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单词 tally
释义

tallyn.1

Brit. /ˈtali/, U.S. /ˈtæli/
Forms: Middle English–1500s taly(e, 1500s tallye, tallee, tale, 1500s–1600s talie, tallie, talle, 1600s–1800s talley, 1500s– tally.
Etymology: In 15th cent. talye = Anglo-Norman (14th cent.) tallie = Anglo-Latin tālea , tālia , tallia , in same sense, Latin tālea , cutting, rod, stick. The doublet taille , taile , tail n.2, < French taille, was in earlier use, and did not become obsolete till 17th cent.
1.
a. A stick or rod of wood, usually squared, marked on one side with transverse notches representing the amount of a debt or payment. The rod being cleft lengthwise across the notches, the debtor and creditor each retained one of the halves, the agreement or tallying of which constituted legal proof of the debt, etc. Cf. tail n.2 4.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical instruments > [noun] > arithmetical instrument > tally or reckoning stick
stick?c1430
tallyc1440
score1565
nick-stick1658
tally-stick1830
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > tally
tailstick1235
taila1325
white stick?c1430
senyec1440
tallyc1440
chalka1529
tally-stick1830
tally-board1849
chalk-score1867
1189 Gervase of Canterbury Op. Hist. Aug. (Rolls) I. 453 Videlicet ut conventus Monachos tres vel quatuor ad custodiendas villas ordinaret, qui redditibus omnibus thesaurariis a conventu constitutis per taleas responderent.
1203 in Placit. Abbrev. (1811) 38/2 Eustacius..inde producit sectam et talliam ostendit quam fecerunt.
1321–2 Rolls of Parl. I. 401/1 Illoques pristrent des biens..pur lour sustenaunce saunz paiement fere ou tallie al gardeyn du dit leu.]
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 486/1 Taly, or talye,..talia, tallia.?1542 H. Brinkelow Complaynt Roderyck Mors vi. sig. B8 She shal not haue hir redy mony neyther, but a taly.1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Talye or tale vsed in receypte, tessera,..tesserula,..dimin. a lyttle or shorte tallye.a1628 J. Preston New Covenant (1634) 323 There is a law in the mind within, answerable to the law of God without;..it answers as Tallie answers to Tallie.1690–1700 Order of Hospitalls sig. Hii The Tallyes of the same Baker and Bruer shalbe in the custodie and keping of the Thresorer.1756 Gentleman's Mag. 26 606/1 Harry, who ought to have minded the Tallies of the milk-score.1790 W. Paley Horæ Paulinæ xiv It is like comparing the two parts of a cloven tally.1881 C. Whitehead Hops 62 In some cases the very old fashioned method prevails of cutting notches upon wooden tallies, one part kept by the picker, the counterpart by the measurer.
b. Such a cloven rod, as the official receipt formerly given by the Exchequer for a tax, tallage, etc. paid, or in acknowledgement of a loan to the sovereign.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > receipt > types of
bill of lading1599
note1601
bill of loading1626
tally1626
bank receipt1699
subscription receipt1720
treasury certificate1791
warrant1825
tally of sol1843
stock receipt1901
1166 Pipe Rolls 12 Hen. II (1888) 2 Et x. li. in 11 talliis.
1178 Dialogus de Scaccario v Quid ad factorem talearum.
1284 Provis. Exch. (St. Rec. Comm. I. 69/1) Omnes illi qui habent tallias de scaccario de debitis suis vel antecessorum suorum.]
1626 King Charles I in Buccleuch MSS (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1899) I. 264 Acquittances to be given you, which shall be your warrant for striking tallies and for repayment hereafter.
1633 tr. Henry Marlborough Chron. Ireland 208 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland Calwagh burnt all the rolles and tallyes of that countie.
1697 J. Pollexfen Disc. Trade & Coyn 70 When any Tax or Imposition is granted by Parliament, Tallies, Exchequer Notes or Bills, issued out upon the same, for the supplying of the Government with Ready Money till the Duties be paid.
1697 London Gaz. No. 3328/4 Lost..a Talley of 300 l. on Wines and Tobacco, Dated the 11th of March, 1695, No. 2329.
1738 Hist. View Court of Exchequer v. 91 To pay in their Rents into the Exchequer, and take Tallies from thence.
1776 A. Smith Inq. Wealth of Nations I. ii. ii. 385 In 1696 tallies had been at forty, and fifty, and sixty per cent. discount, and bank notes at twenty per cent. View more context for this quotation
1847 J. Francis Hist. Bank Eng. iv. 59 Tallies lay bundled up like Bath faggots in the hands of brokers, and stock-jobbers.
1848 J. J. S. Wharton Law Lexicon (at cited word) The use of tallies in the Exchequer was abolished by 23 Geo. III c. 82, and the old tallies were ordered to be destroyed by 4 & 5 Wm. IV c. 15.
1892 W. R. Anson Law & Custom of Constit. II. vii. ii. §1. 310 In 1834..orders were given to destroy the tallies. They were used as fuel in the stoves which warmed the Houses of Parliament; they overheated the flues, and burned down the Houses.
c. tally of pro (i.e. pro, for or in favour of some one), tally of sol (i.e. solutum, paid): see quot. 18431. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > paper money > promissory notes or bills of exchange > [noun] > other promissory notes or bills
warrant1433
assignmentc1460
policy1623
navy bill1679
redraft1682
tally of pro1691
bank bill1694
bank seal bill1696
chequer-bill1697
assignation1704
chequer-note1705
mint bill1707
transport debenture1707
transport-bill1710
loan-bill1722
treasury note1756
tin bill1778
treasury-bill1798
rescription1800
short bill1808
treasury-warrant1834
sight bill1853
short-paper1912
treasuries1922
T.B.1936
T.D.R.1948
T-Bill1982
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > receipt > types of
bill of lading1599
note1601
bill of loading1626
tally1626
bank receipt1699
subscription receipt1720
treasury certificate1791
warrant1825
tally of sol1843
stock receipt1901
1691 W. Lowndes Acct. Revenue Eng. (MS.) 88 The Tally of Pro called also the Tally of Assignement Imports on the same Stick both a Receipt and payment.
1696 London Gaz. No. 3157/4 Lost..a Tally of Pro, dated the 18th of May 1695, in the Name of John Richards, Esq; for 300 l. struck on the Commissioners of His Majesty's Hereditary and Temporary Revenues of Excise.
1696 London Gaz. No. 3244/4 Lost a Talley of 100 l. upon the Temporal Excise, struck the 5th of Aug. 1696, pro Edvardo Nicholas.
1697 London Gaz. No. 3308/4 Lost.., a Talley of Pro No. 90. struck Aug. 6, 1696, in the Name of Edward Nicholas Esq; for 100 l. in part of 35000 l. by him Lent the 2d of July, 1696, upon the Hered' and Temp' Excise.
1703 London Gaz. No. 3933/4 The Tallies of Pro, levied upon the Surplus of the Duties on Malt.
1843 4th Rep. Deputy Keeper App. ii. 166 The Tally of Sol..whereon the word sol was written, to show that the money..had been paid into the Exchequer.
1843 4th Rep. Deputy Keeper App. ii. 166 The Tally of Pro..operated as a modern cheque on a banker, being given forth in payment from the Exchequer, as a charge upon some public accountant, for him to pay the sum expressed thereon, out of the revenues in his hands.
1892 W. R. Anson Law & Custom of Constit. II. vii. ii. §1. 310 The payer of money into the Exchequer received a tally, or one half of a notched stick split down the middle... The other half was kept at the Exchequer... The first sort of tally was called a Tally of Sol, the second a Tally of Pro.
d. transferred. Any tangible means of recording a payment or amount.
Π
1874 H. Fawcett Man. Polit. Econ. (ed. 4) ii. x. 256 Each customer, when he makes a purchase, receives certain tin tickets or tallies which record the amount of his purchases.
2.
a. The record of an amount due; a score or shot, an account. Also, the record of a number.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun]
accountc1300
counta1350
scorea1400
audit?1550
tally1580
state1582
memorandum1583
ticket1632
tick1681
a/c1736
financial statement1789
balance sheet1838
tab1889
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > receipt
acquittance1394
quittancea1400
quietus est1427
bill of receipt1434
bill of payment1465
quietus1540
tally1580
receipt1583
counter-bill1598
voucher1696
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > mark made to keep score or record
nick?a1450
notch1565
chalk1674
tally1951
1580 T. Tusser Fiue Hundred Pointes Good Husbandrie (new ed.) f. 70 In buieng of drinke, by the firkin or pot, The tallie ariseth, but hog amendes not.
1828 Marly: Planter's Life in Jamaica 55 Keep tally of their number.
1833 H. Martineau Brooke & Brooke Farm (ed. 3) vii To measure the milk and keep the tally.
1951 ‘J. Wyndham’ Day of Triffids xi. 201 He had taken a tally of the livestock and the number of blind among it.
1976 H. Wilson Governance of Brit. iii. 55 The prime minister usually keeps a tally of those for and against.
b. Nautical. petty tally, a petty account kept of a ship's provisions, originally of a certain portion; hence transferred provisions. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > supply of food or provisions > [noun] > supplied to sailors
petty tally1626
the world > food and drink > food > supply of food or provisions > [noun] > supplied to sailors > account recording
petty tally1626
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > ship's papers > [noun] > account of provisions
petty tally1626
1626 J. Smith Accidence Young Sea-men 39 How to keepe his..petty tally.
1626 J. Smith Accidence Young Sea-men 41 There is neither..Grocer, Poulterie..nor Butchers shop and therefore the vse of this petty tally is necessary.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. xv. 74 A Commander at Sea should doe well..to consider..how to..prouide his petty Tally.
a1642 W. Monson Naval Tracts (1704) vi. 519/2 Beer, Cask, Bread, and Petty-Talley..12l.
1678 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Petty-Tally, in Navigation is a competent proportion of edible and potable commodities in a Ship, according to the number of the Ships company.
1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict.
1849 in J. Craig New Universal Dict.
c. upon the tally: on credit, ‘on tick’; by running up a score. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > solvency > [adverb] > on credit
to fristc1440
on (also upon, of) trust1509
on (also upon) credit1560
in, upon, on (the) score1568
on time1628
on or upon (the) tick1642
upon the tally1807
on the nod1882
on the slate1909
on the cuff1927
on the knocker1934
1807 Sporting Mag. 29 185 To buy goods upon the Tally. (This term Tally, Mr. Garrow said, was not much known to the public.)
d. spec. in sporting use, a total score; also in Baseball, a single run.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > winning, losing, or scoring > [noun] > gaining points > score
score1742
result1802
tally1856
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > [noun] > base-playing or running > types of run
home run1856
tally1856
steal1867
homer1868
round trip1895
double steal1897
round-tripper1908
stroll1908
grand slam1920
dinger1968
1856 Spirit of Times 27 Dec. 276/3 One of these swiftly-delivered balls, when stopped by a skillful batsman, is sure to give the..striker time to go his rounds in safety, and score one tally as he reaches home.
1868 H. Chadwick Game of Baseball 46 Tally, this term applies to the total score of the single innings played, or of the even innings, or of the totals at the close of the match.
1875 Chicago Tribune 29 July 5/4 [They] were only two tallies behind at the beginning of the ninth inning.
1949 Marshfield (Wisconsin) News-Herald 19 July 9/1 Phil Satkowiak homered with none on in the fourth and his teammates added two more tallies.
1976 Liverpool Echo 23 Nov. 17/1 Ainsdale marksman Alex Blakeman took his tally to nine goals from his last four games with a brilliant hat-trick.
1977 Guernsey Weekly Press 21 July 8/5 They shocked their opponents by scoring four runs on four hits in the top of the first and..holding the red-and-blacks to only one tally in the bottom half.
e. Australian and New Zealand. (See quot. 1965.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > sheep-shearing > [noun] > number sheared
tally1881
1881 A. Bathgate Waitaruna xii. 173 There was a rivalry among them [sc. shearers] as to who would have the biggest tally.
1908 D. Ferguson Bush Life (ed. 4) v. 39 Not only did his tallies of 170, 180, and even 190 place him beyond the reach of the keenest competitor, but the quality of his work was far above that of shearers in ordinary.
1930 L. G. D. Acland Early Canterbury Runs 1st Ser. vii. 170 The combined shearing tally was..115,000 sheep.
1965 J. S. Gunn Terminol. Shearing Industry ii. 31 Tally, a specialised alternative term for a number of sheep. Each shearer has his personal tally for..the day, progressively to date, and his final tally for the shed... At one time a notch was cut on a tally stick on the call of ‘tally’ or ‘hundred’, which indicated a hundred sheep counted.
3. figurative (from 1 and 2). Reckoning, score, account. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun]
rimeeOE
talec950
numbrarya1382
compota1387
denumberment1455
numeration1533
magnitude1570
enumeration1577
annumeration1604
tally1614
denumeration1623
recensiona1638
connumeration1646
calculate1695
the world > relative properties > number > arithmetic or algebraic operations > [noun] > summing or addition > result of
resultantc1450
sum1570
tally1614
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > an account or reckoning
accountc1300
taila1325
laya1400
tale1401
reckoningc1405
tailye1497
accounterc1503
lawing1535
note1587
post1604
chalking1613
tally1614
computus1631
tick1681
tab1889
slate1909
1614 W. Raleigh Hist. World i. ii. iii. §6. 255 Ordinarie occurrences, that are to be numbred by a shorter talie [than by the year].
1628 G. Wither Britain's Remembrancer iv. 1807 Left they upon thy Tally all that sin.
1648 C. Walker Relations & Observ. ii. 96 He that hath a Tally of every mans faults but his own hanging at his Girdle.
a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Richard II xxxviii, in Poems (1878) III. 146 He threatened To weare it worthy, and a Tally make Of slaughter, to outvye his shop~board's Chalke.
1822 W. Hazlitt Table-talk (1870) I. i. 14 It is stamped on his brain, and lives there thenceforward, a tally for nature, and a test of art.
1951 J. Agee Morning Watch ii. 61 Hell of a saint I'd make, he said to himself; and added with cold and level weary self-disgust to the tally of the sins he must soon confess, I swore in Lady Chapel in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament.
4.
a. Each of the two corresponding halves or parts of anything; a thing, or part, that exactly fits or agrees with another thing or corresponding part; a counterpart; figurative an agreement, correspondence.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > relationship > correlation > [noun] > a complement or counterpart
fellowc1330
marrow1516
correlative1545
mate1578
counterpane1612
counterpart1635
correlate1643
tally1647
correspondent1650
complement1827
co-relative1864
opposite number1874
oppo1932
the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > two > division into two > [noun] > division into two equal parts > a half
halfc950
halfendealc1000
half-part1398
half-deal1399
mediety?1440
moiety1444
demi1501
demi-parcela1592
single1592
second1594
tally1647
'arf1854
half-value1903
1647 J. Cleveland Poems in Char. London-diurnall (Wing C4662) 29 Whose Members being not Tallies, they'l not own Their fellowes at the Resurrection.
1690 J. Dryden Don Sebastian v. 116 So suited in their minds and Persons, That they were fram'd the tallyes for each other.
1816 T. Jefferson Writings (1830) IV. 297 If histories so unlike..can..be brought to the same tally, no line of distinction remains between fact and fancy.
1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 266 The bit of which key is so cut or shaped as to form a complete tally with the interior machinery.
1906 Edinb. Rev. Jan. 207 Here he will find again the tally between proportion and thought.
b. to live (on) tally, to live in concubinage, to cohabit without marriage. slang.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > types of marriage custom or practice > [verb (intransitive)] > cohabit
to live together1483
adhere1525
cohabitc1530
to live in sin1838
to live (on) tally1864
shack1935
1864 J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. (new ed.) 253 Tally, ‘to live tally,’ to live in a state of unmarried impropriety.
1867 B. Brierley Traddlepin Fold 174 Aw'd advise thi t'live tally..if theaw con mak' it reet wi' some owd damsel.
1877 W. H. Thomson Five Years' Penal Servitude iii. 246 I never took to a moll except on tally.
1877 W. H. Thomson Five Years' Penal Servitude vi. 377 A man she was then living ‘tally’ with.
1890 Notes & Queries 7th Ser. 10 297/2 To ‘live tally’ is quite a common expression amongst the working classes in Lancashire, as is also tally-woman.
1901 M. Peacock in Folk-Lore June 174 He had for years been ‘living tally’ with a woman—that is in cohabitation without marriage.
5.
a. A number, group, series, lot, tale; esp. a certain number or group (of things or persons) taken as the unit of computation. Also, ‘a company or division of voters at an election’ ( Eng. Dial. Dict.): see quot. 1774.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [noun] > denomination
denominationc1430
tally1674
name1714
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > result, sum
telc1000
tale?c1225
tailc1330
reckoningc1392
suma1400
aggregatec1443
count1483
sum total1549
total1557
computation1586
calculation1646
quotient1659
tally1674
amount1751
tot1755
summation1841
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > group
fleeta1400
congregation1526
batch1597
parcel1598
seta1616
group1705
lodge1737
groupment1837
klomp1853
tally1890
1674 N. Fairfax Treat. Bulk & Selvedge 56 Every tally by which we tell things must be either even or odd.
1683 W. Kennett tr. Erasmus Witt against Wisdom 102 When they tone out their daily Tally of Psalms.
1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Wall Some Bricks..are broken, in every Load or 500 Bricks; and the Tally or Tale, is, for the most part,..too little.
1774 E. Burke Speech Concl. Poll in Wks. III. 16 Mr. Brickdale opened his poll, it seems, with a tally of those very kind of freemen, and voted many hundreds of them.
1843 C. J. Lever Jack Hinton (1878) xvii. 123 We told them off by tallies as they marched on board.
1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 4 June 14/1 Some few years ago..Victoria was well ahead of New South Wales in the tally of her people.
1889 19th Cent. Nov. 755 Though we had three deaths during the passage, as we also had three births, our tally remained correct.
1890 Science 12 Dec. 323 All the Indians..were drawn up in tallies, and arranged according to families.
1892 Labour Comm. Gloss. Tally, a check account made by a person receiving goods;..used for the number of bricks or tons of other goods carried on canal boats and river barges.
b. spec. In market-gardening, Five dozen (cabbages, bunches of turnips, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > eleven to ninety-nine > [noun] > sixty > sixty things, persons, etc.
threescorea1616
tally1851
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 92/1 I buy turnips by the ‘tally’. A tally's five dozen bunches.
1883 Daily News 6 Sept. 2/7 Cauliflowers, 5s. per tally.
1891 Times 28 Sept. 4/2 Cabbages, 1s. 6d. to 2s. 6d. per tally;..marrows, 2s. 6d. to 3s. 6d. per tally.
c. spec. In hop-picking, A specified number of bushels that have to be picked for one shilling: see quot. 1904, and cf. quot. 1881 at sense 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > cultivation of plants or crops > picking or gathering > [noun] > hop-picking > number of bushels per shilling payment
tally1868
1868 Derby Mercury 12 Feb. Back at the ‘tally’ to play your part.
1891 Sc. Leader 24 Sept. 7 A strike has occurred among the hop-pickers..owing to alleged ‘excessive measure and high tally’.
1904 Daily Chron. 29 Aug. 8/3 The pay is..at the rate of 1s. for a certain number of bushels, called the ‘tally’, which varies from five to eight or nine, according to the growth of the hops.
d. The last of a specified number forming a unit of computation, on the completion of which the tally-man calls ‘tally’ and notes it down.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > result, sum > signal of
numberc1300
sum totalc1450
tally1886
1886 P. Clarke ‘New Chum’ in Austral. (ed. 2) xii. 175 As a ‘hundred’ is called, one of us calls out ‘tally’, and cuts one notch in a stick.
1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words (at cited word) If the articles are counted singly, they are called out up to the nineteenth; but instead of..‘twenty’, the word tally is substituted; thus ‘eighteen, nineteen, tally’... In counting articles that can be lifted in groups the tale is thus made—‘five, ten, fifteen, tally’.
6. A mark (such as the notch of a tally) representing a unit quantity, or a series or set of units.
ΘΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > a mark > [noun] > mark representing unit quantity
tally1719
1719 in T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth III. 314 In Courts had all their Hearts desire, For ev'ry Kiss a Tally.
1719 in T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth IV. 264 He notcht his Arse with Tallies.
1807 G. Crabbe Parish Reg. i, in Poems 44 Where chalky tallies yet remain in rows.
7.
a. A distinguishing mark on a bale or case of merchandise, etc., corresponding to one in a list, for the purpose of comparison or identification; hence, a mark, label, ticket, or tab, used for this purpose, or to denote the weight and contents, etc.
ΘΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > marking to identify > mark of identification > [noun] > mark identifying goods
merchant mark1540
merchant's mark1557
shop mark1592
skin mark1703
brand1728
chop1828
trademark1839
tally1851
scribing1859
trade name1890
word mark1902
TM1961
UPC1974
countermark-
1851 H. Melville Moby-Dick xlii. 210 Tying a lettered, leathern tally round its neck.
1860 M. F. Maury Physical Geogr. Sea (ed. 8) vi. §324 But the air is invisible; and it is not easily perceived how either marks or tallies may be put on it, that it may be traced.
1865 Morning Star 27 Jan. I entered the weights in the landing-book, and marked them in the tallies..and I saw a great number of the tallies afterwards put on the bales.
b. Coal Mining. (See quots.)
ΚΠ
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Tally, a mark or number placed by a collier upon every tub of coals loaded... They are usually little bits of tin having a number stamped upon them.
1890 Notes & Queries 7th Ser. 10 297/2 At many pits it is customary to send the tubs of coals to bank with tin tallies attached... This tally is so that the banksmen and weighmen may place the coals to the credit of the men working in the banks below, the banks and tallies bearing the same numbers.
c. spec. in Horticulture, A tab or label of wood, metal, etc., on which are inscribed the name, class, etc. of the plant or tree to which it is attached, or beside which it is stuck in the ground.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > equipment and buildings > [noun] > plant identification label
tally1822
naming-stick1824
1822 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening iii. iv. 1190 Every plant [in a Botanical Garden] ought to have its name painted on strong cast-iron talleys.
1842 Penny Cycl. XXIV. 17/1 Many different kinds of tally are used in gardens and arboretums, to bear either numbers referring to a catalogue, or the names of the plants near which they are placed.
1870 W. Thornbury Tour Eng. I. i. 23 The..gray stone, the tally to mark a seed plot in Death's neglected garden.
1881 Encycl. Brit. XII. 234/2 Tallies of wood [in horticulture] should be slightly smeared with white paint and then written on while damp with a black-lead pencil.
d. A tie-label, tab, or tag for luggage, etc.
ΘΠ
society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > labelling > [noun] > label, tag, or ticket
bill1474
schedule1523
label?1577
libel1603
tessera1656
check1812
price ticket1830
etiquette1831
sticker1862
tag1864
price tag1880
tab1883
tally1909
mailing label1959
swing-ticket1962
swing label1968
1909 Advt. Temple Tower Tallies, 1d. per packet, strung ready for use.
e. Nautical slang. (See quots 1929, 1946). Also cap-tally = tally ribbon n. at Compounds 3 below.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > naming > name or appellation > [noun]
nameeOE
wordeOE
clepinga1300
namingc1300
neveningc1300
titlec1390
notea1393
stylec1400
calling?a1425
nomination?a1425
vocable1440
appellation1447
denomination?a1475
vocation1477
preface1582
prenomination1599
nomenclature1610
expressiona1631
denotation1631
appellative1632
compellation1637
denominate1638
nomenclation1638
nominance1642
titularity1643
entitlement1823
compellative1830
cognomen1852
tally1929
denotative1944
anthroponym1952
1929 F. C. Bowen Sea Slang 138 Tally, a name or name-plate of any description.
1945 ‘Tackline’ Holiday Sailor i. 9 We queued-up before him to have our cap-talliesnot cap-ribbons, we now discovered—secured about our caps with the authentic sailor's-knot.
1946 J. Irving Royal Navalese 172 Tally, a sailor's name is his ‘tally’—e.g. ‘Answer your tally!’
8. Used as = tail n.2 2b. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > impost, due, or tax > tax > types of tax > [noun] > specific tax in France
tailc1515
tallya1613
a1613 T. Overbury Obseruations Xvii. Prouinces (1626) 15 The Gentrie are the onely entire Body there, which participate with the Prerogatiues of the Crowne; for from it they receiue..supply to their estates, by Gouernments and Pensions, and freedome from Tallies vpon their owne Lands.
1642 J. Howell Instr. Forreine Travell xvii. 211 When one hath seene the Tally and taillage of France,..the Assise of Holland, the Gabels of Italy,..hee will blesse God, and love England better ever after.

Compounds

General attributive.
C1. Simple attributive and objective genitive, as (from 1a, 1b).
a.
tally-broker n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > use of bills of exchange > one dealing in bills of exchange > dealer in exchequer receipts
tally-broker1715
1715 R. South 12 Serm. IV. 154 Such a Money-Monger, such a Tally-Broker, and Cheater of the Publick.
tally-court n.
Π
1684 E. Chamberlayne 2nd Pt. Present State Eng. (ed. 12) 105 In the Tally Court..the Tally-cutter attends.
tally-cutter n.
Π
1684 E. Chamberlayne 2nd Pt. Present State Eng. (ed. 12) 105 In the Tally Cour..the Tally-cutter attends.
1786 St. Paper in Ann. Reg. 193/1 The tally writer..takes an account of the sum, and writes it on both sides of the tally delivered to him, with the sum cut upon it in notches by the tally-cutter.
tally-office n.
Π
1631 S. D'Ewes Jrnl. Parl. (1783) 52 That unjust and rare recorde called Domesdei in the tallie-office of the Exchequer.
tally-stick n.
b. (From 2a, 2b, 2e.)
tally-book n.
Π
1965 J. S. Gunn Terminol. Shearing Industry ii. 31 Tally book, the official record of what every man has shorn in each run of the day.
1972 T. A. Bulman Kamloops Cattlemen xxxi. 178 Our tally books showed that we were short a bull and six head of cattle.
tally-check n.
Π
1884 Times (Weekly ed.) 10 Oct. 13/4 Rudely inscribed potsherds..tally-checks scrawled with entries of time-labour and food-wages.
tally-keeper n.
Π
1880 ‘M. Twain’ Tramp Abroad v. 55 The tally-keeper..tallied one for the opposition in his book.
1883 J. Gilmour Among Mongols xix. 247 Ocher..threw up his office of tally-keeper.
tally-table n.
C2. In reference to the instalment or petty credit system (cf. 2c) worked by the tallyman n.
tally-business n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > [noun] > selling by hire purchase
tally-trade1829
tally-business1851
1851Tally-business [see tally-master n.].
1862 M. E. Braddon Lady Audley's Secret II. viii. 153 You're not connected with—with the tally business, are you, sir?
tally-draper n.
tally-master n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > seller > [noun] > one who sells on hire purchase
tallyman1654
tallywoman1728
tally-master1851
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 383/2 The ‘travellers’..are occasionally shopmen, for a ‘large’ tally-master not unfrequently carries on a retail trade in addition to his tally-business.
tally-packman n.
Π
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 381/1 The pedlar or hawking tallyman travels for orders... The great majority of the tally-packmen are Scotchmen.
tally-room n.
tally-shop n.
Π
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 32/1 The poor,..pawnbrokers, loan-offices, tally-shops, dolly-shops, are the only parties who will trust them.
1870 Public Opinion 16 July [He] described from personal inspection the low quality of the provisions supplied in the tally-shops.
tally-system n.
Π
1850 J. R. Planché Island of Jewels ii. i. 21 Is it all a trick, you make this mighty splash on, Or, is the tally system here in fashion?
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 372/2 Some had been unsuccessful as tallymen when shopkeepers, or travellers for tally-shops, and have resorted to hawking or street-trading,..blending the tally system with the simple rules of sale for ready money.
tally-trade n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > [noun] > selling by hire purchase
tally-trade1829
tally-business1851
1829 W. Cobbett Advice to Young Men ii. §60 The ‘Tally-trade’, by which household goods, coals, clothing, all sorts of things, are sold upon credit, the seller keeping a tally, and receiving payment..little by little.
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 383/1 Establishments, ‘doing largely’ in the tally-trade.
C3. Special combinations: See also tallyman n., woman n.
tally band n. Nautical = tally ribbon n. below.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > [noun] > band > types of > bearing name of sailor's ship
cap-ribbon1917
tally ribbon1919
cap-tally1944
tally band1977
1977 Times 7 Jan. (Royal Navy Suppl.) p. ii/6 That dear little pancake hat with its silk tally band;..I believe that it was because of that little hat that I had joined the WRNS in the first place.
tally-board n. a board on which an account is notched or chalked; e.g. one on which the record of a weaver's work is kept ( Eng. Dial. Dict.).
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > tally
tailstick1235
taila1325
white stick?c1430
senyec1440
tallyc1440
chalka1529
tally-stick1830
tally-board1849
chalk-score1867
1849 G. P. R. James Woodman I. vii. 133 You have not got the tally board so completely in your hand, my friend.
tally card n. U.S. a scorecard.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > recording score > [noun] > scorecard
scoring-paper1840
scoring-book1845
scoring-card1845
score-paper1847
scorebook1851
scoring-sheet1851
score-sheet1859
scorecard1877
tally card1909
scoreline1969
1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl. Tally card.
1928 Publishers' Weekly 14 July 172 Allied with these are tally cards, playing cards, novelties and party favors.
tally-clerk n. one who checks merchandise with a list in loading or discharging cargo; also (U.S.), one who assists in counting and recording votes.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > office > appointment to office > choosing or fact of being chosen for office > election of representative body by vote > proceedings at election > [noun] > election officials
scrutator1618
scrutineer1682
scrutinator1691
returning officer1728
presiding officer1745
viander1751
warden1763
poll clerk1783
canvasser1792
polling clerk1833
tally-clerk1890
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > other manual or industrial workers > [noun] > who load or unload > and check merchandise
tallyman1888
tally-clerk1890
1890 Daily News 13 Sept. 6/4 A large number of ships' tally clerks,..have not had a day's work for weeks.
1902 Westm. Gaz. 25 Feb. 2/1 There is a duplicate of this board, but on a small scale, placed on the desk of the tally-clerk, so that the record of the votes is constantly before his eyes.
tally desk n. Nautical a desk at which merchandise is checked.
ΚΠ
1899 C. J. C. Hyne Further Adventures Capt. Kettle ix. 166 He went up to the second mate at the tally-desk on the main deck below.
Categories »
tally-husband n. slang a man who ‘lives tally’ ( 4b) with a woman.
tally-mark n. = sense 7.
tally-pot n. a vessel in which records of a counting or voting are placed ( Funk's Stand. Dict. 1895).
tally ribbon n. Nautical a sailor's cap-ribbon bearing the name of his ship (cf. sense 7e above).
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > [noun] > band > types of > bearing name of sailor's ship
cap-ribbon1917
tally ribbon1919
cap-tally1944
tally band1977
1919 W. Lang Sea-lawyer's Log 14 Those three caps, too, look very smart, with the neat, white canvas cover which we wear during the summer months, and the tally ribbon with its tricky little bow on the left side.
tally-room n. (Ireland) a committee-room at an election.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > office > appointment to office > choosing or fact of being chosen for office > election of representative body by vote > proceedings at election > [noun] > committee room at election
tally-room1842
1842 S. Lover Handy Andy xvii The popular tunes..in the tally rooms, while the fellows are waiting to go up.
1910 Daily News 24 Jan. 8 Mr. Wood could neither show himself in the place nor get a tally-room, as they call their committee-rooms there [i.e. at Lisburn].
tally-sheet n. a score-sheet, esp. (U.S.) in recording votes.
ΚΠ
1889 Cent. Mag. Feb. 622/1 The growing disposition [in U.S.] to tamper with the ballot-box and the tally-sheet.
1893 Scribner's Mag. June 779/2 To call her attention to a tally-sheet, covering a period of three calendar months.
tally-shouter n. Mining see quot.
ΚΠ
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Tally-shouter, one who shouts out the numbers on the tallies to the weigher.
tally-stick n. a stick used as or like a tally (sense 1).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical instruments > [noun] > arithmetical instrument > tally or reckoning stick
stick?c1430
tallyc1440
score1565
nick-stick1658
tally-stick1830
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > account or statement of > [noun] > tally
tailstick1235
taila1325
white stick?c1430
senyec1440
tallyc1440
chalka1529
tally-stick1830
tally-board1849
chalk-score1867
1830 Virginia Lit. Museum 27 Jan. 526/2 A ‘negro boy, with a talley stick was a statesman complete in his school’.
a1861 T. Winthrop Canoe & Saddle (1883) vii. 153 She could not tell how many [years], having dropped her tally-stick in the fire..that very day.
1895 W. J. Hoffman Beginnings of Writing 140 Several tribes of Indians, in California, employed a variety of tallysticks to record transactions in business.
1897 M. Kingsley Trav. W. Afr. 49 They hopefully notched away the moons on their tally~sticks.
tally-writer n. formerly, the clerk who wrote the description and amount of the payment on two opposite sides of the exchequer tallies.
ΘΠ
society > communication > record > written record > compiler or keeper of written records > [noun] > others
secretary14..
remembrancer1523
rapporteur1653
tally-writer1786
messenger1793
memorandist1866
toll-clerk1878
shorthand typist1901
progress clerk1916
filing clerk1922
secretary bird1969
1786 St. Paper in Ann. Reg. 193/1 The tally writer..takes an account of the sum, and writes it on both sides of the tally delivered to him, with the sum cut upon it in notches by the tally-cutter.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

tallyn.2

Etymology: < tally v.3: compare French taille < tailler to deal.
Cards. Obsolete.
At faro, basset, etc., A deal.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > [noun] > game or match > a deal
tally1706
1706 S. Centlivre Basset-table iv. ii. 53 Captain... Pray count the Cards, I believe there's a false Tally. Sir James... No, they are Right, Sir (Sir James counts em).
1760 S. Foote Minor iii. 74 A Most infernal run. Let's see, (Pulls out a card) Loader a thousand, the Baron two, Tally—Enough to beggar a banker.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online March 2021).

tallyn.3

Forms: Short for tally-ho v.
Etymology: Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˈtally.
rare.
See quot.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > signals > [noun] > cry
huinga1250
sohoa1572
tue1602
shout and cry1609
shout and hoyes1609
chevyc1785
gone away1827
tally1886
1886 in J. W. Fortescue Rec. Stag-hunting Exmoor (1887) 180 Another hundred yards of slow hunting, and then a loud tally proclaims a fresh find.

Derivatives

tally v.4 to signal with tally-ho!
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > signals > signal [verb (intransitive)] > cry
hallowc1420
harro?1578
view1812
soho1824
yoicks1840
tally1886
1886 in J. W. Fortescue Rec. Stag-hunting Exmoor (1887) 182 The farmer is half inclined to fear he has tallied a fresh hind.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

tallyv.1

Brit. /ˈtali/, U.S. /ˈtæli/
Forms: see tally n.1
Etymology: < tally n.1 Compare also medieval Latin talliāre to cut (wood); also, to conform or cause to correspond in number or measure: see Du Cange. (Some of the uses may have been influenced by association with Latin tālis such, tālio giving like for like.)
I. Senses relating to reckoning or counting.
1.
a. transitive †To notch (a stick) so as to make it a tally (obsolete); hence, to mark, score, set down or enter (a number, etc.) on or as on a tally; transferred to record, register.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > keeping accounts > keep accounts [verb (transitive)] > make or cut a tally
tail1377
tallyc1440
strike1626
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)] > record > by notches
scorec1386
tallyc1440
nick?1523
notch1573
strike1626
society > communication > record > pictorial, etc., records > [verb (transitive)]
nick?1523
notch1573
score1590
tallya1640
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 486/1 Talyyn, or scoryn' on taly, tallio, dico.
1632 in S. R. Gardiner Rep. Cases Star Chamber & High Comm. (1886) 94 Mrs Jennet Carrier had a knife in her hand,..to tally a sticke to shewe how many dishes full there were.
1633 J. Ford Broken Heart iv. i. sig. G2v So prouident is folly in sad issue, That after-wit, like Bankrupts debts, stand tallyed Without all possibilities of payment.
a1640 W. Fenner Sacrifice of Faithful (1648) 53 There is not one of them that God tallies downe, or reckons for a praier.
1707 E. Ward Wooden World Dissected 18 At every tenth Call, perhaps you may tally down a Sailor.
1890 Cent. Mag. June 205/2 These [field judges] measure and tally the trials of competitors in jumps, pole vaults [etc.].
b. spec. To identify, count, and enter each bale, case, article, etc. of a cargo or lot of goods in loading or discharging.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > [verb (transitive)] > identify and count each article, etc.
tally1812
1812 J. Smyth Pract. of Customs i. 7 Goods paying Duty by Tale are, at the delivery, to be tallied at 1, 10, 20, &c. according to the nature thereof.
1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 29 Jan. 5/2 Upon the mates of ships..falls the bulk of the work and responsibility entailed in getting a ship ready to receive cargo, in ‘tallying’ the cargo, in preparing her to leave port [etc.].
1899 F. T. Bullen Log of Sea-waif 226 No pretence was made of tallying in the cargo.
c. To furnish (a bale of goods, etc.) with a tally or identifying label; to distinguish, mark, or identify by or as by a tally: see tally n.1 7.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > marking to identify > be distinctive mark on [verb (transitive)] > put identifying mark on > commercial goods
scribe1806
tally1837
trademark1859
badge1980
1837 F. Marryat Snarleyyow xxxiv, in Metropolitan Apr. 385 Leaving his people to mark and tally the bales.
1860 M. F. Maury Physical Geogr. Sea (ed. 8) vi. §332 We have tallied the air, and put labels on the wind.
1865 Morning Star 27 Jan. If a number of bales were tallied as having arrived by a vessel called the Onwards, the label with the mark ‘Onwards’ on it was taken off and another marked the ‘City of Dublin’ placed in its stead.
d. Sport (chiefly North American). To score (a run, goal, etc.).
(a) intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > winning, losing, or scoring > win, lose, or score [verb (intransitive)] > make points
score1844
tally1867
1867 Ball Players' Chron. 14 Nov. 2/4 Taylor took his first on a muff by Banker and tallied on passed balls.
1903 N.Y. Times 18 Aug. 5/2 The home players tallied only five times during the entire contest.
1931 Randolph Enterprise (Elkins, W. Va.) 9 July 5/3 The nine from Randolph had tallied five times in the same frame.
1947 Sun (Baltimore) 8 Nov. 12/2 The visitors tallied for the first time in the opening minutes of the game when Ann Worthington sent a hard shot into the corner of the cage.
1968 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 5 Feb. 17/2 Pit Martin also scored for a three-goal first period for Chicago and Wayne Maki tallied early in the second.
1974 Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio) 13 Oct. C.2/3 Terell tallied on a two-yard run and took a pass from Jeff Starrett 70 yards for a second score.
(b) transitive.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > winning, losing, or scoring > win, lose, or score [verb (transitive)] > score
get1634
make1680
score1742
notch1836
steal1836
to put up1860
rattle1860
to put on1865
tally1875
net1907
to rack up1921
slam1959
1875 Chicago Tribune 24 Aug. 5/6 A furious overthrow by Beals at second..tallied three unearned runs.
1966 Telegraph (Brisbane) 22 Jan. 5/2 He started racing in November, and in five starts has tallied a win, second, and a third.
1976 Billings (Montana) Gaz. 6 July 1- c/6 The Angels tallied their fifth run in the third inning as Bob Brenly came on a Young single to short center.
2.
a. To count or reckon up, to number.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)]
rimeeOE
arimec885
atellc885
talec897
i-telle971
tellOE
readc1225
reckon?c1225
aima1375
numbera1382
denumber1382
accounta1393
casta1400
countc1400
umberc1400
ascribe1432
annumerate?a1475
to sum upa1475
annumbera1500
ennumber1535
reckon?1537
tally1542
compute1579
recount1581
rate1599
catalogize1602
to add up1611
suma1616
enumeratea1649
numerate1657
to run up1830
to figure out1834
figure1854
to count up1872
enumer1936
1542 T. Becon Newe Pathway vnto Praier vi. sig. C.viij Some also vpon theyr bedes taly vp, I cannot tel howe many Lady Psalters.
1586 W. Webbe Disc. Eng. Poetrie sig. F.iiii v The first or the first couple hauing twelue sillables, the other fourteene, which versifyers call Powlters measure, because so they talle their wares by dosens.
1598 in W. Greenwell Wills & Inventories Registry Durham (1860) II. 335 Two men, to serve..att the pitt, to take the reckoninges, the one..who doth tallee the horses.
1648 Bp. J. Hall Breathings Devout Soul iv. 5 I have not kept even-reckonings with thee; I have not justly tallied up thy inestimable benefits.
1660 Col. J. Okie's Lament. (single sheet) I..must now..Tally the Account of our State Stinking Beer.
1885 A. Munro Siren Casket (1889) 85 They anchor'd at morning to tally their spoil.
b. figurative. To reckon, estimate (with object clause). colloquial. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > evaluation, estimation, appraisal > appraise, estimate [verb (transitive)]
talec897
ween971
takec1175
weigha1200
deem?c1225
judge?c1225
guessc1330
reta1382
accounta1387
aretc1386
assize1393
consider1398
ponder?a1400
adjudgec1440
reckonc1440
peisec1460
ponderate?a1475
poisea1483
trutinate1528
steem1535
rate?1555
sense1564
compute1604
censure1605
cast1606
cense1606
estimate1651
audit1655
state1671
balance1692
esteem1711
appraise1823
figure1854
tally1860
revalue1894
lowball1973
1860 J. G. Holland Miss Gilbert's Career xix. 297 You can't hardly tally how she's coming out, because she isn't exactly a woman yet.
3. intransitive. To deal on tally or credit; to open or have a credit account with any one. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > other trading methods > [verb (intransitive)] > deal on credit
tail1514
tally1596
1596 Foxe's Actes & Monuments (ed. 5) I. iv. 298/2 He was in great debt..driuen to tallie for his owne cates.
1724 J. Swift Let. to Mr. Harding 2 Several Gentlemen have been forced to Tally with their Workmen and give them Bits of Cards Sealed and Subscribed with their Names.
II. Senses relating to correspondence or agreement.
4. transitive. figurative. To cause (things) to correspond or agree; to ‘match’; past participle matched, suited, adapted. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree, harmonize, or be congruous with [verb (transitive)] > bring into agreement or harmony
concile1398
commune1423
agree1532
concord1548
conciliate1573
square1578
concent1596
tally1607
to wind up1608
accommodate1609
adjust1611
conform1646
reconcilea1672
attune1744
harmonize1767
1607 Bp. J. Hall Holy Observ. 75 Morall Philosophie [teacheth] that tallying of iniuries is iustice: Diuinitie, that good must be returned for ill.
1716 J. Swift Let. 30 Aug. (2001) II. 176 They are not so well tally'd to the present juncture.
c1717 M. Prior Epitaph 16 They seem'd just tallied for each other.
1812 T. Jefferson Writings (1830) IV. 177 Peculiarly tallied in interests, by each wanting exactly what the other has to spare.
5.
a. To compare, as tallies, for the purpose of verifying an account, etc. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > discovery > comparison > compare [verb (transitive)] > balance against
counterweighc1430
weigha1535
proportion1591
counterbalance1603
scalea1616
appoisea1670
counterpoise1685
tally1702
commeasure1849
benchmark1963
1702 London Gaz. No. 3827/4 These are to give Notice to all the Fortunate in Sydenham's Land-Lottery..to bring their Prize Tickets, in order to have the same Tallied.
1703 London Gaz. No. 3963/4 All Persons, whose Tickets in the late Land-Lottery have not been tallied and reported.
b. figurative. To bring into comparison, compare.
ΚΠ
1773 J. Ross Fratricide (MS) vi. 478 What but a shadow is this mortal life When tally'd with eternity?
6. intransitive. To agree, as one half of a cloven tally with its fellow; to correspond or answer exactly; to accord, conform, fit. Const. †to (obsolete), with. (The chief current sense.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree/be in harmony/be congruous [verb (intransitive)] > exactly
jump1567
coincidate1657
coincide1705
tally1705
pary1716
1705 J. Addison Remarks Italy 227 I found pieces of Tiles that exactly tally'd with the Channel.
1721 Coll. Polit. Lett. London Jrnl. 1720 64 The Courage and Understanding of her [the High Church's] Passive Sons Tally to each other.
1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iv. xii. 198 Neither shall I be ever able to comprehend how such an Animal [sc. Yahoo] and such a Vice [sc. pride], could tally together.
1738 W. Warburton Divine Legation Moses I. 271 A Theory that does not exactly tally with fact.
1758 E. M. da Costa in Philos. Trans. 1757 (Royal Soc.) 50 229 The impressions of ferns, grasses, &c. are easily recognizable, they so minutely tally to the plants they represent.
1779 J. Moore View Society & Manners France (1789) I. xxiv. 188 High hills, whose opposite sides tally so exactly.
1891 E. Peacock Narcissa Brendon II. 82 It tallies exactly with what the others have said.
III. (? Connected with tales n.)
7. transitive (?) To summon or empanel as a juryman.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > [verb (transitive)] > empanel a jury > empanel as juryman
jure1598
tally1776
1776 in Stonehouse Axholme (1839) 145 None of the Lord's tenants, either freehold or copyhold, to be tallied out of the Manor, to the Assizes, Sessions, or Sheriff's Court.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

tallyv.2

Etymology: Origin obscure.Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˈtally.
Nautical. Now rare.
1. transitive. To haul taut (the fore or main leesheets).
ΚΠ
c1450 Pilgrim's Sea-Voy. 19 in Stacions Rome (1867) 37 A boy or tweyn Anone up styen, And ouerthwart the sayle~yerde lyen;—‘Y how! taylia!’ the remenaunt cryen, And pulle with alle theyr myght.
a1625 H. Mainwaring Nomenclator Navalis (Harl. 2301) When they hale aft the Sheate of Maine or Fore-Saile, they saie Tallee aft the Sheate.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. ix. 39 Get your Starboord tacks aboord, and tally or hale off your Lee-Sheats.
1762 W. Falconer Shipwreck ii. 21 Taught aft the sheet, they tally, and belay.
1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine Border les écoutes tout plat, to tally the sheets flat aft.
2. intransitive. To catch hold or ‘clap’ on to a rope.
ΚΠ
1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xxviii. 97 All hands tallied on to the cat-fall.
1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xxxv. 133 All hands tally-on to the main tack.
1896 R. Kipling Seven Seas 93 Heh! Tally on. Aft and walk away with her! Handsome to the cathead now; O tally on the fall!
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online June 2021).

tallyv.3

Forms: Also 1700s ( taillé), tailly.
Etymology: < French tailler to cut, especially to deal at faro, etc.: see tail v.2
Cards. Obsolete.
intransitive. At faro, basset, and similar games, To be banker (i.e. to deal).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > games of chance played with cards > [verb (intransitive)] > be banker
tally1706
1701 G. Farquhar Sir Harry Wildair i. 7 The French Marquis, you know, constantly Taillés.
1701 G. Farquhar Sir Harry Wildair ii. ii. 17 I rely'd altogether on your setting the Cards; you us'd to Taillé with success.]
1706 S. Centlivre Basset-table iv. ii. 52 Lady R. Sir James, pray will you Tally. Sir J. With all my Heart, Madam. (Takes the Cards and shuffles them.)
1715 Lady M. W. Montagu Basset-table 68 Wretch that I was, how often have I swore When Winnall tally'd, I wou'd Punt no more?
1716 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. to C'tess Mar 17 Dec. The duke taillys at basset every night.
1748 H. Walpole Let. to H. Mann 26 Dec. I don't know whom your Highness will get to tally to you; you know I am ruined by dealing.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online March 2021).

tallyadv.

/ˈtɔːlli/
Etymology: < tall adj. + -ly suffix2.
Now rare or Obsolete.
In a tall manner.
1. In a seemly manner; becomingly, elegantly; fairly, well; bravely. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > dueness or propriety > [adverb]
rightlyeOE
arightc970
rightOE
properly?c1225
goodc1275
rightfully1340
truly1340
tallya1375
featlya1400
rekenlyc1400
communablya1425
fitc1440
accordantlyc1443
accordinglyc1443
justilyc1450
seemingly1483
fitlyc1550
conveniently1569
arightly1588
legitimately1593
fittinglya1643
legitimously1657
honest-like1807
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > [adverb] > with propriety
comelyOE
seemlyc1320
menskfullya1375
tallya1375
comelilyc1400
comelywise1440
decently1552
decent1716
decorously1808
properly1811
wise-like1822
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > pleasing fitness > [adverb] > in seemly or decorous manner
comelyOE
menskful?c1225
seemlyc1320
menskfullya1375
tallya1375
comelilyc1400
comelywise1440
handsomely1525
decently1552
civilly1593
decent1716
comme il faut1756
decorously1808
wise-like1822
spiffily1977
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 1706 Sche..borwed boiȝes cloþes, & talliche hire a-tyred tiȝtli þer-inne.
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 486/1 Tally,..in semely wyse, decenter, eleganter.
1450 Anc. Deed A. 8559 (P.R.O.) in Catalogue IV. 327 [Proctour should come to the] Hall of Broghton and ther tawly besek John of Broghton [es]qwier to be his gode master.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 8813 When this taburnacle atyrit was tally to end, Thai closit hit full clanly, all with clene ambur.
2. Highly, loftily.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > vertical extent > [adverb] > to a great or considerable height
highOE
heaven-high?1518
loftily1548
tower-wise1581
a-cock-hye1598
tally1611
eminently1620
spirally1806
sky-high1818
toweringly1822
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Hautement, highly, tally.
a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Captaine ii. ii, in Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Gg4/1 You Lodovick That stand so tally on your reputation, You shall be he shall speake it.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.1c1440n.21706n.31886v.1c1440v.2c1450v.31706adv.a1375
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