English

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Verb

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reckon out (third-person singular simple present reckons out, present participle reckoning out, simple past and past participle reckoned out)

  1. (transitive) To figure out; determine by calculation, computation, or logic; make out
    • 2008, Fridtjof Nansen, Farthest North, page 302:
      But suppose, now, that we could reckon it out, that the inmost secret of it all lay as clear and plain to us as a rule-of-three sum, should we be any the happier?
    • 2013, Patricia Finney, Gloriana's Torch:
      'What is written on the paper?' 'Don't rightly know, sir. I can reckon out my name and numbers of course, but I can't make out all that fancy clerkwriting. Or sometimes Portuguese carracks take them and the certificates say Bristol on them, I can make that out.'
    • 2015, Karl Clifton-Soderstrom, The Cardinal and the Deadly:
      Pahom does not understand. “A day? What measure is that? How many acres would that be?” “How Much Land Does a Man Need?”“We do not know how to reckon it out,” said the Chief.
  2. (transitive) To count out
    • 2012, Marvin E. Gettleman, Stuart Schaar, The Middle East and Islamic World Reader:
      Woe to those who act fraudulently, who exact their full measure when in receipt from others, yet give short measure when they reckon out or weigh out for others.

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