I'll take a stab at it: This seems to mean that it is a high order of knowledge to have a sense of the limits of one's knowledge. Being 'smart' and 'informed' or 'savvy' is great, but being aware of one's areas of ignorance, limits of skill and areas of doubt is a very important kind of knowledge indeed. People can be glib and persuasive, skilfully using rhetoric and half-backed information to get others to believe them. The wiser, scarier and much more costly approach is to be willing to shed light on ignorance, even if it is our own. No one finds this easy; few develop it as a strength.
You never know what you know unless you know it which is what you know but then you know it and you wouldn't question what you know would you? unless you don't know if what you know is true. but that's a different story.
One who knows one thing that he/she knows nothing.
The abstract noun forms for the verb 'to know' are the gerund 'knowing' and 'knower', one who knows. A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
The word 'know' can be an abstract noun for example, in the expression 'in the know' or the compound noun 'know how'.The abstract noun form for the verb 'to know' is the gerund knowing.A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
Confucius, a Chinese philosopher, said this quote. It emphasizes the importance of self-awareness and the acknowledgment of one's limitations in order to attain true knowledge.
Knowledge , unknown , knows, known
Personal knowledge is something that a person knows from first hand knowledge. It is not something that one has heard, or thinks, it is what someone knows for a fact.
The abstract noun forms for the verb 'to know' are the gerund 'knowing' and 'knower', one who knows. A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
The abstract noun forms for the verb 'to know' are the gerund 'knowing' and 'knower', one who knows. A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
The abstract noun forms for the verb 'to know' are the gerund 'knowing' and 'knower', one who knows. A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
to my knowledge no one really knows
This quote from Shakespeare's "As You Like It" suggests that those who are foolish tend to overestimate their own intelligence, while those who are truly wise are aware of their own limitations and constantly seek knowledge. It highlights the importance of humility and self-awareness in gaining true wisdom.
One example of eachKNOW- "I Know the answer to this question"KNOWS- "He Knows a secret"