تعريف count#in في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Count Dracula
- The fictional vampire in the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker
- complete blood count
- A measure of the number, concentration, and size of white blood cells, platelets, and red blood cells in one's blood
- count
- To consider something an example of something
I count apples as a type of fruit.
- count
- To be of significance; to matter
Your views don't count here.
- count
- To determine the number (of objects in a group)
There are three apples; count them.
- count
- To be an example of something
Apples count as a type of fruit.
- count
- A charge of misconduct brought in a legal proceeding
- count
- To enumerate the digits of one's numeral system
Can you count to a hundred?.
- count
- The act of counting or tallying a quantity
- count
- The result of a tally that reveals the number of items in a set; a quantity counted
- count
- The number of balls and strikes, respectively, on a batter's in-progress plate appearance
He has a 3-2 count with the bases loaded.
- count
- The male ruler of a county; also known as an earl, especially in England. The female equivalent is countess
- count
- A countdown
- count angels on pinheads
- Verbal form of angels dancing on the head of a pin
Such assertions are motivated by the desire to leave the independent-particle model in place as the central paradigm in nuclear theory, but they inadvertently push theoretical nuclear physics in the direction of counting angels on pinheads: “Sure they’re there! It’s just that there aren’t any observable implications of their celestial presence!”.
- count coup
- To win prestige in battle by performing an act of bravery in the face of the enemy (such as touching him and escaping unharmed) — a ritual of the Plains Indians|Plains Indians]] of North America
- count down
- To announce the passage of time to a precisely timed expected event
The sound system counted down the seconds to meteor impact.
- count down
- Alternative spelling of countdown
- count down
- To await a precisely timed expected event
The party was counting down the days to Inauguration.
- count downs
- plural form of count down
- count noun
- a noun which is used to refer to things that can be counted. Examples: woman, stone, tree, dollar
- count nouns
- plural form of count noun
- count on
- to rely upon, trust, or expect
Hopefully you can count on them for a long period of time. Quite frankly, not often do you give those players up..
- count one's blessings
- To focus one's attention on the circumstances of one's life which are pleasant or fortunate, especially with the intention of diverting one's thoughts from serious or disagreeable matters
The other out-of-town Dons patiently listened, perhaps counting their blessings that each had a city all to himself.
- count out
- To exclude; to dismiss from participation or eligibility
I may not be as young as I used to be, but I can still handle this job. Don't count me out.
- count out
- To determine that a competitor has lost a match, by a referee's enumeration aloud of the increments of time for which the competitor has been incapacitated
The champ was knocked unconscious and counted out in the third round.
- count out
- To enumerate items while organizing or transferring them
The bank teller counted out five twenty-dollar bills and gave them to me.
- count sheep
- To attempt to go to sleep by thinking of something boring, traditionally by counting imaginary sheep
- count-noun
- Attributive form of count noun, noun
I don't know... to me, love just has a count-noun ring to it.
- count
- a nobleman (in various countries) having rank equal to a British earl
- count
- {f} enumerate; take into account
- count
- show consideration for; take into account; "You must consider her age"; "The judge considered the offender's youth and was lenient"
- count
- Returns the number of entries in the dictionary
- count
- Unless noted, the number of projects shown excludes the number of administrative supplements
- count
- {n} a foreign title, tale, number, declaration
- count
- {v} to reckon, tell, esteem, depend
- Count
- to count your blessings: see blessing. or earl European title of nobility, ranking in modern times directly below a marquess or (in countries without marquesses) a duke. In England the title of earl is the equivalent of count and ranks above a viscount. The wife of a count or earl is a countess. The Roman comes ("count") was originally a household companion of the emperor; under the Franks he was a local commander and judge. The counts were later incorporated into the feudal structure, some becoming subordinate to dukes, though a few countships were as great as duchies. As royal authority was reasserted over the feudatories, which took place at different times in the different kingdoms, the counts lost their political authority, though they retained their privileges as members of the nobility. Aehrenthal Aloys Count Lexa von Alfieri Vittorio Count Amadeus the Green Count Andrássy Gyula Count Arakcheyev Aleksey Andreyevich Count Basie Count Berchtold Leopold count von Bernadotte af Wisborg Folke Count Bernstorff Johann Heinrich count von Beust Friedrich Ferdinand count von Caprivi Georg Leo count von Cavour Camillo Benso count di Chambord Henri Dieudonné d'Artois count de Ciano Galeazzo count di Cortellazzo Conrad von Hötzendorf Franz Xaver Josef Count Frontenac Louis de Buade count de Palluau and de Gama Vasco da 1st count da Vidigueira Gneisenau August Wilhelm Anton Count Neidhardt von Gobineau Joseph Arthur count de Grandi Dino count di Mordano Ignatyev Nikolay Pavlovich Count Izvolsky Aleksandr Petrovich Count Károlyi Mihály Count count de L'Empire Bruno count von Egisheim und Dagsburg Loris Melikov Mikhail Tariyelovich Count Louis Stanislas Xavier count de Provence Moltke Helmuth Karl Bernhard count von Montalembert Charles Forbes René count de Nesselrode Karl Robert Vasilyevich Count Orlov Aleksey Grigoryevich Count Orlov Grigory Grigoryevich Count Oxenstierna af Södermöre Axel Gustafsson Count Pico della Mirandola Giovanni conte count di Concordia Radetzky Joseph Count Rochambeau Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur count de Roon Albrecht Theodor Emil count von Donatien Alphonse François count de Sade Saxe Hermann Maurice count de Sforza Carlo Count Speransky Mikhail Mikhaylovich Count Suvorov Aleksandr Vasilyevich Count Széchenyi István Count Taaffe Eduard count von Teleki Pál Count Tilly Johann Tserclaes count von Tisza István Count Tolstoy Aleksey Konstantinovich Count Tolstoy Aleksey Nikolayevich Count Lev Nikolayevich Count Tolstoy Uvarov Sergey Semyonovich Count Vergennes Charles Gravier count de Vigny Alfred Victor count de Count of Valor Don Luchino Visconti count di Modrone Witte Sergey Yulyevich Count Yorck von Wartenburg Johann David Ludwig Count Mac Mahon Marie Edme Patrice Maurice count de Maurits prince van Oranje count van Nassau Mirabeau Honoré Gabriel Riqueti count de Aberdeen George Hamilton Gordon 4th earl of Alexander Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander 1st Earl Asquith Herbert Henry 1st earl of Oxford and Asquith Attlee Clement Richard 1st Earl Attlee of Walthamstow Baldwin of Bewdley Stanley Baldwin 1st Earl Balfour of Whittingehame Arthur James 1st Earl Birkenhead Frederick Edwin Smith 1st earl of James Earl Breslin Browder Earl Russell Burger Warren Earl Bute John Stuart 3rd earl of Cadogan William 1st Earl Cardigan James Thomas Brudenell 7th earl of James Earl Carter Cecil Robert 1st earl of Salisbury Clarendon Edward Hyde 1st earl of Clarendon George William Frederick Villiers 4th earl of Cornwallis Charles Cornwallis 1st Marquess and 2nd Earl Cromer Evelyn Baring 1st earl of Cromwell Thomas earl of Essex Derby Edward George Geoffrey Smith Stanley 14th earl of Disraeli Benjamin earl of Beaconsfield Dodge William Earl Dongan Thomas 2nd earl of Limerick Durham John George Lambton 1st earl of Eden Robert Anthony 1st earl of Avon Elgin James Bruce 8th earl of Essex Robert Devereux 2nd earl of Essex Robert Devereux 3rd earl of Essex Walter Devereux 1st earl of French John Denton Pinkstone 1st earl of Ypres Grey Charles Grey 2nd Earl Haig Douglas 1st Earl Halifax Edward Frederick Lindley Wood 1st earl of Harley Robert 1st earl of Oxford Henry Tudor earl of Richmond Hines Earl Kenneth Howe Richard Howe Earl Jellicoe John Rushworth Jellicoe 1st Earl Jones James Earl Leicester Robert Dudley earl of Liverpool Robert Banks Jenkinson 2nd earl of Lloyd George of Dwyfor David Lloyd George Earl Mansfield William Murray 1st earl of Earl of Leicester Montrose James Graham 5th earl and 1st marquess of Morton James Douglas 4th earl of earl of Guilford Northampton Henry Howard earl of Earl of Kent Ormonde James Butler 12th earl and 1st duke of Oxford Edward de Vere 17th earl of 1st earl of Chatham Earl Powell Ray James Earl John Stewart earl of Carrick Rochester John Wilmot 2nd earl of Rosse William Parsons 3rd earl of Russell Bertrand Arthur William 3rd Earl Russell Russell of Kingston Russell John Russell 1st Earl Sackville Thomas 1st earl of Dorset Sandwich John Montagu 4th earl of Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper 1st earl of Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd earl of Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper 7th earl of Shrewsbury Charles Talbot duke and 12th earl of Southampton Thomas Wriothesley 1st earl of Southampton Henry Wriothesley 3rd earl of Stanhope James Stanhope 1st Earl Stanhope Charles Stanhope 3rd Earl Stirling William Alexander 1st earl of Strafford Thomas Wentworth 1st earl of Suffolk Thomas Howard 1st earl of Sunderland Robert Spencer 2nd earl of Surrey Henry Howard earl of Tyrone Hugh O'Neill 2nd earl of Walpole Horace 4th earl of Orford Walpole Robert 1st earl of Orford Warren Earl Warwick Earl of Bulwer Lytton Edward George Earl Earl Kitchener of Khartoum and of Broome Maurice Harold Macmillan 1st earl of Stockton Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden Mountbatten of Burma Louis Mountbatten 1st Earl Rosebery Archibald Philip Primrose 5th earl of Wavell of Eritrea and of Winchester Archibald Percival Wavell 1st Earl
- Count
- If you count something when you are making a calculation, you include it in that calculation. It's under 7 percent only because statistics don't count the people who aren't qualified to be in the work force The years before their arrival in prison are not counted as part of their sentence. = include
- Count
- You can use count to refer to one or more points that you are considering. For example, if someone is wrong on two counts, they are wrong in two ways. `You drink Scotch,' she said. `All Republicans drink Scotch.' --- `Wrong on both counts. I'm a Democrat, and I drink bourbon.'
- Count
- You use count in expressions such as a count of three or a count of ten when you are measuring a length of time by counting slowly up to a certain number. Hold your breath for a count of five, then slowly breathe out
- Count
- If you keep count of a number of things, you note or keep a record of how many have occurred. If you lose count of a number of things, you cannot remember how many have occurred. The authorities say they are not able to keep count of the bodies still being found as helicopters search the area She'd lost count of the interviews she'd been called for
- Count
- A count is the action of counting a particular set of things, or the number that you get when you have counted them. The final count in last month's referendum showed 56.7 per cent in favour
- Count
- If something or someone counts for something or counts, they are important or valuable. Surely it doesn't matter where charities get their money from: what counts is what they do with it When I first came to college I realised that brainpower didn't count for much = matter
- Count
- If something counts or is counted as a particular thing, it is regarded as being that thing, especially in particular circumstances or under particular rules. No one agrees on what counts as a desert Two of the trucks were stopped because they had tents in them, and under the commanders' definition of humanitarian aid, that didn't count They can count it as a success
- Count
- You use count when referring to the level or amount of something that someone or something has. A glass or two of wine will not significantly add to the calorie count see also blood count, pollen count
- Count
- A Count is a European nobleman with the same rank as an English earl. Her father was a Polish Count
- Count
- If you say that someone should stand up and be counted, you mean that they should say publicly what they think, and not hide it or be ashamed of it. Those involved and benefiting from the scandal must be prepared to stand up and be counted
- Count
- In law, a count is one of a number of charges brought against someone in court. He was indicted by a grand jury on two counts of murder
- Count
- When you count, you say all the numbers one after another up to a particular number. He was counting slowly under his breath Brian counted to twenty and lifted his binoculars
- Count
- If someone is out for the count, they are unconscious or very deeply asleep
- Count
- If you count all the things in a group, you add them up in order to find how many there are. I counted the money. It was more than five hundred pounds I counted 34 wild goats grazing With more than 90 percent of the votes counted, the Liberals should win nearly a third of the seats. Count up means the same as count. Couldn't we just count up our ballots and bring them to the courthouse? + counting count·ing The counting of votes is proceeding smoothly
- Count Amadeo Avogadro
- {i} Amadeo Avogadro (1776-1856), Italian physicist and chemist who developed a hypothesis now known as Avogadro's law
- Count Basie
- {i} (1904-1984, born William James Basie) African-American jazz pianist and composer (William "Count" Basie)
- Count Basie
- a US jazz musician who played the piano, and led one of the most famous bands to play swing (=jazz music of the 1930s and 40s) (1904-84). Basie, Count. orig. William Allen Basie born Aug. 21, 1904, Red Bank, N.J., U.S. died April 26, 1984, Hollywood, Fla. U.S. jazz pianist and bandleader. Basie was influenced by the Harlem pianists James P. Johnson and Fats Waller. In Kansas City in 1936 he formed his own band, which became known as the most refined exponent of swing. Its rhythm section was noted for its lightness, precision, and relaxation; on this foundation, the brass and reed sections developed a vocabulary of riffs and motifs. Their hit recordings included "One O'Clock Jump" and "Jumpin' at the Woodside." Basie's piano style became increasingly spare and economical. His soloists included singer Jimmy Rushing, trumpeters Buck Clayton and Harry ("Sweets") Edison, and saxophonist Lester Young. Basie's reorganized band of the 1950s placed greater emphasis on ensemble work and developed a more powerful style built from the riffs and buoyant rhythm of the earlier group. The band achieved renewed popularity for recordings featuring vocalist Joe Williams
- Count Dracula
- fictional vampire in the novel "Dracula" by Bram Stoker
- Count Leo Tolstoy
- a Russian writer famous for his long novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina (1828-1910)
- Count Tolstoy Lev Nikolayevich
- Russian Lev Nikolayevich, Count Tolstoy born Sept. 9, 1828, Yasnaya Polyana, Tula province, Russian Empire died Nov. 20, 1910, Astapovo, Ryazan province Russian writer, one of the world's greatest novelists. The scion of prominent aristocrats, Tolstoy spent much of his life at his family estate of Yasnaya Polyana. After a somewhat dissolute youth, he served in the army and traveled in Europe before returning home and starting a school for peasant children. He was already known as a brilliant writer for the short stories in Sevastopol Sketches (1855-56) and the novel The Cossacks (1863) when War and Peace (1865-69) established him as Russia's preeminent novelist. Set during the Napoleonic Wars, it examines the lives of a large group of characters, centring on the partly autobiographical figure of the spiritually questing Pierre. Its structure, with its flawless placement of complex characters in a turbulent historical setting, is regarded as one of the great technical achievements in the history of the Western novel. His other great novel, Anna Karenina (1875-77), focuses on an aristocratic woman who deserts her husband for a lover and on the search for meaning by another autobiographical character, Levin. After its publication Tolstoy underwent a spiritual crisis and turned to a form of Christian anarchism. Advocating simplicity and nonviolence, he devoted himself to social reform. His later works include The Death of Ivan Ilich (1886), often considered the greatest novella in Russian literature, and What Is Art? (1898), which condemns fashionable aestheticism and celebrates art's moral and religious functions. He lived like a peasant on his great estate, practicing a radical asceticism. Finding his marriage unbearable, he departed suddenly for the local railway station, where he contracted a fatal pneumonia in the cold
- Count Zero
- science fiction novel written by the "cyberpunk" William Gibson
- complete blood count
- blood test in which a full count is made of all blood cell types, CBC (Medicine)
- complete blood count
- counting the number of white and red blood cells and the number of platelets in 1 cubic millimeter of blood
- complete blood count
- The determination of the quantity of each type of blood cell in a given sample of blood, often including the amount of hemoglobin, the hematocrit, and the proportions of various white cells. Also called blood profile
- count
- To number or be counted; to possess value or carry weight; hence, to increase or add to the strength or influence of some party or interest; as, every vote counts; accidents count for nothing
- count
- The act of numbering; reckoning; also, the number ascertained by counting
- count
- A nobleman on the continent of Europe, equal in rank to an English earl
- count
- A formal statement of the plaintiff's case in court; in a more technical and correct sense, a particular allegation or charge in a declaration or indictment, separately setting forth the cause of action or prosecution
- count
- Each trick counts as 1 point (there are seven tricks), the and count 10 points each and the , , and count as 5 points each for a total of 42 points per hand
- count
- count Returns the number of entries currently in the dictionary
- count
- A numbering system used to indicate the fineness of yarn The length of yarn that can be spun from a set mass of wool
- count
- {i} counting, numbering; amount; European nobleman
- count
- find the number of -- " ignore the direction and just count from zero " (49)
- count
- To esteem; to account; to reckon; to think, judge, or consider
- count
- In a fabric, the number of warp ends, the number of filling picks, or both in a square inch of fabric
- count
- The number of hanks of finished yarn, each 840 yards long, that can be made from one pound of cotton So, the higher the count, the finer the thread
- count
- One of the built in functions found in SQL and Access that can be used in queries, forms and reports to determine the number of different values of an attribute in a query, form or report
- count
- take account of; "You have to reckon with our opponents"; "Count on the monsoon"
- count
- 1) Number size of a yarn 2) Number of ends and picks per inch of a weave, or their sum, as 200 count sheeting
- count
- The result of a tally that reveals the number of items in a set
- count
- (Cnt): The number of recovery records for a particular year
- count
- (mesh cloth) - The number of openings per linear inch, measured from the center of any wire
- count
- The pipcount, usually referring to the difference in the two players' pipcounts
- count
- name or recite the numbers; "The toddler could count to 100"
- count
- An object of interest or account; value; estimation
- count
- A standard method for size measurement for prunes Count is defined as number of prunes per pound The larger the number the smaller the fruit size For example a 40 count prune means that there are 40 prunes per pound
- count
- To determine the number (of objects in a group.)
- count
- put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members
- count
- As LongGet By ValueReturns a count of the number of items in this dictionary
- count
- To tell or name one by one, or by groups, for the purpose of ascertaining the whole number of units in a collection; to number; to enumerate; to compute; to reckon
- count
- include as if by counting; "I can count my colleagues in the opposition"
- count
- Pip count The relative standing of the players' pip counts The player with the lower pip count is said to be ahead in the count
- count
- put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members"
- count
- An aggregate function which returns the number of rows of a query or some part of a query Count can be used to return a single count of the rows a query selects, or the rows for each group in a query, such as the number of degrees each student has See Group Functions
- count
- the act of counting; "the counting continued for several hours"
- count
- to matter
- count
- The number of pins knocked down on the first ball
- count
- Counted number, quantity
- count
- The number of called balls and strikes on a hitter
- count
- The male ruler of a county. Also known as an earl, especially in England. (The female equivalent is countess.)
- count
- Number of pins knocked down on the first ball of each frame
- count
- refers to the number of openings per linear inch
- count
- To take account or note; with To plead orally; to argue a matter in court; to recite a count
- count
- the act of counting; "the counting continued for several hours" a nobleman (in various countries) having rank equal to a British earl the total number counted; "a blood count" include as if by counting; "I can count my colleagues in the opposition" 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" name or recite the numbers; "The toddler could count to 100" determine the number or amount of; "Can you count the books on your shelf?"; "Count your change" have weight; have import, carry weight; "It does not matter much" put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members
- count
- determine the number or amount of; "Can you count the books on your shelf?"; "Count your change"
- count
- the total number counted; "a blood count"
- count
- Unless noted, the total number of grants shown, excluding administrative supplements
- count
- To reckon; to rely; to depend; with on or upon
- count
- Returns a count of the number of items in the range in the argument
- count
- a nobleman (in various countries) having rank equal to a British earl the total number counted; "a blood count"
- count
- To enumerate the digits of ones numeral system
- count
- The number of pins knocked down with the first ball in a frame
- count
- To place to an account; to ascribe or impute; to consider or esteem as belonging
- 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"
- count
- have weight; have import, carry weight; "It does not matter much"
- count
- is the number of entities in a product Usually the Count is 1, but it's more if several entities are bundled together in a pack For example, a 6-pack of 12 floz cans of soda has a Count of 6 when purchased If 2 have already been consumed, it has a Count of 4 A 12-pack of baseballs has a Count of 12 when purchased See also Size and In Depth: Entering Product Size
- count on
- judge to be probable
- count against
- If something counts against you, it may cause you to be rejected or punished, or cause people to have a lower opinion of you. He is highly regarded, but his youth might count against him
- count beads
- counting of stringed beads as part of the ritual of Muslim or Catholic prayer
- count de Provence Louis-Stanislas-Xavier
- orig. Louis-Stanislas-Xavier, count de Provence born Nov. 17, 1755, Versailles, France died Sept. 16, 1824, Paris King of France by title from 1795 and in fact from 1814 to 1824. He fled the country in 1791, during the French Revolution, and issued counterrevolutionary manifestos and organized émigré-nobility associations. He became regent for his nephew Louis XVII after the 1793 execution of Louis XVI, and at the dauphin's death in 1795 he proclaimed himself king. When the allied armies entered Paris in 1814, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand negotiated the Bourbon Restoration and Louis was received with jubilation. He promised a constitutional monarchy, and the Charter of 1814 was adopted; after the interruption of the Hundred Days, when Napoleon returned from Elba, he resumed his constitutional monarchy. The legislature included a strong right-wing majority, and though Louis opposed the extremism of the ultras, they exercised increasing control and thwarted his attempts to heal the wounds left by the Revolution. He was succeeded at his death by his brother, Charles X
- count de Sade Donatien-Alphonse-François
- orig. Donatien-Alphonse-François, count de Sade born June 2, 1740, Paris, France died Dec. 2, 1814, Charenton, near Paris French novelist and philosopher. After abandoning a military career at the end of the Seven Years' War, he married and became involved in a life of debauchery and outrageous scandal with prostitutes and with local young people he abducted, for which he was repeatedly imprisoned, once narrowly escaping execution. Despite his noble birth, he supported the French Revolution, which he saw as representing political liberation on a level parallel to the sexual liberation he himself represented. He was twice sent to the insane asylum at Charenton (1789-90, 1801-14), where he would eventually die. He overcame boredom and anger in prison and the asylum by writing sexually graphic novels and plays. The 120 Days of Sodom (written 1785) was a tale of four libertines who kidnap victims for a nonstop orgy of perversion. In his most famous novel, Justine (1791), the heroine suffers because she fails to perceive that there is no moral God and that desire is the only reality. His other works include Philosophy in the Bedroom (1793) and Crimes of Passion (1800). His reputation and writings gave rise to the term sadism
- count di Modrone Don Luchino Visconti
- orig. Don Luchino Visconti, count di Modrone born Nov. 2, 1906, Milan died March 17, 1976, Rome Italian film and theatre director. Born into the nobility, he became an assistant to Jean Renoir in 1935. He directed his first film, Ossessione (1942), in a style foreshadowing the Neorealism of Roberto Rossellini and Vittorio De Sica. His later films include the documentary-style drama La terra trema (1948), Senso (1954), Rocco and His Brothers (1960), The Leopard (1963, Golden Palm), The Damned (1969), and Death in Venice (1971). As a stage director, he introduced to Italy works by Jean Cocteau, Arthur Miller, and Tennessee Williams, and he staged operas starring Maria Callas that combined realism and spectacle
- count down
- count backwards; before detonating a bomb, for example
- count fleet
- thoroughbred that won the triple crown in 1943
- count heads
- count attendance, count people
- count in
- A command in a sequencer that plays a metronome for several measures until you are ready to record
- count in
- If you tell someone to count you in, you mean that you want to be included in an activity. She shrugged. `You can count me in, I guess.' count out
- count in
- A count at the start of a piece of music to show when to start and how fast to play (usually the top number on the time signature)
- count me out
- I'm not part of it, consider me out of it, don't involve me
- count noun
- A noun of a type that can be counted Thus horse is a count noun, but water is not Contrast mass noun
- count noun
- a noun that forms plurals
- count noun
- A noun that can be counted or divided easily is a count noun For example, the nouns "friend" and "school" are count nouns
- count noun
- Nouns that have both singular and plural forms because they can be counted: one ball, two balls
- count noun
- A count noun is a noun such as `bird', `chair', or `year' which has a singular and a plural form and is always used after a determiner in the singular. = countable noun. A noun for an object, such as chair, or for an idea, such as experience, that speakers of a language identify as referring to a single entity and that can form a plural or occur in a noun phrase construction with an indefinite article, with numerals, or with such terms as many. a noun that has both a singular and plural form and can be used with 'a' or 'an' noun
- count off
- call in turn from right to left or from back to front numbers that determine some position or function
- count on
- If you count on someone or count upon them, you rely on them to support you or help you. Don't count on Lillian I can always count on you to cheer me up
- count on
- If you count on something or count upon it, you expect it to happen and include it in your plans. The government thought it could count on the support of the trades unions
- count on
- judge to be probable
- count on
- rely on, depend upon
- count oneself fortunate
- consider oneself lucky
- count out
- If you count out a sum of money, you count the notes or coins as you put them in a pile one by one. Mr. Rohmbauer counted out the money and put it in an envelope
- count out
- If you tell someone to count you out, you mean that you do not want to be included in an activity. If this is the standard to which I have to drop to gain membership, then count me out! count in
- count out
- declare the loser
- count palatine
- a count who exercised royal authority in his own domains
- count per minute
- frequency per minute
- count the house
- count how many are present at an assembly
- count towards
- If something counts towards or counts toward an achievement or right, it is included as one of the things that give you the right to it. In many courses, work from the second year onwards can count towards the final degree
- count up
- see count 2
- count upon
- rely upon -, depend upon -
- count upon
- see count on
- count von Egisheim und Dagsburg Bruno
- orig. Bruno, count von Egisheim und Dagsburg born 1002, Egisheim, Alsace, Upper Lorraine died April 19, 1054, Rome; feast day April 19 Pope (1049-54). He was consecrated bishop of Toul in 1027. He was named pope by Emperor Henry III but insisted on election by the clergy and people of Rome. His efforts to strengthen the papacy and eradicate clerical marriage and simony laid the foundation for the Gregorian reform movement. His assertion of papal primacy and his military campaign against the Normans in Sicily (1053) alienated the Eastern church. His representatives excommunicated the patriarch of Constantinople. Though Leo had already died, their act triggered the Schism of 1054
- count your chickens before they hatch
- plan your future according to events that may or may not take place, depend on something whose outcome is uncertain
- Borda count
- A voting system in which voters rank candidates in order of preference and points are awarded to candidates based these rankings. The winning candidate is one with the most points
- ahead in the count
- When a batter has less strikes than balls against a pitcher in an at-bat
- ahead in the count
- When a pitcher has more strikes than balls against a batter in an at-bat
- almost doesn't count
- Near success (or correctness) is not deemed success (or correctness)
- behind in the count
- When a batter has more strikes than balls against a pitcher in an at-bat
- behind in the count
- When a pitcher has fewer strikes than balls against a batter in an at-bat
- bit-count integrity
- the condition of having a consistent, fixed bitrate
- bit-count integrity
- the condition of having the same number of bits as the source message
- blood count
- A test that gives information about the cells in a patient's blood
- body count
- The number of persons or bodies counted, especially of those killed in a disaster
- day count convention
- A convention on how interest accrues over time for a variety of investments, including bonds, notes, loans, medium-term notes, swaps, and FRAs
- don't count your chickens before they're hatched
- You should not count on something before it happens
- double-count
- The process of or results of a second tally, for purposes of accuracy and/or safety
For controlled substances' prescriptions pharmacists do a double-count as a matter of course.
- down for the count
- Decisively beaten; rendered irrelevant for the long term
- fastball count
- When the pitch count is such that a fastball is often thrown, usually 3-0 and 3-1
Batters will often sit dead-red when there is a fastball count.
- full count
- When there are three balls and two strikes in an at-bat
Full count, two outs, bottom of the ninth, the bags are jammed, 2-2 tie.
- hard count
- When the quarterback attempts to draw the defense offside through a deceptive snap count sequence, sometimes accompanied by subtle body movements which simulate the initiation of the play
Jones is good at drawing a defense offside with his hard count.
- head count
- An act of counting a small group of people
- head count
- The exact number of people in a group or organization
- hitter's count
- A count favourable to the batter, in which there are more balls than strikes, especially a 3-0, 3-1, or 2-0 count
The runners will be going on the hitter's count.
- lose count
- to forget the number of times that something has happened
I have lost count of the number of girls I have kissed.
- loses count
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lose count
- losing count
- Present participle of lose count
- lost count
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose count
- no-count
- Of no value
- non-count
- uncountable
- pitch count
- The number of throws that a pitcher has delivered in a game
His pitch count is up to 110; he will probably be pinch-hit for next inning.
- pitcher's count
- A count favourable to the pitcher, usually with two strikes; a 1-2, 0-2, or 0-1 count
The infield defence has moved to double play depth on the pitcher's count.
- pollen count
- the measurement of the number of grains of pollen in a cubic meter of air
- post count
- The number of messages written by a user on an internet forum or message board
- sperm count
- The number of spermatozoa in a given amount of ejaculate (typically one millilitre), often used as a gauge of male fertility
- thread count
- a measure of the fineness of fabric; the total number of vertical and horizontal threads in one square inch
- word count
- The number of words in a passage of text
- down for the count
- (deyim) If someone is down for the count, they have lost a struggle, like a boxer who has been knocked out
- make it count
- (deyim) Make something have as useful and positive an effect as possible
You only get one chance, so you have to make it count.