Jesús Román León
What is the meaning of "count on" ? We didn't count on so many people being off work today but the flu epidemic seems to be getting worse.
16 Thg 02 2017 17:00
Câu trả lời · 3
1
All these answers are good and correct. I would add "to depend (upon/on) someone/something": Examples: "I counted on (depended on) the tow line (tested to forces of 1200 newtons) to safely maneuver my yacht every day." A VERY BROAD & GENERALIZED rule when learning English is that verbal phrases and prepositional phrases sound more natural, less formal and less "foreign/exotic/special" than a single-word verb. Examples: verbal phrase vs. single verb "to count on" = "to depend" "to dig up" = "to excavate" "to screw up" (very informal) = "to equivocate" "to come in" = "to enter" "to get up" = "to rise" There are thousands more examples of this, but what I am saying is that "count on" is perfectly useful but less formal.
16 tháng 2 năm 2017
1
If you count on somebody then you can rely upon them. If you count on something happening you can rely on the fact that it will happen.
16 tháng 2 năm 2017
Count on = expect
16 tháng 2 năm 2017
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