely on; depend on: You can count on my help.2. To be confident of; anticipate: counted on getting a raise. count out To declare (a boxer) to have been knocked out by calling out the count.Idiom: count heads/noses To make a count of members, attendees, or participants.
[Middle English counten, from Old French conter, from Latin computāre, to calculate : com-, com- + putāre, to think; see pau- in Indo-European roots.]

count 2

C0683700 (kount)n.1. A nobleman in some European countries.2. Used as a title for such a nobleman.
[Middle English counte, from Old French conte, from Late Latin comes, comit-, occupant of any state office, from Latin, companion; see ei- in Indo-European roots.]

count

(kaʊnt) vb1. (Mathematics) to add up or check (each unit in a collection) in order to ascertain the sum; enumerate: count your change. 2. (Mathematics) (tr) to recite numbers in ascending order up to and including3. (often foll by: in) to take into account or include: we must count him in. 4. not counting excluding5. (tr) to believe to be; consider; think; deem: count yourself lucky. 6. (Mathematics) (intr) to recite or list numbers in ascending order either in units or groups: to count in tens. 7. (intr) to have value, importance, or influence: this picture counts as a rarity. 8. (often foll by: for) to have a certain specified value or importance: the job counts for a lot. 9. (Music, other) (intr) music to keep time by counting beatsn10. (Mathematics) the act of counting or reckoning11. (Mathematics) the number reached by counting; sum12. (Law) law a paragraph in an indictment containing a distinct and separate charge13. (General Physics) physics the total number of photons or ionized particles detected by a counter14. (Mathematics) keep count to keep a record of items, events, etc15. (Mathematics) lose count to fail to keep an accurate record of items, events, etc16. (Boxing) boxing wrestling the act of telling off a number of seconds by the referee, as when a boxer has been knocked down or a wrestler pinned by his opponent17. (Wrestling) boxing wrestling the act of telling off a number of seconds by the referee, as when a boxer has been knocked down or a wrestler pinned by his opponent18. (Boxing) out for the count boxing knocked out and unable to continue after a count of ten by the referee19. (Boxing) take the count boxing to be unable to continue after a count of ten20. archaic notice; regard; account[C14: from Anglo-French counter, from Old French conter, from Latin computāre to calculate, compute]

count

(kaʊnt) n1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a nobleman in any of various European countries having a rank corresponding to that of a British earl2. (Historical Terms) any of various officials in the late Roman Empire and under various Germanic kings in the early Middle Ages3. (Roman Catholic Church) a man who has received an honour (papal knighthood) from the Pope in recognition of good deeds, achievements, etc[C16: from Old French conte, from Late Latin comes occupant of a state office, from Latin: overseer, associate, literally: one who goes with, from com- with + īre to go] ˈcountˌship n

count1

(kaʊnt)

v.t. 1. to check over one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate. 2. to reckon up; calculate; compute. 3. to list or name the numerals up to: Close your eyes and count to ten. 4. to include in a reckoning; take into account: Count her among the chosen. 5. to reckon to the credit of another; ascribe; impute. 6. to consider or regard: He counted himself lucky. v.i. 7. to count the items of a collection to determine the total. 8. to list or name numerals in order. 9. to reckon numerically. 10. to have a specified numerical value. 11. to be accounted or worth something: That try didn't count - I was practicing. 12. to have merit, importance, value, etc.; deserve consideration: Every bit of help counts. 13. count down, to count backward, usu. by ones, from a given integer to zero. 14. count in, to include. 15. count off, to count aloud by turns, as to arrange positions within a group of persons; divide or become divided into groups: Count off from the left by threes. 16. count on or upon, to depend or rely on. 17. count out, a. to declare (a boxer) the loser in a bout because of inability to stand up before the referee has counted to 10. b. to exclude. c. to count and apportion or give out. d. to disqualify (ballots) illegally in counting, in order to control the election. n. 18. the act of counting; enumeration; reckoning; calculation. 19. the number obtained by counting; the total. 20. an accounting. 21. Baseball. the number of balls and strikes, usu. designated in that order, that have been called on a batter during a turn at bat. 22. a separate charge in a legal declaration or indictment: two counts of embezzlement. 23. a. a single ionizing reaction registered by an ionization chamber, as in a Geiger counter. b. the total number of ionizing reactions so registered. 24. Archaic. regard; notice. 25. the count, the calling out, by the referee, of the numbers from 1 to 10 when a boxer falls to the canvas. adj. 26. noting a number of items determined by an actual count: The box is labeled 50 count. Idioms: count heads or noses, to count the number of people present. [1275–1325; (v.) Middle English < Anglo-French c(o)unter, Old French conter < Latin computāre to compute]

count2

(kaʊnt)

n. (in some European countries) a nobleman equivalent in rank to an English earl. [1375–1425; < Anglo-French c(o)unte, Old French conte, comte < Late Latin comitem, acc. of comes honorary title of various imperial functionaries, Latin: retainer, staff member, literally, companion]

count


Past participle: counted
Gerund: counting
Imperative
count
count
Present
I count
you count
he/she/it counts
we count
you count
they count
Preterite
I counted
you counted
he/she/it counted
we counted
you counted
they counted
Present Continuous
I am counting
you are counting
he/she/it is counting
we are counting
you are counting
they are counting
Present Perfect
I have counted
you have counted
he/she/it has counted
we have counted
you have counted
they have counted
Past Continuous
I was counting
you were counting
he/she/it was counting
we were counting
you were counting
they were counting
Past Perfect
I had counted
you had counted
he/she/it had counted
we had counted
you had counted
they had counted
Future
I will count
you will count
he/she/it will count
we will count
you will count
they will count
Future Perfect
I will have counted
you will have counted
he/she/it will have counted
we will have counted
you will have counted
they will have counted
Future Continuous
I will be counting
you will be counting
he/she/it will be counting
we will be counting
you will be counting
they will be counting
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been counting
you have been counting
he/she/it has been counting
we have been counting
you have been counting
they have been counting
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been counting
you will have been counting
he/she/it will have been counting
we will have been counting
you will have been counting
they will have been counting
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been counting
you had been counting
he/she/it had been counting
we had been counting
you had been counting
they had been counting
Conditional
I would count
you would count
he/she/it would count
we would count
you would count
they would count
Past Conditional
I would have counted
you would have counted
he/she/it would have counted
we would have counted
you would have counted
they would have counted
Thesaurus
Noun1.count - the total number countedcount - the total number counted; "a blood count"number - a concept of quantity involving zero and units; "every number has a unique position in the sequence"complement - a complete number or quantity; "a full complement"blood count - the number of red and white corpuscles in a blood samplebody count - a count of troops killed in an operation or time period; "the daily body count increased as the war went on"circulation - number of copies of a newspaper or magazine that are sold; "by increasing its circulation the newspaper hoped to increase its advertising"circulation - (library science) the count of books that are loaned by a library over a specified periodhead count, headcount - number of people in a particular grouppollen count - the number of pollen grains (usually ragweed) in a standard volume of air over a twenty-four hour period and a specified time and placesperm count - the number of sperm in an ejaculate; "the sperm count is used as an indicator of male fertility"
2.count - the act of countingcount - the act of counting; reciting numbers in ascending order; "the counting continued for several hours"counting, enumeration, numeration, reckoning, tallyinvestigating, investigation - the work of inquiring into something thoroughly and systematicallyblood count - the act of estimating the number of red and white corpuscles in a blood samplecensus, nose count, nosecount - a periodic count of the populationcountdown - counting backward from an arbitrary number to indicate the time remaining before some event (such as launching a space vehicle)miscount - an inaccurate countpoll - the counting of votes (as in an election)recount - an additional (usually a second) count; especially of the votes in a close electionsperm count - the act of estimating the number of spermatozoa in an ejaculate
3.count - a nobleman (in various countries) having rank equal to a British earlcount palatine - a count who exercised royal authority in his own domainlandgrave - a count who had jurisdiction over a large territory in medieval Germanynoble, nobleman, Lord - a titled peer of the realm
Verb1.count - determine the number or amount of; "Can you count the books on your shelf?"; "Count your change"numerate, enumerate, numberrecount - count again; "We had to recount all the votes after an accusation of fraud was made"ascertain, determine, find out, find - establish after a calculation, investigation, experiment, survey, or study; "find the product of two numbers"; "The physicist who found the elusive particle won the Nobel Prize"miscount - count wronglycensus - conduct a census; "They censused the deer in the forest"add together, summate, tot, tot up, tote up, total, add up, sum, sum up, tally, add - determine the sum of; "Add all the people in this town to those of the neighboring town"
2.count - have weightcount - have weight; have import, carry weight; "It does not matter much"matter, weighbe - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer"press, weigh - to be oppressive or burdensome; "weigh heavily on the mind", "Something pressed on his mind"
3.count - show consideration forcount - show consideration for; take into account; "You must consider her age"; "The judge considered the offender's youth and was lenient"weigh, consider
4.count - name or recite the numbers in ascending order; "The toddler could count to 100"recite - repeat aloud from memory; "she recited a poem"; "The pupil recited his lesson for the day"count down - count backwards; before detonating a bomb, for examplecount down - count backwards; before detonating a bomb, for examplecount out - declare the loser
5.count - put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members"numberclass, classify, sort out, assort, sort, separate - arrange or order by classes or categories; "How would you classify these pottery shards--are they prehistoric?"
6.count - include as if by counting; "I can count my colleagues in the opposition"include - consider as part of something; "I include you in the list of culprits"
7.count - have a certain value or carry a certain weight; "each answer counts as three points"be - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer"
8.count - have faith or confidence in; "you can count on me to help you any time"; "Look to your friends for support"; "You can bet on that!"; "Depend on your family in times of crisis"depend, bet, reckon, calculate, lookrely, trust, swear, bank - have confidence or faith in; "We can trust in God"; "Rely on your friends"; "bank on your good education"; "I swear by my grandmother's recipes"
9.count - take account of; "You have to reckon with our opponents"; "Count on the monsoon"reckonestimate, gauge, approximate, guess, judge - judge tentatively or form an estimate of (quantities or time); "I estimate this chicken to weigh three pounds"

count

verb1. (often with up) add (up), total, reckon (up), tot up, score, check, estimate, calculate, compute, tally, number, enumerate, cast up I counted the money. It came to more than five hundred pounds.2. matter, be important, cut any ice (informal), carry weight, tell, rate, weigh, signify, enter into consideration It's as if your opinions just don't count.3. consider, judge, regard, deem, think of, rate, esteem, look upon, impute I count him as one of my best friends.4. include, number among, take into account or consideration The years before their arrival in prison are not counted as part of their sentence.noun1. calculation, poll, reckoning, sum, tally, numbering, computation, enumeration At the last count the police had 247 people in custody.count on or upon something or someone depend on, trust, rely on, bank on, take for granted, lean on, reckon on, take on trust, believe in, pin your faith on I'm counting on your support. We're all counting on you to do the right thing.count someone out (Informal) leave out, except, exclude, disregard, pass over, leave out of account If it means working extra hours, you can count me out.

count

verb1. To note (items) one by one so as to get a total:enumerate, number, numerate, reckon, tally, tell.2. To be of significance or importance:import, matter, signify, weigh.3. To indicate (time or rhythm), as with repeated gestures or sounds:beat.Idioms: keep time , mark time.phrasal verb
count on or upon
1. To place trust or confidence in:bank on (or upon), believe in, depend on (or upon), reckon on (or upon), rely on (or upon), trust (in).2. To look forward to confidently:anticipate, await, bargain for (or on), depend on (or upon), expect, look for, wait (for).Informal: figure on.phrasal verb
count outTo keep from being admitted, included, or considered:bar, debar, eliminate, except, exclude, keep out, rule out, shut out.nounA noting of items one by one:enumeration, numeration, reckoning, tally.Archaic: tale.
Translations
伯爵把...看作数数数有价值

count1

(kaunt) noun nobleman in certain countries, equal in rank to a British earl. 伯爵 伯爵ˈcountess noun1. the wife or widow of an earl or count. 伯爵夫人 伯爵夫人2. a woman of the same rank as an earl or count in her own right. 女伯爵 女伯爵

count2

(kaunt) verb1. to name the numbers up to. Count (up to) ten. 數數兒 (按顺序的)数数 2. to calculate using numbers. Count (up) the number of pages; Count how many people there are; There were six people present, not counting the chairman. 計數 计数3. to be important or have an effect or value. What he says doesn't count; All these essays count towards my final mark. 重要,有影響或價值 有价值,有重要意义 4. to consider. Count yourself lucky to be here. 把...視為 把...看作 noun1. an act of numbering. They took a count of how many people attended. 計數 计数2. a charge brought against a prisoner etc. She faces three counts of theft. 罪狀 罪状 adjectivesee countable. ˈcountable adjective1. capable of being numbered. Millionths of a second are countable only on very complicated instruments. 可計數的 可计数的2. (negative uncountable. also count) (of a noun) capable of forming a plural and using the definite or indefinite article: Table is a count(able) noun, but milk is an uncountable noun. 可數的 可数的ˈcounter noun a token used in numbering or playing certain games; counters for playing ludo etc. 數數兒或遊戲的籌碼 筹码ˈcountless adjective very many. Countless pebbles. 不計其數的 无计其数的ˈcountdown noun (used originally of a rocket) a counting backwards to check the time remaining until the beginning of an event, regarded as zero. It's five minutes to countdown. 倒數計時 倒数读秒,倒计数 count on to rely on (a person or happening). I'm counting on you to persuade her. 依靠 依靠out for the count1. (of a boxer) still not standing after the count of ten. 拳擊比賽被擊倒後裁判數到十仍未爬起,被判失敗 拳击比赛被击倒后裁判计时十秒钟仍未爬起,被判失败 2. exhausted; asleep. He was out for the count for several hours after his long walk. 累垮,睡著了 睡得极熟的

count

数zhCN

count


count

heads/noses To make a count of members, attendees, or participants.
See:
  • almost doesn't count
  • and counting
  • at the last count
  • be able to count (someone or something) on one hand
  • be able to count (someone or something) on the fingers of one hand
  • be able to count somebody/something on one hand
  • be out for the count
  • body count
  • but who's counting
  • Call no man happy till he dies
  • can count on the fingers of one hand
  • Close only counts in horseshoes
  • close only counts in horseshoes (and hand grenades)
  • count
  • count (one's) blessings
  • count (one's)/the pennies
  • count (someone or something) among (something)
  • count (someone or something) as (something)
  • count (someone or something) in
  • count (something) on the fingers of one hand
  • count (up)on (someone or something)
  • count against
  • count against (one)
  • count among
  • count as
  • count chickens before they hatch
  • count coup
  • count down
  • count for
  • count for (something)
  • count from
  • count from (something)
  • count heads
  • count in
  • count noses
  • count noses, to
  • count off
  • count on
  • count one's blessings
  • count one's chickens before they hatch
  • count out
  • count sheep
  • count something on the fingers of one hand
  • count the cost
  • count the pennies
  • count to ten
  • count up
  • count up to
  • count up to (some number)
  • count with
  • count with (one)
  • count your blessings
  • count your chickens
  • count your chickens before they hatch
  • count your chickens before they're hatched
  • do a bean count
  • don't count your chickens
  • don't count your chickens before they hatch
  • don't count your chickens before they're hatched
  • down for the count
  • Every minute counts
  • it's the thought that counts
  • keep (a) count (of someone or something)
  • keep count
  • lose count
  • lose count (of something)
  • lose count of
  • no-count
  • not count your chickens
  • out cold
  • out for the count
  • stand up and be counted
  • take the count
  • take the long count
  • who's counting?
  • wouldn't bet on it

count


count

11. the act of counting or reckoning 2. the number reached by counting; sum 3. Law a paragraph in an indictment containing a distinct and separate charge 4. Physics the total number of photons or ionized particles detected by a counter 5. Boxing Wrestling the act of telling off a number of seconds by the referee, as when a boxer has been knocked down or a wrestler pinned by his opponent 6. out for the count Boxing knocked out and unable to continue after a count of ten by the referee 7. take the count Boxing to be unable to continue after a count of ten

count

21. a nobleman in any of various European countries having a rank corresponding to that of a British earl 2. any of various officials in the late Roman Empire and under various Germanic kings in the early Middle Ages 3. a man who has received an honour (papal knighthood) from the Pope in recognition of good deeds, achievements, etc.

Count

 

(Russian, graf; from German Graf), in Western Europe during the early Middle Ages, a royal servitor. Beginning in the second half of the sixth century, a count in the Frankish state possessed his own district—the county—with judicial, administrative, and military authority. Gradually the post of count became hereditary. In the period of feudal disintegration, the count was a feudal sovereign; then, at the end of this period, he became a high aristocrat. The title of count is maintained to this day in most European countries with a monarchical form of government.

In Russia the title of graf was introduced in the 18th century by Peter I and was abolished in 1917.

count

[kau̇nt] (aerospace engineering) To proceed from one point to another in a countdown or plus count, normally by calling a number to signify the point reached. To proceed in a countdown, for example, T minus 90 and counting. (chemistry) An ionizing event. (design engineering) The number of openings per linear inch in a wire cloth. (mathematics) To name a set of consecutive positive integers in order of size, usually starting with 1. To associate consecutive positive integers, starting with 1, with the members of a finite set in order to determine the cardinal number of the set. (nucleonics) A single response of the counting system in a radiation counter. The total number of events indicated by a counter. (textiles) The number of warp and filling threads per square inch of fabric.

count

In wire cloth, the number of openings per linear inch.

count


count

 [kownt] a numerical computation or indication.Addis count the determination of the number of erythrocytes, leukocytes, epithelial cells, and casts, and the protein content in an aliquot of a 12-hour urine specimen; used in the diagnosis and management of kidney disease.blood count (blood cell count) see blood count.blood count, complete a series of tests of the peripheral blood, including the erythrocyte count, erythrocyte indices, leukocyte counts, and sometimes platelet count.blood count, differential differential leukocyte count.erythrocyte count determination of the number of erythrocytes in a unit volume of blood that has been diluted in an isotonic solution, done with an automatic counter such as a flow cytometer. Called also red blood cell or red cell count.leukocyte count determination of the number of leukocytes in a unit volume of blood, usually after the erythrocytes have been lysed and the blood has been diluted; it may be done either manually with a hemacytometer or electronically. See total leukocyte c. and differential leukocyte c. Called also white blood cell or white cell count.leukocyte count, differential a leukocyte count that calculates the percentages of different types. See also count" >total leukocyte count.leukocyte count, total a leukocyte count measuring the total number of all the types in a given volume of blood. See also differential leukocyte count.platelet count determination of the total number of platelets per cubic millimeter of blood; the direct platelet count simply counts the cells using a microscope, and the indirect platelet count determines the ratio of platelets to erythrocytes on a peripheral blood smear and computes the number of platelets from the erythrocyte count.red blood cell count (red cell count) erythrocyte count.reticulocyte count a calculation of the number of reticulocytes in 1 cu mm of peripheral blood, recorded either as an absolute number or as the percentage of the erythrocyte count. It provides a means of assessing the erythropoietic activity of the bone marrow.white blood cell count (white cell count) leukocyte count.

count

(kownt), 1. A reckoning, enumeration, or accounting. 2. To enumerate or score.

count

Lab medicine The enumeration of a thing. See Absolute eosinophil count, Bacterial count, CD4 count, Colony count, Collateral frame count, Differential count, Platelet count, Pollen count, Red cell count, Reticulocyte count, Sperm count, White cell count Surgery A needle and instrument count. See Sponge count.

count

(kownt) 1. A reckoning, enumeration, or accounting. 2. To enumerate or score. 3. A tally of instruments and materials performed at the beginning of a surgical operation and again before the incision is closed, to ensure that no foreign object remains in the patient.

Patient discussion about count

Q. When do you start counting your pregnancy? I want to know if after your last period you start counting your months of pregnancy. A. so many doctors are counting from your last menstrual day.
so if you had your last menstrual period on 30 october 2008, and today is 5 december 2008, and you check yourself is positively pregnant -- it means you are 5 weeks pregnant already.

Q. how do i teat my no sperm count? i do not have a live sperm,how can i treat and have live sperm countA. The treatment is done only at specialist centers, and consists first of evaluation of the reason for this condition (called azoospermia). If an anatomical malformation is found, it may be corrected, as well as medical conditions, and in some cases, direct extraction of sperms from the testes (called MESA) enables in-vitro fertilization.
You may read more here:
www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/infertility.html

Q. what is the counting diet? when you count your calories of every meal during the day? why is it so papular? A. because you get so frustrated of counting calories all the time that you rather skip meals :)
yes it's counting calories, and it's popular because at the end our body cannot defy the laws of thermodynamics- if you eat 4000 calories a day and use only 3000, the rest will transform into fat. and in this diet it doesn't matter what you eat as long as you don't go over the calorie level you decided. not always a healthy diet if done without someone supervising it.

More discussions about count

count


Related to count: WBC count

Count

In Common-Law Pleading or Code Pleading, the initial statements made by a plaintiff that set forth a Cause of Action to commence a civil lawsuit; the different points of a plaintiff's declaration, each of which constitute a basis for relief. In Criminal Procedure, one of several parts or charges of an indictment, each accusing the defendant of a different offense.

The term count has been replaced by the word complaint in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and many state codes of civil procedure. Sometimes count is used to denote the numbered paragraphs of a complaint, each of which sets out an essential element of the claim.

Federal and state rules of criminal procedure govern the standards that a criminal count must satisfy in federal and state criminal matters.

count

n. each separate statement in a complaint which states a cause of action which, standing alone, would give rise to a lawsuit), or each separate charge in a criminal action. For example, the complaint in a civil (non-criminal) lawsuit might state: First Count (or cause of action) for negligence, and then state the detailed allegations; Second Count for breach of contract, Third Count for debt, and so forth. In a criminal case each count would be a statement of a different alleged crime. There are also so-called common counts which cover various types of debt. (See: common counts)

count

a paragraph in an indictment containing a distinct and separate charge.

COUNT, pleading. This word, derived from the French conte, a narrative, is in our old law books used synonymously with declaration but practice has introduced the following distinction: when the plaintiff's complaint embraces only a single cause of action, and he makes only one statement of it, that statement is called, indifferently, a declaration or count; though the former is the more usual term.
 2. But when the suit embraces two or more causes of action, (each of which of course requires a different statement;) or when the plaintiff makes two or more different statements of one and the same cause of action, each several statement is called a count, and all of them, collectively, constitute the declaration.
 3. In all cases, however, in which there are two or more counts, whether there is actually but one cause of action or several, each count purports, upon the face of it, to disclose a distinct right of action, unconnected with that stated in any of the other counts.
 4. One object proposed, in inserting two or more counts in one declaration, when there is in fact but one cause of action, is, in some cases, to guard against the danger of an insufficient statement of the cause, where a doubt exists as to the legal sufficiency of one or another of two different modes of declaring; but the more usual end proposed in inserting more than one count in such case, is to accommodate the statement to the cause, as far as may be, to the possible state of the proof to be exhibited on trial; or to guard, if possible, against the hazard of the proofs varying materially from the statement of the cause of action; so that if one or more or several counts be not adapted to the evidence, some other of them may be so. Gould on Pl. c. 4, s. 2, 3, 4; Steph. Pl. 279; Doct. Pl. 1 78; 8 Com. Dig. 291; Dane's Ab. Index, h.t.; Bouv. Inst. Index, h.t. In real actions, the declaration is most usually called a count. Steph. Pl. 36, See Common count; Money count.

Count


Count

On a point & figure chart, an estimation of future price movements. Point & figure charts seek to identify support and resistance levels. Counts are estimates on the likelihood that a security will break through one or the other and result in a large profit or loss.
See CNT
See CNT

count


Related to count: WBC count
  • all
  • verb
  • noun
  • phrase

Synonyms for count

verb add (up)

Synonyms

  • add (up)
  • total
  • reckon (up)
  • tot up
  • score
  • check
  • estimate
  • calculate
  • compute
  • tally
  • number
  • enumerate
  • cast up

verb matter

Synonyms

  • matter
  • be important
  • cut any ice
  • carry weight
  • tell
  • rate
  • weigh
  • signify
  • enter into consideration

verb consider

Synonyms

  • consider
  • judge
  • regard
  • deem
  • think of
  • rate
  • esteem
  • look upon
  • impute

verb include

Synonyms

  • include
  • number among
  • take into account or consideration

noun calculation

Synonyms

  • calculation
  • poll
  • reckoning
  • sum
  • tally
  • numbering
  • computation
  • enumeration

phrase count on or upon something or someone

Synonyms

  • depend on
  • trust
  • rely on
  • bank on
  • take for granted
  • lean on
  • reckon on
  • take on trust
  • believe in
  • pin your faith on

phrase count someone out

Synonyms

  • leave out
  • except
  • exclude
  • disregard
  • pass over
  • leave out of account

Synonyms for count

verb to note (items) one by one so as to get a total

Synonyms

  • enumerate
  • number
  • numerate
  • reckon
  • tally
  • tell

verb to be of significance or importance

Synonyms

  • import
  • matter
  • signify
  • weigh

verb to indicate (time or rhythm), as with repeated gestures or sounds

Synonyms

  • beat

phrase count on: to place trust or confidence in

Synonyms

  • bank on
  • believe in
  • depend on
  • reckon on
  • rely on
  • trust

phrase count on: to look forward to confidently

Synonyms

  • anticipate
  • await
  • bargain for
  • depend on
  • expect
  • look for
  • wait
  • figure on

phrase count out: to keep from being admitted, included, or considered

Synonyms

  • bar
  • debar
  • eliminate
  • except
  • exclude
  • keep out
  • rule out
  • shut out

noun a noting of items one by one

Synonyms

  • enumeration
  • numeration
  • reckoning
  • tally
  • tale

Synonyms for count

noun the total number counted

Related Words

  • number
  • complement
  • blood count
  • body count
  • circulation
  • head count
  • headcount
  • pollen count
  • sperm count

noun the act of counting

Synonyms

  • counting
  • enumeration
  • numeration
  • reckoning
  • tally

Related Words

  • investigating
  • investigation
  • blood count
  • census
  • nose count
  • nosecount
  • countdown
  • miscount
  • poll
  • recount
  • sperm count

noun a nobleman (in various countries) having rank equal to a British earl

Related Words

  • count palatine
  • landgrave
  • noble
  • nobleman
  • Lord

verb determine the number or amount of

Synonyms

  • numerate
  • enumerate
  • number

Related Words

  • recount
  • ascertain
  • determine
  • find out
  • find
  • miscount
  • census
  • add together
  • summate
  • tot
  • tot up
  • tote up
  • total
  • add up
  • sum
  • sum up
  • tally
  • add

verb have weight

Synonyms

  • matter
  • weigh

Related Words

  • be
  • press
  • weigh

verb show consideration for

Synonyms

  • weigh
  • consider

verb name or recite the numbers in ascending order

Related Words

  • recite
  • count down
  • count out

verb put into a group

Synonyms

  • number

Related Words

  • class
  • classify
  • sort out
  • assort
  • sort
  • separate

verb include as if by counting

Related Words

  • include

verb have a certain value or carry a certain weight

Related Words

  • be

verb have faith or confidence in

Synonyms

  • depend
  • bet
  • reckon
  • calculate
  • look

Related Words

  • rely
  • trust
  • swear
  • bank

verb take account of

Synonyms

  • reckon

Related Words

  • estimate
  • gauge
  • approximate
  • guess
  • judge
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英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

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更新时间:2024/11/11 15:08:05