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Show KNG Theé timber i more knotty: tr laying the ear a voice will not paf fome trees more cléan, in fom it by fpeaking at one end, an the other; for if it be £notty, th well acon The knotty oaks their lift'ning branches bow Rofcommon One with a brand yet burning from the flame Arm'd with a &xotty club another came . Dryden's Zin Where the vales with violets once were crown'd Now #£notty burss and-thorns difgrace the ground Dryden 2: Hard; rugged. Valiant fools Were made by nature for the wife to wor They are their tools with and 'tis the {port of ftatefmen And fall by one another Rowe's Ambitious Stepmother 3,Intricate;v-perplexed raffed difficult; embar in the very entranc of his reign met with a point of great difficulty, and knotty to folve, able to trouble and confound the wifeft kings Bacon Princes exercifed {kill in putting intricate queftions; and he that was the beft at the untying o knotty difficulties, carried the prize L'Effrange Some on the bench the Azorty laws untie.. Dryden T'hey compliment, they fit, they chat Fight o'erthe wars; reform the ftate; A thoufand £»oity points they clear *Till fupper and my wife appear Prier I hav T KNOW. @.a. preter. I knew known. [ cnapan, Saxon. An XN Adam kuew Eve his wife Genefie. .fzm animals of th A no to b doubtful I know of a furety that the Lord hath féat hi angel an Aézs When they 4nz0tv within themfelves they f{pea of that they do not well 4zow, they would neverthelefs feem to others to know of that which the may not well fpeak Bacon Kvo'wine He fnowingly and wittingly brought evil into th More world They who were rather fond of it than Anowingly admired it, might defend their inclination b Dryden their reafon To the private duties of the clofet he repaired, a often as he entered upon any bufinefs of confequence: I {peak knowvingly Atterbury Anow. [fro f 7 Kno'WLEDGE Dryden 1. Certain perception ; indubitabl henfion our jer 3. To be informed ‘The prince and Mr. Poins will put o kins and aprons, and Sir Jokn muft not £z0wc of it Shakefpeare There is but one mineral body, that we 4zo Do but fay to me what L.fhould do That in your kzou/edge may by me be done 4 90 Know for. To. hive knowledg of. A colloquial expreflion itfel wate health a good wa And I am preft unto it Shakefpeare's Mevchant of Venice 2. Learning illumination of the mind Knowledge the wing wherewith we- fly to heav'n Shakefp InShakefpeare, is to tak 1. To perceive with certainty, whetherte, 75 Know of intuitive or difcurfive cognifance of; to examine Skill.in any thing 3 O, that a man might£ze Not from experience, for the world was new d-are beeo s Spimr fi, Bucat s 1 i Bt e il He only from their caufe their natures £zezw Dernham We doubt not, neither can we properly fay w think we admire' and love you above all other meri there is a certainty in the propofition,. and w krow it Dryden When a man malkes-ufe of the nameof any fimpl idea, which he perceives is not underftcod, he i obliged by the laws of ingenuity,.and the end o fpeech, to make Azowz what idea he makes it ftan Locke for 3:-To be informed of; to be taught Ye fhall be healed, and it thall be £zowwn to yo why his hand is not removed . from you 1 Sam vi. 3 Fair Hermia, queftion your defires Know of your yeuth, examine well your blood Whether,. if you yield not to your father's choice Shipme adj Cogno [from kzow. The do knowledge and yet it may be, there is more knowable in thefe Glanville than in lefs acknowledged myfteries >Tis plain, thatunder the law of works is comth la o nature knowabl b reafon, as well as the law given by Mofes Locke Thefe two arguments are the voices of nature the unanimous f{uffrages of "all real beings and fub ftances created, that are naturally Azowable withou Bentley. revelation -On [from kzsw. ftraight fawned upon his maite for ol Sidney Why'have I found grace in-thine eyes, that tho thouldft take kzow/ledge of me, feeing 1 am a ftranger Ruth Thefe are refolved into a confefled ignorance and. 1 fhall notpurfue them to their old afylum alf Kings 5. Cognifance ; notice {cible; pofiible to be difcovered or underftood prehende that have drowledgeof the fea 4. Acquaintance with any faét or perfon You can endure the livery of a nun For ay to be in a (hady cloifter mew'd. Shakefpeare Kno'waBLE wh A ftate's anger thould not tak Knowledge either of fools or women. - Ben Fonfon 6. Information T I pulled off my. headpiece, and humbly entreate her pardon, or kzow/edge why fhe was cruel: Sidney KNo'wLEDGE « [not i a ufe. To acknowledge; to avow The prophet Hofea tells us that God faith of th they hav Jews provet Go plainly and giving to th wholea ne name t know it from thofe before and after, and diftinguif it from every fmaller or greater multitude of units Locke 4. 'To recognife What art thou, thus to rail on me knewn of thee, nor kzows thee that is neither Shakefpeare They told what things were done in the way and how he was Azowz of them in breaking o Luke, xxiv. 35bread Atnearer view he thought he £zeav the dead And call'd the wretched man to mind Tell me how I may 4zow him Flarman Milton 5. To be no ftranger to; to be familia with What are you -A moft poor man, made tame to fortune's blows Who, by the art of £zow and feeling forrows Am pregnant to good pity Shakefp. King Lear &. To converfe with another fex Kno'winNg adj. [from know. 1. Skilful; wel ignorance inftru&ed iemot fro You have heard, and with a kzowing ear That he, which hath our noble father ilain Shakefp. Hamlet Purfu'd my life The knowingef of thefe have of late reformed thei Boyle hypothefis What makes the clergy glorious is to be knowin in their profeflion, unfpotted in their lives, altiv South and laborious in their charges The neceffity of preparing for the offices of religio wa a leflo which the mer light an dictates o common reafon, without the help of revelation taught all the kzowing and intelligent part of th world South's Sermans Bellino, one of the firft who was of any confideration at Venice, painted very drily, accordin to the manner of his time: he was very Arewin Dryden both in archite@ure and perfpetive power of knowing. ~ reigned tha doth not avow ther but not by me ar whic governments whic for thoug they be ordaine by his fecret providence, yet they are not kzow/edge KNowER. 7. / Led on with a defire to £now Bacon's Holy War by his revealed will Mi What nearer might concer him has fkill or knowledge Danifh. [kzipler @ w KNUBBLE T 'ti fa On If we look on a vegetable, and can onl inner To beat Glanville things than to expe& a kindnefs from a commo cold anddry, weare pitiful Azowers L' Efirange enemy I know the refpet and reverence which in this KNU'CKLE. #./. [cnucle, Saxon ; 4nockle in before you, who are 3. To diftinguifh addrefs I ought to appea Dutch. general #zower of mankind and poetry. Southerne. 1. The joints o Numeration is but the adding of one unit more whereb Ignorance is the curfe of God Shakefp. Henry1V- . more difeafes than he tzew for appre- Knowledge, which is the higheft degree of th {peculative faculties, confifts in the perception of th Locke truth of affirmative or negative propofitions Boyle of, heavier than common qliickfilver Wit fkill; with knowledge nature wa well imitated by the moftable mafters Know KNo'wincLY. adv. [from krowing. Tillotfon. underftood the way to have been happy They might underftand thofe excellencies whic they blindly valued, fo as not to be farther impofe He faid th [from know. Let him be fo entertain'd as fuits gentlemen o your knowing to a ftranger of his quality. Shake/p will fting our confciences more cruelly than this, tha we did:wickedly, when we £zeww to have done better and. chofe to make ourfelves niiferable, when w and to Azow when 7 Blackmore ledge That which before us lies in daily life Is the prime wifdom Milton In the other world there is mo confideration tha upon by bad pieces Addifon If the Grgal Midd, had-forp'd a different frame Miglat ot yols wanion wit the {yfrem Blime delivered me out of the hand of" #étod 2. Not to be ignorant Could any but a fnowing prudent cauf I}egir.;fg:‘\ motions and affign fuch lawy 250 water; but for the party thatown'd it, he might hay The end of this day's bufinefs ereit come!" Shak The memorial of virtue is immortal, becaufe it i Wifd. iv. 1 known with God and with men Milton The gods all things &zew for whic kind focicty, are more dnowing than'others To Kxow. w. 1. To have clear and certain percepticn; 2. Confcious; intelligent Not to kzow of things remote, but Azo When heroes knock their £zorzy heads together King Heénry, KN the finger when the fingers clofe protuberar Thus often at the Temple-ftairs we've fee Two tritons, of a rough athletick mien Sourly difpute fome quarrelof the flood With kzuckles bruis'd and face befmear'd in bloo Garth 2. The knee joint of a calf Jelly, which they ufed fora reftorative, is chiefl made of Anuckles of veal Bacon's Natural Hiff 3. The articulation or joint of a plant Divers herbs have joints or kwuckles, as it wer ftops in their germination; as giilyflowers, pinks, and corn acon To Kvu'ckLE. @. . [from the noun.] T fubmit : I fuppofe from an odd cufto of ftriking the under fid with the knackles argumental defeat of th in confeflio tabl of a Knvu'ckrzp |