Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Reciprocal knowledge.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun obsolete Mutual knowledge or acquaintance.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun
Reciprocal knowledge .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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This we found wonderful strange; for that all nations have interknowledge one of another, either by voyage into foreign parts, or by strangers that come to them; and though the traveller into a foreign country doth commonly know more by the eye than he that stayeth at home can by relation of the traveller; yet both ways suffice to make a mutual knowledge, in some degree, on both parts.
The New Atlantis 2002
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This we found wonderful strange; for that all nations have interknowledge one of another, either by voyage into foreign parts, or by strangers that come to them; and though the traveller into a foreign country doth commonly know more by the eye than he that stayeth at home can by relation of the traveller; yet both ways suffice to make a mutual knowledge, in some degree, on both parts.
The New Atlantis 1626
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This we found wonderful strange; for that all nations have interknowledge one of another, either by voyage into foreign parts, or by strangers that come to them; and though the traveller into a foreign country doth commonly know more by the eye than he that stayeth at home can by relation of the traveller; yet both ways suffice to make a mutual knowledge, in some degree, on both parts.
New Atlantis 1626
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This we found wonderful strange; for that all nations have interknowledge one of another, either by voyage into foreign parts, or by strangers that come to them; and though the traveller into a foreign country doth commonly know more by the eye than he that stayeth at home can by relation of the traveller; yet both ways suffice to make a mutual knowledge, in some degree, on both parts.
Ideal Commonwealths Tommaso Campanella 1603
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