a-count teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- 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
- Count Dracula
- The fictional vampire in the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker
- 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
- 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.
- 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
- 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
- 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
- down for the count
- (deyim) Defeated by an oponent, out of the contest
Chad was down for the count. He couldn't get up.
- keep count
- Take note of the number or amount when counting
- lose count
- Forget the number or amount when counting
- 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.
- make something 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.
- Aleksey Konstantinovich Count Tolstoy
- born Sept. 5, 1817, St. Petersburg, Russia died Oct. 10, 1875, Krasny Rog Russian poet, novelist, and dramatist. A distant relative of Leo Tolstoy, he held various court posts. In the 1850s he began to publish comic verse, often satirizing government bureaucracy. Among his popular historical novels is Prince Serebrenni (1862). His dramatic trilogy about the 16th and 17th centuries The Death of Ivan the Terrible (1866), Tsar Feodor Ioannovich (1868), and Tsar Boris (1870) is written in blank verse and contains some of Russia's best historical dramatic writing. His lyric poetry includes many love and nature poems, as well as Ioann Damaskin (1859), a paraphrase of St. John of Damascus's prayer for the dead
- 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
- Franz Count Conrad von Hötzendorf
- born Nov. 11, 1852, Penzing, Austria died Aug. 25, 1925, Mergentheim, Ger. Austrian soldier. A career officer in the Austro-Hungarian army, he became chief of staff in 1906. A conservative propagandist for Austria-Hungary, he advocated preventive wars against Serbia and Italy, for which he was briefly dismissed in 1911. In World War I, he planned the successful Austro-German offensive of 1915, but he was later hampered by German domination and lack of military resources. He was dismissed when Charles I took command in 1916
- Franz Xaver Josef Count Conrad von Hötzendorf
- born Nov. 11, 1852, Penzing, Austria died Aug. 25, 1925, Mergentheim, Ger. Austrian soldier. A career officer in the Austro-Hungarian army, he became chief of staff in 1906. A conservative propagandist for Austria-Hungary, he advocated preventive wars against Serbia and Italy, for which he was briefly dismissed in 1911. In World War I, he planned the successful Austro-German offensive of 1915, but he was later hampered by German domination and lack of military resources. He was dismissed when Charles I took command in 1916
- Johann Tserclaes count von Tilly
- born February 1559, Tilly, Brabant, Spanish Netherlands died April 30, 1632, Ingolstadt, Bavaria Bavarian general in the Thirty Years' War. He gained military experience in the Spanish Army of Flanders fighting under Alessandro Farnese (1585) against the Dutch and in 1594 joined the emperor Rudolf II's army against the Turks. Appointed by Maximilian I of Bavaria to reorganize the Bavarian army (1610), Tilly created an efficient force that became the spearhead of the Catholic League in the Thirty Years' War. He led the League's forces to victories in the Battle of White Mountain (1620) and at Lutter (1626). In 1630 he added the imperial forces to his command. In 1631 he besieged the Protestant city of Magdeburg, but its destruction proved disastrous for him. Failing to stop the Swedish advance into Germany, he was defeated at Breitenfeld (1631) and was fatally wounded in a later battle
- Joseph Count Radetzky
- born Nov. 2, 1766, Trebnice, Bohemia died Jan. 5, 1858, Milan Austrian army officer. He fought with distinction against the French in the Napoleonic Wars. As army chief of staff, he attempted to modernize the Austrian army. As commander in chief of the Austrian army in northern Italy (1831-57), he suppressed the revolt in the Austrian-ruled provinces of Lombardy and Venetia in 1848. He served as governor-general of these provinces (1849-57). His status among conservatives as a national hero inspired Johann Strauss the Elder to compose the Radetzky March
- Joseph-Arthur count de Gobineau
- born July 14, 1816, Ville-d'Avray, France died Oct. 13, 1882, Turin, Italy French diplomat and writer. While serving in the diplomatic service (1849-77), he wrote the Essay on the Inequality of Human Races (1853-55), which asserted the superiority of the white race over others and labeled the "Aryans," or Germanic peoples, as the summit of civilization. He claimed that white societies flourished as long as they remained free of "black and yellow strains" and that dilution would lead to corruption. His theory of racial determinism in Essay influenced the racist policies of such figures as Robert F. Wagner, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, and Adolf Hitler
- Karl Robert Vasilyevich Count Nesselrode
- born Dec. 13, 1780, Lisbon, Port. died March 23, 1862, St. Petersburg, Russia Russian statesman. After serving in the Russian diplomatic service, he acted as minister of foreign affairs (1822-56) and as chancellor (1845-62). He sought to influence the Ottoman Empire with the Treaty of Hünkâr skelesi (1833) and the Straits Convention (1841). He supported aid to Austria in suppressing the Hungarian uprising (1848). His policy of promoting Russia's influence in the Balkans helped precipitate the Crimean War. He negotiated the subsequent treaty at the Congress of Paris
- Leo count von Caprivi
- born Feb. 24, 1831, Berlin-Charlottenburg, Prussia died Feb. 6, 1899, near Crossen-an-der-Oder, Ger. German soldier and politician. A distinguished soldier, he served as chief of the admiralty (1883-88). He succeeded Otto von Bismarck as Germany's imperial chancellor (1890-94) and Prussian minister president (1890-92). His achievements included an Anglo-German agreement concerning spheres of influence in Africa, commercial treaties with Austria, Romania, and other states, and the reorganization of the German army
- Marie-Edme-Patrice- Maurice count de Mac-Mahon
- later duke de Magenta born July 13, 1808, Sully, France died Oct. 17, 1893, Loiret French soldier and second president (1873-79) of the Third Republic. Descended from an Irish Jacobite family, he began his army career in 1827 and distinguished himself in the Crimean War and in the Italian campaign at the Battle of Magenta (1859), after which he was made a marshal of France and duke de Magenta. He was governor-general of Algeria (1864-70) and later a commander in the Franco-Prussian War. He was appointed head of the Versailles Army, which defeated the Paris Commune in 1871. He was elected president after the resignation of Adolphe Thiers. During his term the Constitutional Laws of 1875 were promulgated. Mac-Mahon resigned following a constitutional crisis that was resolved in favour of parliamentary control of the government. Thereafter in the Third Republic, the office of president became largely honorific
- Mikhail Count Speransky
- born Jan. 12, 1772, Cherkutino, Russia died Feb. 23, 1839, St. Petersburg Russian politician. After teaching at the seminary in St. Petersburg, he entered government service. He served as an assistant to Tsar Alexander I (1807-12), but his proposed financial and administrative reforms angered the nobles, who had him exiled (1812-16). He returned to government service, serving as governor-general of Siberia (1819-21). A member of the state council from 1821 under Nicholas I, he compiled the first complete collection of Russian law (1830). He was given the title of count in 1839
- Nikolay Pavlovich Count Ignatyev
- born , Jan. 29, 1832, St. Petersburg, Russia died July 3, 1908, Krupodernitsy estate, Kiev province Russian politician and diplomat under Tsar Alexander II. A career diplomat, he concluded a treaty with China in 1860 that allowed Russia to construct the city of Vladivostok and become a major power in the northern Pacific. Appointed head of the foreign ministry's Asian department, he gained jurisdiction over Russia's relations with the Ottoman Empire as well, and in 1864 he became ambassador to Constantinople. An advocate of Pan-Slavism, he encouraged Serbia and Bulgaria in a revolt that proved unsuccessful. In 1878, after Russia's victory in the Russo-Turkish War, he negotiated the favourable Treaty of San Stefano. The western European powers replaced it with the Treaty of Berlin, far less favourable to Russia, and he was forced to resign
- Sergey Count Uvarov
- born Sept. 5, 1786, Moscow, Russia died Sept. 16, 1855, Moscow Russian administrator. Uvarov served as a diplomat (1806-10), head of the St. Petersburg educational district (1811-22), and deputy minister of education (1832) before being named minister of education in 1833 under Tsar Nicholas I. In an influential report, Uvarov declared that education must adhere to the "principles of orthodoxy, autocracy, and nationality," which was adopted as an ideology rooted in loyalty to dynastic rule, traditional religious faith, and glorification of the Russian homeland. Uvarov was also president of the Academy of Science from 1818 until his death
- blood count
- the act of estimating the number of red and white corpuscles in a blood sample
- blood count
- A laboratory test requiring a small blood sample with which to measure the number and types of cells circulating in the blood The term complete blood count or CBC is often used to refer to this test
- blood count
- Diagnostic test in which a sample of blood is examined and the number of red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets are determined
- blood count
- routine test that determines the amount of white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets in a sample of blood
- body count
- a count of troops killed in an operation or time period; "the daily body count increased as the war went on
- 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 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 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 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 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 oneself fortunate
- consider oneself lucky
- cycle count
- A physical inventory verification procedure performed at regular intervals throughout specific aisles or sections in a store The duration of the "cycle" may vary, but the activity in all individual sections is generally completed before the next begins
- cycle count
- Counting inventory by checking a particular location or set of locations and comparing the physical counts with the system-maintained inventory levels* *Glossary of Logistics Terminology
- thread count
- the number of threads per inch in each direction, with the warp mentioned first, and the fill second, (e g , a thread count of 20 x 10 means 20 threads per inch [25 4mm] in the warp and 10 threads per inch [25 4mm] in the fill direction)
- thread count
- The number of ends and picks per inch in a woven cloth, or the number of wales and courses per inch in a knit fabric