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was knowledge
noun
The fact of knowing about something; general understanding or familiarity with a subject, place, situation etc.
Exact(59)
No. 9 was knowledge of programming, and No. 10 was knowledge of NBC.
It was knowledge that Holmes acquired, to spectacular effect.
"It was knowledge I gave away freely and I did wonder if I was being dumb.
For John, faith was inspired by miracles and was knowledge of Jesus as the Messiah.
Pollard concluded that there was "knowledge, not just rumour" within BBC Vision about the "unsavoury side of Savile's character at the time the Christmas tribute programmes were planned".
Was knowledge, honestly used, ever quite so profitable, especially knowledge of art?" There have been repeated claims that Berenson altered attributions for gain.
Pollard says there was knowledge within BBC Vision, the TV department, of the "darker side of Jimmy Savile" at the time its tributes were broadcast.
His passion was knowledge, his patients and family and he will be greatly missed by all who knew him and those whose lives he touched.
Science was knowledge that was deduced from self-evident principles, and theology received its principles from God, the source of all principles.
But here, too, he was frustrated by his professors: "They could not agree upon what was knowledge, nor upon what was good and what evil, nor why".
I knew this was knowledge she ought to have, given how my adoption has and will continue to affect our lives.
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