reckon

  • 41reckon on/to — informal have a specified view or opinion of. → reckon …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 42reckon on — Depend upon, place dependence on, count upon, reckon upon …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 43reckon — v 1. calculate, compute, tally, score, figure, give a figure to, put a figure on, quantify; add up, tally up, sum up, total up, figure up. 2. count, enumerate, numerate, number; tell, count off, list, name. 3. consider, regard, esteem, deem, hold …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 44reckon — verb 1) the cost was reckoned at £60 Syn: calculate, compute, work out, figure, count (up), add up, total; Brit. tot up 2) Anselm reckoned Hugh among his friends Syn: include, count, regard as …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • 45reckon — [OE] Reckon originally meant ‘give a list of, enumerate, tell’. The sense ‘count’ had developed by the 13th century, and ‘estimate, consider’ emerged in the 14th century. It comes ultimately from a prehistoric West Germanic *rekenōjan, which also …

    Word origins

  • 46reckon —  to imagine, to suppose : I reckon I shall. North …

    A glossary of provincial and local words used in England

  • 47reckon with — archaic settle accounts with. → reckon reckon with take (or fail to take) into account. → reckon …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 48reckon with someone — reckon with (someone/something) to consider the influence or power that someone or something has. He failed to reckon with the bureaucratic skills of the military. You have to reckon with these angry people who just don t like change of any kind …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 49reckon with something — reckon with (someone/something) to consider the influence or power that someone or something has. He failed to reckon with the bureaucratic skills of the military. You have to reckon with these angry people who just don t like change of any kind …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 50reckon with — (someone/something) to consider the influence or power that someone or something has. He failed to reckon with the bureaucratic skills of the military. You have to reckon with these angry people who just don t like change of any kind …

    New idioms dictionary