Dictionary entry

Account (3)

Webster's Dictionary 1913

Ac‐count″, v. i. 1. To render or receive an account or relation of particulars; as, an officer must account with or to the treasurer for money received.

2. To render an account; to answer in judgment; — with for; as, we must account for the use of our opportunities.

3. To give a satisfactory reason; to tell the cause of; to explain; — with for; as, idleness accounts for poverty.

To account of, to esteem; to prize; to value. Now used only in the passive. “I account of her beauty.” Shak.

Newer was preaching more accounted of than in the sixteenth century.

Canon Robinson.