cognize

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cognize

(ˈkɒɡnaɪz; kɒɡˈnaɪz) or

cognise

vb
(tr) to perceive, become aware of, or know
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

cognize


Past participle: cognized
Gerund: cognizing

Imperative
cognize
cognize
Present
I cognize
you cognize
he/she/it cognizes
we cognize
you cognize
they cognize
Preterite
I cognized
you cognized
he/she/it cognized
we cognized
you cognized
they cognized
Present Continuous
I am cognizing
you are cognizing
he/she/it is cognizing
we are cognizing
you are cognizing
they are cognizing
Present Perfect
I have cognized
you have cognized
he/she/it has cognized
we have cognized
you have cognized
they have cognized
Past Continuous
I was cognizing
you were cognizing
he/she/it was cognizing
we were cognizing
you were cognizing
they were cognizing
Past Perfect
I had cognized
you had cognized
he/she/it had cognized
we had cognized
you had cognized
they had cognized
Future
I will cognize
you will cognize
he/she/it will cognize
we will cognize
you will cognize
they will cognize
Future Perfect
I will have cognized
you will have cognized
he/she/it will have cognized
we will have cognized
you will have cognized
they will have cognized
Future Continuous
I will be cognizing
you will be cognizing
he/she/it will be cognizing
we will be cognizing
you will be cognizing
they will be cognizing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been cognizing
you have been cognizing
he/she/it has been cognizing
we have been cognizing
you have been cognizing
they have been cognizing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been cognizing
you will have been cognizing
he/she/it will have been cognizing
we will have been cognizing
you will have been cognizing
they will have been cognizing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been cognizing
you had been cognizing
he/she/it had been cognizing
we had been cognizing
you had been cognizing
they had been cognizing
Conditional
I would cognize
you would cognize
he/she/it would cognize
we would cognize
you would cognize
they would cognize
Past Conditional
I would have cognized
you would have cognized
he/she/it would have cognized
we would have cognized
you would have cognized
they would have cognized
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Verb1.cognize - be cognizant or aware of a fact or a specific piece of information; possess knowledge or information about; "I know that the President lied to the people"; "I want to know who is winning the game!"; "I know it's time"
keep track - keep informed of fully aware; "I keep track of the stock market developments"
know - be aware of the truth of something; have a belief or faith in something; regard as true beyond any doubt; "I know that I left the key on the table"; "Galileo knew that the earth moves around the sun"
agnise, agnize, realize, recognize, realise, recognise - be fully aware or cognizant of
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
If only one tag responds and a reader successfully receives the response, the reader definitely cognizes the tag.
In addition, JISE re cognizes the international influences on IS education and seeks international input in all aspects of the journal, including content, authorship of papers, readership, paper reviewers, and Editorial Board membership.
According to the first one, practical reason cognizes and establishes moral norms (values, or ends), and according to the second one, it just cognizes moral norms (values, or ends).
Drieza Lininding, an outspoken BNMPD official, said he had appeared thrice before the Marcos committee in recent hearings to explain that the original BBL draft respects and cognizes national government's power and control over the lake's hydroelectricity production, without implicit or explicit intention of infringement.
It relocates traditional metasemantic indeterminacy arguments as indeterminacies of what language an agent speaks or cognizes. Finally, it aims to provide a theoretical analysis of the cognizing relation in terms of the agent's assigning certain meanings to strings.
He said, "Government fully cognizes the fact that societies and countries cannot move forward without empowering women.
On this reading, an intellectual intuition is an intuition capable of grasping things in themselves, whereas an intuitive understanding is something which cognizes a whole and, by cognizing this whole, cognizes also the parts constituted by it.
Neshamah (the classic name of the soul) is the intellectual part of our soul that cognizes, comprehends, analyzes, synthesizes, and integrates knowledge through the brain.
The understanding or intellect cognizes the world in a manner that is non-conceptual.
Matilal has defended the second of these possibilities (in his Perception: An Essay on Classical Indian Theories of Knowledge [Clarendon, 1986], 138-40), a view that leads him to say, perhaps unfortunately, that although the lucky guesser knows that there are five shells, he does not know that he knows (unfortunate because the analysis will have to apply as much at the second order as at the first, so the guesser only cognizes truly that he cognizes truly that there are five shells, and the presence or absence of this additional second-order true cognition in the mind of the cognizer does not seem to have any bearing upon the deviant epistemology of the first-order one).