reckon
21reckon — verb 1》 calculate. 2》 be of the opinion. 3》 regard in a specified way. ↘(reckon someone/thing among) include someone or something in (a group). ↘(reckon on/to) informal have a specified view or opinion of. 4》 (reckon on) rely on or be… …
22reckon — 01. I m not sure what time we re going to leave, but I [reckon] it ll be no later than 7:00. 02. My neighbor [reckons] I ll be able to sell my car fairly quickly. 03. The government [reckons] the tax increase will bring in well over five million… …
23reckon — [[t]re̱kən[/t]] ♦♦♦ reckons, reckoning, reckoned 1) VERB If you reckon that something is true, you think that it is true. [INFORMAL] [V that] Toni reckoned that it must be about three o clock... [V that] He reckoned he was still fond of her. Syn …
24reckon — verb (reckoned; reckoning) Etymology: Middle English rekenen, from Old English recenian (as in gerecenian to narrate); akin to Old English reccan Date: 13th century transitive verb 1. a. count < reckon the days till Christmas > …
25reckon*/ — [ˈrekən] verb spoken 1) [I/T] British to believe that something is true I reckon there s something wrong with him.[/ex] It is generally reckoned to be the best restaurant in town.[/ex] 2) [T] to have a particular opinion about someone or… …
26reckon — /ˈrɛkən / (say rekuhn) verb (t) 1. to count, compute, or calculate as to number or amount. 2. to esteem or consider (as stated): to be reckoned a wit. 3. Colloquial to think or suppose. –verb (i) 4. to count; make a computation or calculation. 5 …
27reckon — verb 1) the cost was reckoned at $6,000 Syn: calculate, compute, peg, work out, put a figure on, figure; count (up), add up, total; chiefly Brit. tot up 2) Anselm reckoned Hugh among his friends Syn …
28reckon on — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms reckon on : present tense I/you/we/they reckon on he/she/it reckons on present participle reckoning on past tense reckoned on past participle reckoned on reckon on something to expect something to happen and… …
29reckon — / rekən/ verb to calculate something ● to reckon the costs at £25,000 ● We reckon the loss to be over £1m. ● They reckon the insurance costs to be too high …
30reckon — v. 1 tr. count or compute by calculation. 2 tr. (foll. by in) count in or include in computation. 3 tr. (often foll. by as or to be) consider or regard (reckon him wise; reckon them to be beyond hope). 4 tr. a (foll. by that + clause) conclude… …