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Reckoned, with "up"
Answer for the clue "Reckoned, with "up" ", 6 letters:
summed
Alternative clues for the word summed
Word definitions for summed in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
See sum
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. (en-pastsum)
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sum \Sum\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Summed ; p. pr. & vb. n. Summing .] [Cf. F. sommer, LL. summare.] To bring together into one whole; to collect into one amount; to cast up, as a column of figures; to ascertain the totality of; -- usually with up. The mind ...
Usage examples of summed.
Courteuil summed up my arguments, and an hour was passed in stating objections which I refuted with the greatest ease.
They afterwards proceeded to disqualify particular voters, and summed up their evidence on the twenty-first day of January.
After this the evidence was brought forward, and the whole was summed up by Mr.
After Fox had summed up and commented upon the evidence, on the 9th of June their lordships agreed to postpone the trial till the first sitting in the next session of parliament.
The history of the reign may be summed up in the great Religious Movement begun by John Wesley, which has just been described, and in the Asiatic, Continental, and American wars with France, which ended in the extension of the power of Great Britain in both hemispheres,-- in India in the Old World and in North America in the New.
Decimus Junius Silanus, whom she had to admit Cato had summed up neatly as a puking ninny.
He had summed up all the arguments that had been made against the measure in both Houses, and he arrayed them with greater strength than when they were originally presented.
Bingham summed up the case on behalf of the House and reviewed all the charges against the President, answering point by point the argument of his counsel.
But Curio summed it up so well all the rest of us could add was that Clodius is insane.
After which she had to deal with another of the men in her life: her husband, Decimus Junius Silanus, whom she had to admit Cato had summed up neatly as a puking ninny.
The results of the French occupation were summed up to me by a Tunisian as the making of roads, the introduction of more money and much drunkenness, and the institution of laws which no native could ever hope to understand.
In short, her position in England for half a century may well be summed up in words attributed to King Edward VII.