tally with

  • 1tally — ▪ I. tally tal‧ly 1 [ˈtæli] verb tallied PTandPP 1. [intransitive] if numbers or statements tally, they match each other exactly: • If the figures don t quite tally, you might be missing an invoice. tally with • The original …

    Financial and business terms

  • 2tally — [[t]tæ̱li[/t]] tallies, tallying, tallied 1) N COUNT: usu sing, oft N of n A tally is a record of amounts or numbers which you keep changing and adding to as the activity which affects it progresses. They do not keep a tally of visitors to the… …

    English dictionary

  • 3tally — tallier, n. /tal ee/, n., pl. tallies, v., tallied, tallying. n. 1. an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like. 2. Also called tally stick. a stick of wood with notches cut to indicate the amount of …

    Universalium

  • 4tally — I UK [ˈtælɪ] / US noun [countable] Word forms tally : singular tally plural tallies a record of the number of things that someone has done, won, or achieved The company keeps a tally of legal cases won and lost. II UK [ˈtælɪ] / US verb Word forms …

    English dictionary

  • 5tally — Synonyms and related words: a reckoning of, accommodate, accommodate with, accord, accordance, account, account current, account of, account rendered, account stated, accounting, acta, active list, adapt, adapt to, add, add up, addition, adjust,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 6tally — tal|ly1 [ tæli ] noun count a record of the number of things that someone has done, won, or achieved: The company keeps a tally of legal cases won and lost. tally tal|ly 2 [ tæli ] verb 1. ) tally or tally up transitive if you tally numbers or… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 7tally — I. /ˈtæli / (say talee) noun (plural tallies) 1. History a stick of wood with notches cut to indicate the amount of a debt or payment, often split lengthwise across the notches, the debtor retaining one piece and the creditor the other. 2.… …

  • 8tally — tal|ly1 [ˈtæli] n plural tallies [Date: 1400 1500; : 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 …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 9tally — 1 noun plural tallies (C) 1 a record of how much you have spent, won, obtained etc so far: England s tally at the moment is 15 points. | keep a tally (=write down or remember) 2 a special stick that was used in the past to show an amount of money …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 10tally — 1. noun 1) he keeps a tally of the score Syn: running total, count, record, reckoning, register, account, roll; census, poll 2) her tally of 22 victories Syn: total, score, cou …

    Thesaurus of popular words