Cognise

Word COGNISE
Character 7
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Cognise"

What do we mean by cognise?

To know, perceive, or become aware of.

To make into an object of cognition (the process of acquiring knowledge through thought); to cogitate.

Becoming aware that when you get a hard it’s all in your head. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Cognise

  • Synonyms for cognise
  • Cognise synonyms not found!!!
  • Antonyms for cognise
  • Cognise antonyms not found!

The word "cognise" in example sentences

A debate would only demonstrate who is more appealing, articulate and cognise of the nation and world issues and prepared to address them. ❋ Unknown (2008)

One cannot mistake state A for state B since one must first cognise state A. ❋ Rizvi, Sajjad (2009)

But there is no analogous “hard school” in which we learn how to deploy verbs such as ˜cognise™ and ❋ Tanney, Julia (2007)

Again, if you clinically crazy, if you clinally a mad-man, if your someone who is a liar and can not see your hand in front of your face, or cognise simpleton issues–yet they “are doing what they think is right”. ❋ Unknown (2006)

The most likely situation is you have 50% of people who are educated and can see and cognise very basic things, and the other half are crooked and sick and very very stupid. ❋ Unknown (2006)

By bringing in the quinquennial series, Vandin wishes to assert that the five senses are competent to cognise their respective objects and that besides these senses and their objects there is neither any other sense to perceive nor any other object of perception. ❋ Kisari Mohan [Translator] Ganguli (N/A)

All science proceeds thus, and the reason that savants have not unearthed the precious object for which they seek with such wonderful perseverance is that the physical senses, even when aided by the most delicate instruments, are able to cognise only a portion of the physical Universe -- the denser portion. ❋ Th. Pascal (N/A)

It is by the breaks, the turnings in the road that we cognise its course. ❋ Alexander Philip (N/A)

The koilon is to us non-manifestation, because we have not unfolded powers which enable us to cognise it, and it may be the manifestation of a loftier order of LOGOI, utterly beyond our ken. ❋ Annie Wood Besant (1890)

And that Scripture _is_ founded on something defective is known at the very time of hearing Scripture, for the reflection (which follows on hearing) consists in repeated attempts to cognise the oneness of Brahman -- a cognition which is destructive of all the plurality apprehended through the first hearing of the Veda. ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

-- The outcome of all this is that we have to cognise Brahman as carrying plurality within itself, and the world, which is the manifestation of his power, as something real. ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

And how can one subject cognise what has been apprehended through the senses of another? and how is one subject to take to itself what another subject has cognised? ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

In general, wherever we cognise the relation of distinguishing attribute and thing distinguished thereby, the two clearly present themselves to our mind as absolutely different. ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

Through the cognition of the real shell we do not cognise the unreal silver of which the shell is the substrate. ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

For without a knowledge of the nature of those constitutive elements it is impossible to cognise the difference of the soul from them. ❋ George Thibaut (1881)

I don't think anybody who does me the honour to cognise my humble individuality at all will ever be likely to mistake me for a _laudator temporis acti_. ❋ Grant Allen (1873)

Thus, for example, the doctrine of Materialism is no more "ruled out" by the reflection that what we cognise as cerebral matter is only cognised relatively, than would the doctrine of chemical equivalents be ❋ George John Romanes (1871)

For as units of Feeling are the only entities of which we are, or can be, conscious, they are the entities into which units of Force must be, so to speak, subjectively translated before we can cognise their existence at all. ❋ George John Romanes (1871)

It is these sensations and ideas that we directly cognise, and it is to them that we have attached the idea of the particular kind of matter we happen to be thinking of. ❋ Samuel Butler (1868)

The inorganic is less expert in differentiating its feelings, therefore its memory of them must be less enduring; it cannot recognise what it could scarcely cognise. ❋ Samuel Butler (1868)

[Cognisize]; cognisized; cognisizes (v) : I wish I could [cognisize] this [hard on] To really be 3 in. Longer, but its [all in] my head. ❋ Longbackdorsea (2020)

Cross Reference for Cognise

  • Cognise cross reference not found!

What does cognise mean?

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