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Range of what one can know or understand
Answer for the clue "Range of what one can know or understand ", 10 letters:
cognizance
Alternative clues for the word cognizance
Word definitions for cognizance in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ VERB take ▪ Of course, in both enumerative and faceted schemes, it is necessary to take cognizance of new simple subjects. EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ He has full cognizance of the risks involved. ▪ It was a military program ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. 1 An emblem, badge or device, used as a distinguishing mark by the body of retainers of a royal or noble house. 2 notice or awareness. n. 1 An emblem, badge or device, used as a distinguishing mark by the body of retainers of a royal or noble house. ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Cognizance is the annual technical festival (techfest) of the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee (IIT-R). Established in 2003, it celebrated its 13th edition in 2015. It is the second largest technical festival of Asia. The 13th edition consisted of ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. having knowledge of; "he had no awareness of his mistakes"; "his sudden consciousness of the problem he faced"; "their intelligence and general knowingness was impressive" [syn: awareness , consciousness , cognisance , knowingness ] range of what one ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-14c., from Anglo-French conysance "recognition," later, "knowledge," from Old French conoissance "acquaintance, recognition; knowledge, wisdom" (Modern French connaissance ), from past participle of conoistre "to know," from Latin cognoscere "to get ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cognizance \Cog"ni*zance\ (? or ?; 277), n. [OF. conissance, conoissance, F. connaissance, LL. cognoscentia, fr. L. cognoscere to know. See Cognition , and cf. Cognoscence , Connoisseur .] Apprehension by the understanding; perception; observation. Within ...
Usage examples of cognizance.
Court took cognizance of the full hearing accorded the appellant, and of his failure to choose another route, although he was at liberty to do so.
During the Revolutionary War, Congress took cognizance of all matters arising under the law of nations and professed obedience to that law.
But after He had formed this Idea, the particular conception, limited and intelligible, which the Ten Numerations are, of the medium of transmission, Adam Kadmon, the Primal or Supreme Man, He by that medium descended, and may, through that Idea, be called by the name IHUH, and so created things have cognizance of Him, by means of His proper likeness.
His eyes, under the bushy eyebrows, took cognizance of the strained attitudes of Runkle and Fenton.
Luckily for him, his father was absent at a Vigilance Committee called to take cognizance of the late sluice robberies, and although this temporarily concealed his offense of truancy, the news of the vigilance meeting determined him to keep his lips sealed.
Motive apart, painful vivisection differs from that usual cruelty of which the law takes absolute cognizance mainly in being practised by an educated class, who having once become callous to its objectionable features, find its pursuit an interesting occupation under the name of science.
And these things come under the cognizance of the archidiaconal court.
El Mirador again, Farkas very quickly took cognizance of everything around him: the ring of jolly little cafes, the flowing fountain in the middle, the statue of Don Eduardo Callaghan, El Supremo, benignly looming down to the right.
Madison denied that it involved cognizance of the question, whether those exercising the government of the accrediting State have the right along with the possession.
Thus, in spite of their remoteness each from each, the stars often looked curiously like minute living creatures taking cognizance of one another from afar.
Besides the attention it paid to Protestants it instituted very severe processes against Judaizing Christians and took cognizance also of seduction, of pimping, of sodomy, and of infringment of the ecclesiastical rules for fasting.
And if, in the ceremonies of the Mysteries, these material horrors were explained to the Initiates as mere symbols of the unimaginable torture, remorse, and agony that would rend the immaterial soul and rack the immortal spirit, they were feeble and insufficient in the same mode and measure only, as all material images and symbols fall short of that which is beyond the cognizance of our senses: and the grave Hierophant, the imagery, the paintings, the dramatic horrors, the funeral sacrifices, the august mysteries, the solemn silence of the sanctuaries, were none the less impressive, because they were known to be but symbols, that with material shows and images made the imagination to be the teacher of the intellect.
The Law has no cognizance of a pricker or onything like him, and if well-meaning folk under his guiding compass the death of a man or woman that has not been duly tried and sentenced, the Law will uphaud it to be murder, just as muckle as if a caird had cut a throat at a dyke-side.
I should explain that His Cognizance the Prolocutor personally authorized me to enter your cenoby to bring you that.
The throng was kept back, and order preserved, by porters of the royal household, who made good use of their staves upon the costards of such as pressed forward too rudely, by tall yeomen of the guard, having the king's cognizance worked in gold on their breasts, and halberds in their hands, and by mounted pursuivants of arms, who rode constantly from point to point.