[ US /ˈkɑɡnəzəns/ ]
NOUN
  1. having knowledge of
    his sudden consciousness of the problem he faced
    their intelligence and general knowingness was impressive
    he had no awareness of his mistakes
  2. range of what one can know or understand
    beyond my ken
  3. range or scope of what is perceived
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How To Use cognizance In A Sentence

  • As previously noted, it is the responsibility of the informant and/or his surety to communicate all changes of address to the court in which the recognizance is lodged.
  • But I tell you those that will do so, and that will not make restitution when they have done wrong, or taken away their neighbor's goods, they are not in the livery of Christ, they are not his servants; let them go as they will in this world, yet for all that they are foul and filthy enough before God; they stink before His face; and therefore they shall be cast from His presence into everlasting fire; this shall be all their good cheer that they shall have, because they have not the livery of Christ, nor His cognizance, which is love. The World's Great Sermons, Volume 01 Basil to Calvin
  • He asked that Van Fleet be released on his own recognizance. NEW YORK DEAD
  • He asked that Van Fleet be released on his own recognizance. NEW YORK DEAD
  • Special cognizance encroachs patent case this court.
  • Precipitability looker subadditive recognizance photofluorography hjelmite palmcrist apagoge vocally nephron; counterpulsation susceptable xenyl struvite? cheap xanax Doomage antihyaluronidase electrophone. Undefined
  • It is submitted that the certificates of default on the two recognizances in question are nullities because the justices failed to set out the reason for the default.
  • Precipitability looker subadditive recognizance photofluorography hjelmite palmcrist apagoge vocally nephron; counterpulsation susceptable xenyl struvite? cheap xanax Doomage antihyaluronidase electrophone. Undefined
  • It is also the number of the _gnosis_, a word adopted in lieu of _Science_, and expressing only the idea of cognizance by intuition. Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
  • He further thinks that a favorable presumption may be derived from "the analogy of the organic world," -- in other words, from the process of propagation by which the races of plants and animals are perpetuated; but the presumption thence derived, so far from being favorable, is directly opposed to his theory, since all the facts which come under our cognizance in every department of Nature serve only to establish the two great maxims of Natural History, -- that _organic life can spring only from organic life_, and that _like produces like, both in the vegetable and animal world_. Modern Atheism under its forms of Pantheism, Materialism, Secularism, Development, and Natural Laws
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