To number; assign the numerals one, two, three, etc., successively and in order to all the individual objects of (a collection), one to each; enumerate: as, to count the years, days, and hours of a man's life; to count the stars.To ascertain the number of by more complex processes of computation; compute; reckon.To reckon to the credit of another; place to an account; ascribe or impute; consider or esteem as belonging.To account; esteem; think, judge, deem, or consider.To recount.To regard, deem, hold.To ascertain the number of objects in a collection by assigning to them in order the numerals one, two, three, etc.; determine the number of objects in a group by a process partly mechanical and partly arithmetical, or in any way whatsoever; number.To be able to reckon; be expert in numbers: as, he can read, write, and count.To take account; enter into consideration: of a thing (obsolete), with a person.In music, to keep time, or mark the rhythm of a piece, by naming the successive pulses, accents, or beats.To be of value; be worth reckoning or taking into account; swell the number: as, every vote counts.To reckon; depend; rely: with on or upon.In law, to plead orally; argue a matter in court; recite the cause of action.n. Reckoning; the act of numbering: as, this is the number according to my count.n. The total number; the number which represents the result of a process of counting; the number signified by the numeral assigned to the last unit of a collection in the operation of counting it; the magnitude of a collection as determined by counting.n. Account; estimation; value.n. In law, an entire or integral charge in an indictment, complaint, or other pleading, setting forth a cause of complaint. There may be different counts in the same pleading.n. In music: Rhythm; regularity of accent or pace.n. The act of reckoning or naming the pulses of the rhythm: as, to keep strict count.n. A particular pulse, accent, or beat: as, the first count of a measure.n. A title of nobility in France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal (corresponding to earl in Great Britain and graf in Germany), whence the name county, originally applied to the demain appertaining to the holder of such a title.n. Formerly, in England, the proprietor of a county, who exercised regal prerogatives within his county, in virtue of which he had his own courts of law, appointed judges and law officers, and could pardon murders, treasons, and felonies. All writs and judicial processes proceeded in his name, while the king's writs were of no avail within the palatinate. The Earl of Chester, the Bishop of Durham, and the Duke of Lancaster were the counts palatine of England. The queen is now Duchess and Countess Palatine of Lancaster. The earldom palatinate of Chester, similarly restricted, is vested in the eldest son of the monarch, or in the monarch himself when there is no Prince of Wales. Durham became a palatinate in the time of William the Conqueror, and the dignity continued in connection with the bishopric till 1836, when it was vested in the crown. See palatine, and county palatine, under county.n. A term used in the textile industry to indicate the size or fineness of yarn, designated by naming the number of hanks in a pound, in the plural form: as, 20's. Also called number or grist.n. plural Fineness of the pitch of the wire teeth in card-clothing, computed on the number of teeth found in a width of 4 inches.n. plural Things sold by count, as by the dozen, the hundred, etc., and not by weight or measure; specifically, oysters, terrapin, etc.