0 past simple and past participle of count --
1 to say numbers one after the other in order, or to calculate the number of people or things in a group: --
2 to have value or importance: --
3 to consider or be considered as: --
Today, the age of the moon is counted after the new moon, when the moon is near the sun and invisible.
A problem with the phrase-level scores is that a single error may be counted multiple times.
Although far less frequent, some axons were seen to be ensheathed by an oligodendrocytic process; such axons were counted as 'myelinated'.
Data are mean s. e. from at least three independent experiments were counted.
Tokens of each type were counted per informant.
Each sentence of a multisentence turn was counted as a separate token.
On the other hand, where identical discrepancies occur in the analysis of separate instances of identical wording, each instance is counted separately.
The number of black pixels was counted in a standardized square positioned over each band.