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tally

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tally

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++tal·ly1 /ˈtæli/ noun (plural tallies) [countable]  RECORDa record of how much you have spent, won etc by a particular point in time 账目;〔比赛等活动中赢得的〕积分,得分 The final tally was $465,000. 总的支出是46.5万美元。 the two goals that took his tally for Scotland to 15 使他在苏格兰队的总进球数达到15个的两粒进球 Keep a tally of (=write down) the number of cars that pass. 记下经过车辆的数目。
Examples from the Corpus
tallyOne of the simplest means is to buy a tally counter.He was said to keep a tally, an account of all his cases.A final tally will come later this month when the telecommunications giant reports its fourth-quarter results.The final tally was 11 ships sunk, and over 20 enemy planes destroyed.That task was all but impossible in three of the four counties where the Democrats have called for a new tally.No tally of the dead has ever been made.I hate to think what the tally is now.The measure passed 61 percent to 39 percent, according to unofficial tallies.took ... tallyThis penalty took his tally for Bath up to 259 points in 49 matches.Berry struck with Soba Guest and Anusha, who took his winner tally this year to 106.
tally2 verb (tallied, tallying, tallies)  1 [intransitive] (also tally up)SAME if numbers or statements tally, they match exactly 符合;(完全)吻合 Some of the records held by the accounts departments did not tally. 会计部门的一些账目有出入。tally with The number of ballot papers did not tally with the number of voters. 选票数和投票人数不吻合。2. [transitive]COUNT/CALCULATE to calculate a total number 计算〔总数〕→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
tallyCheck both sets of results to see if they tally.A score out of 10 is given for each set, the score being tallied as user progresses.The government also is tinkering with how it tallies Hispanic citizens and in what order questions are put to respondents.In at least one of the counties more votes for Kennedy were tallied than there were voters listed on the rolls.Absentee ballots were tallied three days after the election.She tallied up the revelations, and put all the signs of apathy and bafflement out of mind.The chronometer confirmed his flying time since the aerial refuelling over Omsk, tallying with the covered distance on the on-board computer.His account of the discovery of the body tallied with the testimony of his wife.The relationship which is implied between professional and client by these assumptions still tallies with the traditional relationship.tally withLilly says things that don't always tally with the truth.
From Longman Business Dictionarytallytal‧ly1 /ˈtæli/ verb (past tense and past participle tallied)1[intransitive] if numbers or statements tally, they match each other exactlyIf the figures don’t quite tally, you might be missing an invoice.tally withThe original estimate did not tally with the final bill.2 (also tally up) [transitive] to calculate the total number of things done, points won etcLet’s tally up how much we’ve spent.→ See Verb tabletallytally2 noun (plural tallies) [countable]1a continuous record of how much a person or organization has spent, obtained, won etc so fartally ofPlease keep a tally of how many books you sell.2the amount or number of somethingtally ofThe company has only one-third its usual tally of accountants because so many have taken voluntary redundancyOrigin tally1 (1400-1500) Medieval Latin talea, tallia, from Latin talea; → TAILOR1
tal·ly1 nountally2 verbChineseSyllable
Corpus you have a how Business of record spent, much


tally
I
tally1 /ˈtæli/ noun (plural tallies) [countable]
 Date: 1400-1500
 Language: Medieval Latin
 Origin: talea, tallia, from Latin talea; tailor1
a record of how much you have spent, won etc by a particular point in time:
    The final tally was $465,000.
    the two goals that took his tally for Scotland to 15
    Keep a tally of (=write down) the number of cars that pass.

II
tally2 verb (past tense and past participle tallied, present participle tallying, third person singular tallies)
1. [intransitive] (also tally up) if numbers or statements tally, they match exactly:
    Some of the records held by the accounts departments did not tally.
    tally with
    The number of ballot papers did not tally with the number of voters.
2. [transitive] to calculate a total number


tallyBrE /ˈtæli/ 🔊NAmE /ˈtæli/ 🔊 noun (
plural
tallies
)
a record of the number or amount of sth, especially one that you can keep adding to 记录;积分表;账He hopes to improve on his tally of three goals in the past nine games. 他希望提高在过去九场比赛中打进三球的纪录。🔊🔊Keep a tally of how much you spend while you're away. 在外出期间,把你的花费都记录下来。🔊🔊
tallyBrE /ˈtæli/ 🔊NAmE /ˈtæli/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they tally BrE /ˈtæli/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈtæli/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it tallies BrE /ˈtæliz/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈtæliz/ 🔊past simple tallied BrE /ˈtælid/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈtælid/ 🔊past participle tallied BrE /ˈtælid/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈtælid/ 🔊 -ing form tallying BrE /ˈtæliɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈtæliɪŋ/ 🔊 [intransitive] ~ (with sth) to be the same as or to match another person's account of sth, another set of figures, etc. (说法、数字等)与…符合(或一致);吻合 SYN match up (with sth) Her report of what happened tallied exactly with the story of another witness. 她对于事情的叙述和另一个证人的说法完全吻合。🔊🔊 [transitive] ~ sth (up) to calculate the total number, cost, etc. of sth 计算(总的数目、成本等);合计