Sentence for knowledge | Use knowledge in a sentence

Sentences for knowledge. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use knowledge in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for knowledge.

  • I have some knowledge of the world. (8)
  • You have no positive knowledge of it! (10)
  • The knowledge is only dangerous for fools. (10)
  • Certainly, he had got the knowledge he wanted. (8)
  • Who did much to spread a knowledge of his works? (3)
  • She was most thankful for her own knowledge of him. (4)
  • He shook the head of superior knowledge paternally. (10)
  • That lout comes to a knowledge of his wants too late. (10)
  • Tracy had no knowledge of the object of the expedition. (10)
  • Could the knowledge have been extended through her family? (4)
  • I am bidden to hold my tongue because I have no knowledge. (10)
  • She desires power, insight, knowledge of the obscure and intricate. (12)
  • I bore the dreadful knowledge, and crushed my heart with its weight. (10)
  • To this black wisdom came the combined knowledge of those miscreants. (9)
  • Based on her knowledge of her honest footing, it was a little defiant. (10)
  • Knowledge of Carinthia would have urged him to the confession straightway. (10)
  • Lucy, however, had wits, and inexperienced wits are as a little knowledge. (10)
  • By degrees I got some unconscious knowledge of the characters of Shakespeare. (10)
  • He said of his country: That Lout comes to a knowledge of his wants too late. (10)
  • They reckoned not upon the familiar knowledge of the men with whom they dealt. (21)
  • And now, in this dire necessity for knowledge, there seemed no way of getting it. (8)
  • She remembered with what feelings she had prepared for a knowledge of Northanger. (4)
  • I could not derive benefit from the late knowledge I had acquired of your character. (4)
  • And it is as well to mark the divisions, for the better knowledge of our countrymen. (10)
  • Now, matter is that of which we can have knowledge through one or more of our senses. (7)
  • I reminded Temple of a saying of the Emperor Charles V. as to a knowledge of languages. (10)
  • With such a knowledge as this, it was impossible for Elinor to feel easy on the subject. (4)
  • I am afraid I can as little impart a due sense of what he spiritually was to my knowledge. (9)
  • And such a family, if consenting with knowledge, would consent only for the love of money. (10)
  • It is impossible that your own observation can have given you much knowledge of the clergy. (4)
  • To keep Fanny and the Bertrams from a knowledge of what was passing became his first object. (4)
  • Or, from the knowledge she has of his circumstances, she may talk to him almost as his wife. (10)
  • But also, it should be said that Colonel Roosevelt has expert knowledge of newspaper methods. (16)
  • She seemed to have a wonderful knowledge of the exact thing to say and do to keep him helpless. (8)
  • Mrs. Lapham would not let her know that she was ignorant of the fact attributed to her knowledge. (9)
  • There is no doubt that he acted with her knowledge and consent when he undertook to punish Yaminsky. (12)
  • Then he questioned me as to my knowledge of Concord, and whether I had seen any of the notable people. (9)
  • He read her equal knowledge of these facts in the clear eyes that made him flush and turn his own away. (9)
  • Her tender mercies are cruel; and I leave you to supply the content from your own scriptural knowledge. (9)
  • He wrote in all known forms and was well nigh universal in his knowledge of form, technic and expression. (3)
  • When questioned by a gentleman, however, he was naturally bound to answer to the extent of his knowledge. (10)
  • Meager indeed is our knowledge of this only British bard whose works have endured through thirty centuries. (7)
  • She brought him to say of his knowledge, that Lord Fleetwood hated, and had reason to hate, Captain Levellier. (10)
  • Yes, we gain knowledge, we are the wiser; very probably my value surpasses now what it was when I was happier. (10)
  • Could he love the daughter without some little, which a more intimate knowledge of her dear mother would enlarge? (10)
  • Czerny had an immense knowledge of the higher mechanism of piano playing, and a keen perception of practical methods. (3)
  • His close association with proletarians necessarily involved him in such matters and in a knowledge of their affairs. (12)
  • Manners were all that could be safely judged of, under a much longer knowledge than they had yet had of Mr. Churchill. (4)
  • It is but an instance of the way in which a profession growing more serious is bound to take knowledge more seriously. (16)
  • I give on an average twelve hours a day to study (after my own fashion), but I find real knowledge slow of accumulation. (14)
  • The art of blind vision requires not only practice, but an intimate knowledge of the arts of the traitor we carry within. (10)
  • No doubt it was all a minor affair as compared with equal knowledge of French literature, and so far it was a loss of time. (9)
  • Not that I am an advocate for the prevailing fashion of acquiring a perfect knowledge of all languages, arts, and sciences. (4)
  • When she had shaped in her mind some portion of his knowledge of the subject, she reverted casually to her practical business. (10)
  • Her method for inducing him to go was based on her intimate knowledge of him: she made as if to soothe and kiss him compassionately. (10)
  • He had not known it till after the decisive step which had made him an outcast; since then the knowledge had been with him continually. (8)
  • Mrs. Hunter is a study of extreme interest in degeneracy, but I am not sure that Kitty Morrow is not a rarer contribution to knowledge. (9)
  • He grew discouraged; he seemed no nearer to anything, had not obtained from his inspection any of the knowledge he had vaguely hoped for. (8)
  • Mrs. Lander, in fact, who ruled these expenditures, had no knowledge of the value of things, and made her husband pay whatever was asked. (9)
  • And more, for knowledge crowns the gain Of intercourse with other souls, And Wisdom travels not in vain The plunging spaces of the poles. (10)
  • Her personal position, however, was instilling knowledge rapidly, as a disease in the frame teaches us what we are and have to contend with. (10)
  • And the appreciation of accurate knowledge, if not always the market for it, is certainly higher now in newspaper offices than it used to be. (16)
  • Their superior strength and knowledge are made subservient to the distaff of the weaker and shallower: they crown her queen; her look is their mandate. (10)
  • They were indebted, the next day, to Charles Hayter, for all the minute knowledge of Louisa, which it was so essential to obtain every twenty-four hours. (4)
  • The gentleman had grown restless at covert congratulations, hollow to his knowledge, however much caressing vanity, and therefore secretly a wound to it. (10)
  • You have only knowledge enough of the language to translate at sight these inverted, transposed, curtailed Italian lines, into clear, comprehensible, elegant English. (4)

Also see sentences for: attainments, culture, discernment, education, enlightenment, information, insight.

Definition of knowledge:

  • knowledge, nol’ej, n. assured belief: that which is known: information, instruction: enlightenment, learning: practical skill. | adj. knowl’edgeable (_coll._), possessing knowledge: intelligent. | n. knowl’edge-box (_slang_), the head. | to one’s knowledge, so far as one knows. (0)

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