reckon from

reckon from
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English-Indonesian dictionary. 2013.

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  • reckon from some point in time — index date Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • reckon — O.E. gerecenian to recount, relate, from W.Gmc. * (ga)rekenojanan (Cf. O.Fris. rekenia, M.L.G. rekenen, O.H.G. rehhanon, Ger. rechnen, Goth. rahnjan to count, reckon ), from P.Gmc. *rakinaz ready, straightforward, from PIE *reg to move in a… …   Etymology dictionary

  • reckon — reck‧on [ˈrekən] verb [transitive] 1. to guess a number or amount that you know something about but have not calculated exactly: reckon something to be something • The deal is reckoned to be worth over $1.3 billion. 2. formal to calculate an… …   Financial and business terms

  • reckon — reck|on W3S2 [ˈrekən] v [T not in progressive] [: Old English; Origin: gerecenian to tell, explain ] 1.) spoken especially BrE to think or suppose something reckon (that) ▪ Do you reckon he ll agree to see us? ▪ The police reckon that whoever… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • reckon — verb (transitive not in progressive) 1 spoken especially BrE to think that something is a fact, or have a particular opinion about something: reckon (that): Wayne reckons we ought to call her. | Do you reckon they ll get married? 2 to guess a… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • reckon — 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 > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • reckon — [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 …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • reckon — [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

  • Philip Hall Likes Me, I Reckon Maybe — is the name of a children s novel written by Bette Greene that was awarded a Newbery Honor in 1975. The book was published in 1974 by Puffin Books. It is the first of three novels to feature Beth Lambert and her friend Philip Hall. The sequels… …   Wikipedia

  • List of contestants from the UK national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest — Eurovision: Your Country Needs You is the most recent name of the BBC TV show broadcast annually to select Britain s entry into the Eurovision Song Contest. Shows of similar formats have previously gone under several other names, including… …   Wikipedia

  • tell — {{11}}tell (n.) mound, hill, 1864, from Arabic tall, related to Heb. tel mount, hill, heap. {{12}}tell (v.) O.E. tellan to reckon, calculate, consider, account, from P.Gmc. *taljanan to mention in order (Cf. O.S. tellian, O.N. telja, O.Fris.… …   Etymology dictionary

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