Circa 1225 |
Cogitation |
The action of thinking or reflecting; attentive consideration, reflection, meditation |
1325 |
Recognizance |
A bond or obligation by which a person undertakes before a court or magistrate to perform some act or observe some condition |
1388–89 |
Recognize |
Of a feudal superior: to resume possession of land |
1394 |
Cognizant (-isant) |
To know, recognize |
1400 |
Cognizance (-sance) |
Knowledge, understanding; also acquaintance |
1400–1 |
Recognosce |
Of a feudal superior; to resume possession of (land) |
1436 |
Recognizor |
One who enters into a recognizance |
1447 |
Cognition |
The action or faculty of knowing; knowledge, consciousness; acquaintance with a subject |
1450 |
Recognition |
Knowledge or consciousness; understanding |
1460 |
Recognitor |
A member of a jury impanelled on an assize or inquest |
1477 |
Discognisance |
Non-recognition |
1490 |
Cogitative |
Having the power or faculty of thought; thinking (as a permanent attribute) |
About 1500 |
Precognition |
Antecedent cognition or knowledge; (supposed) foreknowledge, esp. as a form of extrasensory perception |
1522 |
Incogitable |
Unthinkable, inconceivable |
1529 |
Uncogitable |
Obsolete word |
1531–32 |
Cognizee (-isee) |
The party in whose favour a fine of land was levied; he to whom cognizance was made |
1540 |
Miscognizant |
Not cognizant, knowledgeable, or aware; ignorant of something; spec. ignorant of the law, or some aspect of it |
1569 |
Precogitate |
To cogitate, think, or think over beforehand; to consider beforehand, premeditate |
1586 |
Cognitive |
Of or pertaining to cognition, or the action or process of knowing; having the attribute of cognizing |
1591 |
Recogitation |
The action or result of thinking over something again; an instance of this |
1592 |
Recognizee |
The person to whom another is bound in a recognizance |
1596 |
Precogitation |
Previous consideration or meditation; thinking over beforehand; a prior reflection or idea |
1602 |
Recogitate |
To think over (something) again |
1603 |
Miscognize |
To fail to appreciate or acknowledge |
1608 |
Recognizer |
A person who (or occasionally a thing which) recognizes someone or something |
1609 |
Incognite |
Unknown |
1611 |
Recognizon |
Acknowledgement |
1612 |
Incogitancy |
Want of thought or reflection; thoughtlessness, heedlessness, negligence; inadvertence |
1624 |
Praecognitum |
A thing already known, especially a thing needed or assumed to be known in order to infer or ascertain something else |
1628 |
Incogitant |
Thoughtless, unthinking; characterized by want of thought; inconsiderate |
1633 |
Cogitate |
To think, reflect, ponder, meditate; to exercise the thinking faculties |
1637 |
Incogitance |
Want of thought |
1638 |
Incognito |
An unknown man; one who conceals his identity; an anonymous person |
About 1645 |
Precogitancy |
Prior consideration or thought |
1648 |
Incogitantly |
Unthinkingly, thoughtlessly, without consideration or reflection |
1649 |
Cogitabund |
Musing, meditating, thoughtful, deep in thought |
1652 |
Incogitate |
Not thought of; unexpected; unpremeditated |
1654 |
Precognit |
A preliminary discussion |
1659 |
Cognize (-ise) |
To take cognizance |
1659 |
Decognize |
To cease or fail to recognize |
1671 |
Incognita |
A feminine version of incognito |
1678 |
Cognizable (-sable) |
Capable of being known, perceived, or apprehended by the senses or intellect; perceptible |
1680 |
Cogitant |
Thinking, that thinks |
1682 |
Recognizable |
Able to be recognized or identified; that permits recognition |
1688 |
Cogitability |
Capability of being thought or conceived |
1688 |
Cogitable |
That can be thought or conceived; thinkable, conceivable |
1690 |
Incogitative |
Unthinking; destitute of the thinking faculty |
1691 |
Incognoscible |
Unknowable, beyond cognizance |
1720 |
Uncognizable |
|
1722 |
Cogitativity |
Capacity or power of thinking |
1726 |
Precognizance |
Prior knowledge or understanding |
1759 |
Cogitancy |
Cogitant or thinking quality |
1790 |
Recognized |
Acknowledged, accepted; known, identified |
1802 |
Recognitive |
Of, relating to, or involving recognition or acknowledgment; that recognizes |
1813 |
Recognitory |
Of, or relating to, recognition or acknowledgement |
1817 |
Cognizably |
In a cognizable manner; recognizably; perceptibly |
1821 |
Uncognoscible |
|
1824 |
Incognoscibility |
The quality or condition of being incognoscible; unknowableness |
1827 |
Cognitional |
Of or pertaining to cognition |
1827 |
Uncognoscibility |
|
1831 |
Recognizably |
To a recognizable degree, perceptibly; in a recognizable manner |
1836 |
Recognizability |
The fact or quality of being recognizable |
1837 |
Incognizant |
Not cognizant; without cognizance, knowledge, or apprehension of; unaware, unconscious of |
1840 |
Precognizant |
Having previous cognizance; having prior knowledge or understanding (of something) |
1852 |
Incognizable |
Not cognizable; incapable of being known, perceived, or apprehended by the senses or intellect; incapable of recognition |
1853 |
Incogitability |
The quality of being unthinkable; incapability of being thought |
1854 |
Cogito |
The principle ‘cogito, ergo sum’, or any equivalent formula, by which Descartes claimed to establish his own existence as a thinking being from the fact of his thinking or awareness; loosely, conscious awareness or subjectivity |
1856 |
Incognizance |
Want of knowledge or recognition |
1860 |
Incognizability |
The quality of being incognizable |
1860 |
Uncognisant |
|
1862 |
Incognitive |
Destitute of the faculty for cognition; unable to take cognizance |
1866 |
Cogitandum |
That which should be thought; the ideal or correct processes of thought, as opposed to the actual processes |
1875 |
Cognitum |
An object of cognition |
1877 |
Uncognized |
|
1878 |
Cogitatum |
That which is thought; the actual processes of thought, as opposed to the ideal thought-processes |
1880 |
Cognitively |
In a cognitive manner; with regard to, or from the point of view of, cognition |
1880 |
Cognitor |
An attorney or procurator |
1952 |
Cognitivist |
One who holds that moral judgments are true or false statements about moral facts |
1954 |
Precog |
A person who predicts something; a person with precognition |