not to count
1count — count1 [ kaunt ] verb *** ▸ 1 say how many there are ▸ 2 say numbers in order ▸ 3 include in calculation ▸ 4 be important ▸ 5 treat/consider as something ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) intransitive or transitive to calculate how many people or things there are …
2Count Paris — This article is about the Romeo and Juliet character Count Paris. For other uses, see Paris (disambiguation). Count Paris Creator William Shakespeare Play Romeo and Juliet Family Prince Escalus In William Shakespeare s …
3Count Ladislaus von Szögyény-Marich — Ladislaus Graf von Szögyény Marich von Magyar Szögyén und Szolgaegyháza Second Section Chief in the Imperial Foreign Ministry In office 15 June 1882 – 2 May 1883 …
4count — The title of a European nobleman, equivalent to the British earl. The wife of an earl is known as a countess, but ‘count’ itself has never been a British title. Dodsworth, by Sinclair Lewis, has: ‘Kindness all yours, Count.’ ‘Oh, don’t call …
5not\ count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you …
6count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you …
7count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they're\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you …
8count\ one's\ chickens\ until\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you …
9count your chickens before they hatch — depend heavily on plans, spend money that you have not received Politicians have learned not to count their chickens before the election …
10count one's chickens before they're hatched — {v. phr.}, {informal} To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences. * /When Jim said that he would be made… …