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Knows

Knows is the third-person singular present tense of the verb know. The base verb know denotes awareness of information, certainty about a proposition, or familiarity with a person, place, or thing. Knowledge tends to imply some justification or evidence, while mere belief or guesswork does not.

Grammatical details: Know is irregular; its principal forms are know, knows, knew, known, knowing. Examples: She

Etymology and related terms: The verb comes from Old English cnawan, from Proto-Germanic roots; it has cognates

knows
the
answer.
He
knew
her
from
school.
They
have
known
each
other
for
years.
It
regularly
takes
that-clauses
(I
know
that
you
are
right),
questions
(Do
you
know...),
and
negative
forms
(I
do
not
know).
It
can
pair
with
phrases
like
know-how,
know
of,
and
know
about,
to
express
familiarity,
acquaintance,
or
awareness
of
a
topic.
in
other
Germanic
languages,
such
as
German
wissen
and
kennen
and
Dutch
weten
and
kennen.
The
noun
form
knowledge
and
related
adjectives
such
as
knowledgeable
derive
from
the
same
semantic
field.
In
philosophy,
"know"
is
evaluated
in
terms
of
justified
true
belief;
Gettier
problems
have
prompted
discussion
about
the
precise
conditions
under
which
belief
counts
as
knowledge.