Tally
Tally , noun
[Old English taile, taille, French taille a cutting, cut tally, from tailler to cut, but influenced probably by taillé, past participle of tailler. See Tailor, and compare Tail a limitation, Taille, Tallage.]
In purshasing and selling, it was once customary for traders to have two sticks, or one stick cleft into two parts, and to mark with a score or notch, on each, the number or quantity of goods delivered, -- the seller keeping one stick, and the purchaser the other. Before the use of writing, this, or something like it, was the only method of keeping accounts; and tallies were received as evidence in courts of justice. In the English exchequer were tallies of loans, one part being kept in the exchequer, the other being given to the creditor in lieu of an obligation for money lent to government.
Collocations (2)
Tally , transitive verb
[Compare French tialler to cut. See Tally, n.]
Collocations (1)
Tally , intransitive verb
Collocations (1)
Tally , adverb
[See Tall, a.]