资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Reckoning \Reck"on*ing\, n.
1. The act of one who reckons, counts, or computes; the
result of reckoning or counting; calculation.
Specifically:
(a) An account of time. --Sandys.
(b) Adjustment of claims and accounts; settlement of
obligations, liabilities, etc.
Even reckoning makes lasting friends, and the
way to make reckonings even is to make them
often. --South.
He quitted London, never to return till the day
of a terrible and memorable reckoning had
arrived. --Macaulay.
2. The charge or account made by a host at an inn.
A coin would have a nobler use than to pay a
reckoning. --Addison.
3. Esteem; account; estimation.
You make no further reckoning of it [beauty] than of
an outward fading benefit nature bestowed. --Sir P.
Sidney.
4. (Navigation)
(a) The calculation of a ship's position, either from
astronomical observations, or from the record of the
courses steered and distances sailed as shown by
compass and log, -- in the latter case called dead
reckoning (see under {Dead}); -- also used fro dead
reckoning in contradistinction to observation.
(b) The position of a ship as determined by calculation.
{To be out of her reckoning}, to be at a distance from the
place indicated by the reckoning; -- said of a ship.