Annumero, annúmeras, pen. cor. annumerâre. Cic.To number: to adde to in number, to accompe, pay, or tell money.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
an-nŭmĕro (better adn-), āvi, ātum, 1, v.a.I. A..Lit., to count to, to count out to, to put to a person's account: mihi talentum argenti adnumerat, Plaut. Merc. prol. 88: argentum, Ter. Ad. 3, 3, 15: et reddere pecuniam mulieri, Cic. Div. in Caecil. 17, 56: senatus singulos denarios alicui, id. Verr. 2, 3, 84: non adnumerare verba sed appendere, id. Opt. Gen. 5: cuique sua, Col. 12, 3, 4.—B.To add to, to include with, reckon with.(a). With dat.: his libris adnumerandi sunt sex de re publicā, Cic. Div. 2, 1: his duobus adnumerabatur nemo tertius, id. Brut. 57; so Ov. P. 4, 16, 4; Tac. H. 4, 5; Vulg. 1 Reg. 18, 27.—(b). With in: in grege adnumeror,
I am counted with
,
numbered with
,
the multitude
, Cic. Rosc. Am. 32; Ov. Tr. 5, 4, 20; Vulg. Heb. 7, 6.—Also (g). With inter: servos inter urbanos, Dig. 32, 97.— (d). With cum (eccl. Lat.): adnumeratus est cum undecim apostolis, Vulg. Act. 1, 26. —In Plin. also, to give the number of something: Mandorum nomen iis dedit trecentosque eorum vicos adnumerat, Plin. 7, 2, 2, 29.—II.Trop.A.To attribute, impute to (only post-class.): imperitia culpae est adnumeranda, Dig. 19, 2, 9.— B.To reckon for, consider equal to: agni chordi duo pro uno ove adnumerantur, Varr. R. R. 2, 2, 5.