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Idiom
To know something inside-out.
To know something completely and thoroughly.
Exact(6)
In epistemology, for instance, it could be applied to explain what it is to know something: It is knowing how to correctly distinguish what does or does not match the fa for that sort of thing.
To know that knowledge is impossible is to know something; hence, dogmatic Skepticism must be false.
In that case, to know the syllable is to know something for which knowledge of the elements is not sufficient.
Thus Hobbes accepts the Aristotelian idea that to have the best sort of knowledge, scientific knowledge, is to know something through its causes.
If science is viewed as a knowledge-seeking activity, it is natural to define real progress in forward-looking terms: the cognitive aim of science is to know something that is still unknown, and our real progress depends on our distance from this destination.
Not only is Trump ignorant of his ignorance but, as George Will put it, "he does not know what it is to know something".
Similar(52)
The purpose of playing a concert should be to know something at the end of it that you didn't know at the beginning".
"It's to know there's something out here that will multiply.
(h) The future is uncertain [25] (i) It is possible to know something about the future [26] .
"I think it is good to know something about what they are doing," Mr. Turner said.
It is useful to know something about the Ishtar Gate.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com