verb

definition

To add up; to calculate the sum of.

example

When we totalled the takings, we always got a different figure.

definition

To equal a total of; to amount to.

example

That totals seven times so far.

definition

To demolish; to wreck completely. (from total loss)

example

Honey, I’m OK, but I’ve totaled the car.

definition

To amount to; to add up to.

example

It totals nearly a pound.

adjective

definition

Destroyed

example

Several totalled cars were being picked over for usable parts.

Examples of totalled in a Sentence

The chief item of expenditure (which totalled 148 million pounds in 1905) is the service of the public debt, which in 1905 cost 483/4 million pounds sterling.

He totalled 40 league appearances for Liverpool scoring once.

The state assessment in 1901 totalled $301,215,222 and in 1907 was $508,000,000.

Oudinot's and Victor's men were relatively fresh and may have totalled 20,000, whilst Ney can hardly have had more than 6000 of all corps fighting under him.

The losses of the Japanese Russian totalled 23,000, those of the Russians 19,000.

Before the war the Czechoslovak traffic on the Elbe totalled some 4 million tons annually.

The merchant marine of the United States in 1900 totalled 5,164,839 net tons, which was less than that of 1860 (5,353,808), in which year American shipping attained an amount which only in recent years Exports of Domestic Merchandise.

At the end of 1908 the railway of the country totalled 232,046 m.more than those of all Europe.

Administrative changes were credited with nearly 600,000, and the invested funds totalled 9,000,000.

As against $7,200,000 paid for Alaska in 1867, the revenues returned to the United States in the years 1867-1903 totalled $9,555,9 0 9 (namely, rental for the Fox and Pribilof Islands, $999, 200; special revenue tax on seal-skins, $7,597,351; Alaskan customs, $528,558; public lands, $28,928; other sources $401,872).

Apart from this movement the most notable events in the Transvaal at this period were the development of agriculture,' the gradual revival of trade (the output of the gold mines in 1909 totalled f 30,925,000, and at the end of the year 156,000 native labourers were employed), and the continued difficulty with regard to British Indians.

The Italians and Ladins, treated as separate in Switzerland, were in the Austrian official statistics treated as a single national group (like the Czecho-Slovaks and Serbo-Croats), but even then only totalled together 2.75% of the population of the empire.

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