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cognizable

ADJECTIVE
  1. capable of being known

How To Use cognizable In A Sentence

  • After squinting in an attempt to discern a couple of features to make the object recognizable, he began walking swiftly towards it.
  • As the bus turned into a new recognizable road, the pavements were filled with people, scarves blowing in the wind.
  • He thereby provides both a theology of the resurrection and a theology of the liturgy: one encounters the risen Christ in the word and in the sacrament; divine service is the fashion in which he becomes touchable to us and recognizable as the living Christ. The book by Joseph Ratzinger that "changed history"
  • And in the very act of declaring the First Cause incognizable, you do not permit it to remain unknown. On the Genesis of Species
  • He employed extremes in sonority and revels in distortions and interruptions, often through the ironic use of recognizable fragments from the everyday world. A Fierce Enthusiasm
  • All this time the incognizable _nouveau_ was smoking slowly and calmly, and looking at nothing at all with his black buttonlike eyes. The Enormous Room
  • Hundreds of other easily recognizable and distinctive art styles of different cultures can be identified. Cultural Anthropology
  • Saddled with the most unfortunate perm in the history of the coiffeur, she still manages to create an incredibly believable teen protagonist, filled with instantly recognizable angst and insecurity.
  • And so rhetoric allows associative feminist psychologists to address psychology from outside, but from a recognizable and relevant perspective.
  • The formal definition of a radiogram is a plain text message sent in a recognizable format over amateur radio, but in this case it describes a coded message transmitted over shortwave radio directly to operatives in Moscow. Fast Company
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