GNI/GNO comes from a Greek and Latin verb meaning "to know," and can be found at the root of know itself. Among other words built from this root, you may recognize ("know again") some and be ignorant of ("not know") others. But only an ignoramus would know absolutely none of the...
*gnō-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to know." It forms all or part of:acknowledge;acquaint;agnostic;anagnorisis;astrognosy;can(v.1) "have power to, be able;"cognition;cognizance;con(n.2) "study;"connoisseur;could;couth;cunning;diagnosis;ennoble;gnome; (n.2) "short, pithy stateme...
"knowledge of the fixed stars, their names, magnitudes, etc.," 1835, fromastro-"star" +-gnosy, from Greekgnōsis"a knowing, knowledge" (from PIE root*gno-"to know"). can(v.1) Old English 1st and 3rd person singular present indicative ofcunnan"to know," less commonly as an auxilia...
GNI/GNO comes from a Greek and Latin verb meaning "to know," and can be found at the root of know itself. Among other words built from this root, you may recognize ("know again") some and be ignorant of ("not know") others. But only an ignoramus would know absolutely none of the...