0 to think that something is probably true -- sądzić, myśleć
[ + (that) ] He reckons that he earns more in a week than I do in a month.
I reckon he likes her.
1 to guess that a particular number is correct -- szacować
His fortune is reckoned at $5 million.
If that retrieval was to happen by force, he must have reckoned, then so be it.
The position of the nurse relative to the patient during feeding is reckoned to be important67 but there is no research to support this.
Catching an impression or an innovation needs close observation and tends to keep out of the reckoning its effect on an entire performance or production.
Thus, in reckoning 'discretionary time', the question is not how long people would have to work to pay their current tax bill.
But of course we must also reckon with the possibility that the significance of the past can be changed for the worse.
The farmer nearly always reckoned with his labourers in their own houses.
Second, the analysis must reckon with the problem of marginal contributions.
Along another dimension, we need to reckon with the internal diversity of language, in the bilingual mind now differentiated into (instantiated by) separate networks0 circuits.