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单词 reckon
释义  reck·on /ˈrekən/ ●●○ S3 verb [transitive]  1  spokenTHINK/HAVE THE OPINION THAT to think or suppose something 认为,以为reckon (that) Do you reckon he’ll agree to see us? 你认为他会同意见我们吗? The police reckon that whoever killed Dad was with him earlier that day. 警方认为杀害爸爸的人那天早些时候就和他在一起。 ‘There’s nothing we can do about it.’ ‘You reckon (=used to express doubt or disagreement)?’ “这件事我们无能为力。”“是吗?”2  GUESSto guess a number or amount, without calculating it exactly 估算,估计reckon (that) We reckon that sitting in traffic jams costs us around $9 billion a year in lost output. 我们估计,交通堵塞造成的延误使我们每年损失90亿美元左右的产值。reckon something to be something The average selling price for flats in the area was reckoned to be around £200,000. 这个地区公寓房的平均售价估计在20万英镑左右。3  JUDGEto think that someone or something is a particular kind of person or thing 认为…是…be reckoned to be something The Lowsons were reckoned to be very good farmers. 洛森一家被认为是非常出色的农场主。 Moving house is reckoned to be nearly as stressful as divorce. 搬家被认为几乎和离婚一样劳心费神。be reckoned as something An earthquake of magnitude 7 is reckoned as a major quake. 7级地震被认为是大地震。n Grammar Reckon is usually passive in this meaning.4  formalCOUNT/CALCULATE to calculate an amount 计算 The expression ‘full moon’ means the fourteenth day of the moon reckoned from its first appearance. 所谓“满月”是指从新月初现算起的第14天。n GRAMMAR: Using the progressiveReckon is not used in the progressive. You say: I reckon he’s going to win. ✗Don’t say: I’m reckoning he’s going to win. PHRASAL VERBS5 reckon on something phrasal verb British English EXPECTto expect something to happen, when you are making plans 指望,预料 We were reckoning on a profit of about half a million a year. 我们预计每年能赢利约50万。reckon on doing something I was reckoning on getting at least 60% of the votes. 我希望能获得至少60%的选票。6 reckon something ↔ up phrasal verb British English old-fashioned COUNT/CALCULATEto add up amounts, costs etc in order to get a total 把…加起来,计算…的总数 SYN calculate Pat was reckoning up the cost of everything in her mind. 帕特在心算全部花销。7 reckon with somebody/something phrasal verb a) somebody/something to be reckoned withPOWER someone or something that is powerful and must be regarded seriously as a possible opponent, competitor, danger etc 必须认真考虑[对待]的某人/某事物 Barcelona will be a force to be reckoned with this season. 巴塞罗那队将是这个赛季不可忽视的一支球队。 The principal was certainly a woman to be reckoned with. 校长无疑是一个厉害的女人。b) not reckon with somebody/somethingTHINK ABOUT to not consider a possible problem when you are making plans 没有考虑到某人/某事物 I had not reckoned with the excitement in the popular press. 我没有料到会在通俗报刊上引起如此轰动。c) have somebody/something to reckon withDEAL WITH to have to deal with someone or something powerful 必须对付某人/某事物 Any invader would have the military might of NATO to reckon with. 任何入侵者都将面对北约的军事力量。8 reckon without somebody/something phrasal verb British English THINK ABOUTif you are reckoning without something, you do not expect it and are not prepared for it 没有考虑到 They doubted that Fiona could finish the course, but they reckoned without her determination. 他们怀疑菲奥娜能否读完课程,但他们没有考虑到她的决心。→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpusreckon• The TV audience in China is reckoned at 800 million.• Brenda reckons having her own bike has a few benefits.• I reckon I'd do it for a thousand pounds.• How long do you reckon it will take?• None of us had reckoned on open-heart surgery.• If it's being run for the short-term, they reckon, that could account for a lot of its recent pragmatism.• Sun insiders reckon the company will price-list Motif almost immediately.• They reckon the French team's better than ours.• This hotel is reckoned to be one of the best in the country.• By now he was a quick and decisive player, a force to be reckoned with at center half.• What do you reckon - would this make a good present for Donald's birthday?reckon (that)• Scientists reckon a third of global-warming gases are produced by cars and trucks.• I had eaten a few curries in my time, I reckoned, but never in such natural and ethnic conditions.• Not a day over twenty-five, Charlotte reckoned - hardly two years senior to herself.• Peter Alliss reckoned it was probably the end for Ballesteros if he hadn't come roaring back by 1992.• In brief Constable reckons it will have the first UK-published book on the Waco disaster.• We reckon she was brought in from somewhere nearby, and dumped on us.• Gurney reckons this design makes the bike more stable because the centre of gravity is lower.• Andersen reckons this is because companies are using desktop systems more and more.• Twenty years, he reckoned, to an Assistant Director's desk in Headquarters.reckon (that)• I had eaten a few curries in my time, I reckoned, but never in such natural and ethnic conditions.• Not a day over twenty-five, Charlotte reckoned - hardly two years senior to herself.• Peter Alliss reckoned it was probably the end for Ballesteros if he hadn't come roaring back by 1992.• In brief Constable reckons it will have the first UK-published book on the Waco disaster.• We reckon she was brought in from somewhere nearby, and dumped on us.• Gurney reckons this design makes the bike more stable because the centre of gravity is lower.• Andersen reckons this is because companies are using desktop systems more and more.• Twenty years, he reckoned, to an Assistant Director's desk in Headquarters.be reckoned to be something• An ounce of coral beads was reckoned to be worth ten large jars of oil.• In March 1403 his numerous benefices were reckoned to be worth over £800 a year.• Not so in the Soviet Union, where some 60,000 are reckoned to be installed.• Nymansay is reckoned to be the hardiest, and was first grown in the gardens of Nymans in West Sussex.• The Mercier portrait is reckoned to be the earliest, and in many respects the most interesting likeness of Handel in London.• The true pace of recovery in alcoholism is reckoned to be one month for every year of use.• This clump is reckoned to be 2,000 years old.From Longman Business Dictionaryreckonreck‧on /ˈrekən/ verb [transitive]1to guess a number or amount that you know something about but have not calculated exactlyreckon something to be somethingThe deal is reckoned to be worth over $1.3 billion.2formal to calculate an amountThe time in which the proceedings for the recovery of money may take place is reckoned from the date of the demand.→ See Verb tableOrigin reckon Old English gerecenian “to tell, explain”reck·on verb →n GRAMMAR1 →n GRAMMAR2 →PHRASAL VERBS1LDOCE OnlineChineseSyllable   think Corpus Business something or to suppose
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