词汇 | reckon |
释义 | reckon verb uk /ˈrek.ən/ us /ˈrek.ən/ reckonverb (THINK)B2[ I ]informal to think or believe: 想;认为,以为 I reckon it's going to rain.我觉得天要下雨了。 [ + (that) ]How much do you reckon (that) it's going to cost?你认为这会花多少钱? "Can you fix my car today?" "I reckon not/so (= probably not/probably)."“你能今天把我的汽车修好吗?”“我想不行/大概可以。” "How old do I reckon she is? I'd say 38." "Spot on."“我估计她有多大年纪?我看38岁吧。”“一点不差。” She's been promising to pay back the money for six months, but I reckon she's just stringing me along. He reckons all policemen are fascists and bullies. There was a man on the news last night who reckons we've been visited by beings from other worlds. I paid for the tickets and you bought dinner so we're quits, I reckon.我买了票,你付了饭钱,我想我们互不相欠了。 Thinking and contemplating a brown studyidiom agonize agonize over/about something beard-stroking bethink grapple harbour heart-searching hit on/upon something I/we'll (have to) seeidiom in the cold light of dayidiom introspect navel reflection revisit reweigh rumination run through someone's mind/headidiom scratch your headidiom weigh reckonverb (CONSIDER)[ T ] to consider or have the opinion that something is as stated: 认为;把…看作 I don't reckon much to (USof) their chances of winning (= I do not think they will win).我认为他们获胜的希望不大。 She was widely reckoned (to be) the best actress of her generation.人们普遍认为她是她那一代最优秀的演员。 Imagining and conceiving assume beyond your wildest dreamsidiom blue-sky cognitive map conceivable fancy guess imagine impute something to someone in your mind's eyeidiom inconceivably lay the foundation(s) of/foridiom look on/upon someone/something as something regard reimagine retheorization retheorize revisualization riot throw reckonverb (CALCULATE)[ T ]mainly UK to calculate an amount: 计算 Angela quickly reckoned the amount on her fingers.安吉拉掰着手指头快速计算了一下数量。 The inflation rate is now reckoned to be 10 percent.据计算,现在的通货膨胀率是10%。 Numbering & counting absolute difference absolute value accession number binary census count count something out countdown decimal fraction hex hexadecimal innumeracy modulus number line numerical ternary tot tot something up undercount unduplicated Idiomto be reckoned with Phrasal verbsreckon something in reckon on something reckon something up reckon with someone/something reckon without something reckon | American Dictionaryreckon verb[ T ] us/ˈrek·ən/ reckonverb[T] (CALCULATE)to calculate an amount based on facts or on your expectations: Do you reckon this watch has a little value? [ + that clause ]Brusca reckons that the value of all goods and services produced declined last quarter. reckonverb[T] (CONSIDER)to consider or have the opinion that something is as stated: She reckoned they were both equally responsible. She was widely reckoned to be the best actress of her generation. I reckon I better get goin’ now. reckoningnoun[ U ]us/ˈrek·ə·nɪŋ/ By my reckoning, we should get there in another hour or so. Phrasal verbreckon with something/someone reckon | Business Englishreckon verb[ T ] uk /ˈrekən/us to calculate an amount: Fees are reckoned in Euros but can be paid in any currency. to give a general idea about an amount or number: The authors reckon that public sector debt is over 65% of GDP. sth is reckoned to be sthThe market value is reckoned to be 10 million dollars. The deal is reckoned to be worth $14.4 billion. Examples of reckonreckon Positions and heading angle from dead reckoning are redrawn on computer screen overlapped with a hand measured map. Due taxes were reckoned in proportion to one's income, whereas voluntary undertaking of public expenditures, called 'liturgies', depended on one's wealth and sense of altruism. They reckon it blew about 90 miles an hour. But the acquisition of a capability, which has direct and immediate military consequences, becomes a permanent factor to be reckoned with. For one thing, they had to reckon with other patrons, and could sometimes be played off against one another. Decimal reckoning would not only reconcile coinage to simple number theory, but also would make the exercise of accounting apparent to the plainest inhabitant. Along another dimension, we need to reckon with the internal diversity of language, in the bilingual mind now differentiated into (instantiated by) separate networks0 circuits. Second, the analysis must reckon with the problem of marginal contributions. The farmer nearly always reckoned with his labourers in their own houses. But of course we must also reckon with the possibility that the significance of the past can be changed for the worse. Thus, in reckoning 'discretionary time', the question is not how long people would have to work to pay their current tax bill. Catching an impression or an innovation needs close observation and tends to keep out of the reckoning its effect on an entire performance or production. The position of the nurse relative to the patient during feeding is reckoned to be important67 but there is no research to support this. If that retrieval was to happen by force, he must have reckoned, then so be it. To address values dilemmas, biases should not be removed but rather examined and explicitly reckoned with. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
随便看 |
|
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。