You searched for: “tallied
tally, tallies, tallied, tallying (verb forms)
1. An account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, etc.
2. Also called "a tally stick" or a stick of wood with notches cut to indicate the amount of a debt or payment, often split lengthwise across the notches, the debtor retaining one piece and the creditor the other.
3. Anything on which a score or an account is kept.
4. A number or group of items recorded.
5. A mark made to register a certain number of items, as four consecutive vertical lines with a diagonal line through them to indicate a group of five.
6. A number of objects serving as a unit of computation.
7. A ticket, label, or mark used as a means of identification, classification, etc.
8. Anything corresponding to another thing as a counterpart or duplicate.
9. To agree, to correspond, or to come to the same amount, or to cause two or more things to do this.
10. To count or to reckon items.
11. To register something in an account of items.
12. To keep a record of a score or account; such as, to gain a point, to run, to goal, or other score in a contest.
13. Etymology: from about 1440 taly, talye, "stick marked with notches to indicate an amount owed or paid". It was borrowed through Anglo-French tallie, from Medieval Latin tallia, from Latin talea, "a cutting, a rod, a stick".

The meaning of "a thing that matches another, a counterpart", is first recorded in 1651; said to be from the practice of splitting a tally lengthwise, the debtor and creditor each retaining one of the halves.

The early method of counting and keeping records of transactions

Tally goes back to the time when things were commonly counted by cutting notches in a stick of wood. The word was borrowed in Middle English as taille, from Old French taille, "a cutting", and also "a tally", connected with French tailler, "to cut".

It was formerly customary for traders to have two sticks and to mark with notches on each the number or quantity of goods delivered, the seller keeping one stick and the purchaser the other one.

When a payment was to be made, the two parts were put together to se if they "made a tally". If they didn't match, the tellier, now in a modern English known as teller, knew there was a mistake.

When such records came to be kept on paper, tally was used for them, too; and it now means almost "any kind of count or score".

—Based on information from
Picturesque Word Origins; G. & C. Merriam Company;
Springfield; Massachusetts, U.S.A.; 1933; page 116.
This entry is located in the following unit: talli-, tall- + (page 1)