- Change theme
- Never stop learning knowledge doubles every fourteen months.
- Anthony J. D'Angelo on Knowledge
- Nevertheless, I consider OOP as an aspect of programming in the large that is, as an aspect that logically follows programming in the small and requires sound knowledge of procedural programming.
- Niklaus Wirth on Knowledge
- No group and no government can properly prescribe precisely what should constitute the body of knowledge with which true education is concerned.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt on Knowledge
- No man can reveal to you nothing but that which already lies half-asleep in the dawning of your knowledge.
- Khalil Gibran on Knowledge
- No man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience.
- John Locke on Knowledge
- No matter how mistaken Communist ideas may be, the experience and knowledge gained by trying them out have given a tremendous impetus to thought and imagination.
- Anne Sullivan Macy on Knowledge
- No one person invented Mulberry. The knowledge that we had to have this floating harbor slowly grew.
- Lord Mountbatten on Knowledge
- No part of the world can be truly understood without a knowledge of its garment of vegetation, for this determines not only the nature of the animal inhabitants but also the occupations of the majority of human beings.
- Ellsworth Huntington on Knowledge
- No power in society, no hardship in your condition can depress you, keep you down, in knowledge, power, virtue, influence, but by your own consent.
- William Ellery Channing on Knowledge
- Not ignorance, but ignorance of ignorance, is the death of knowledge.
- Alfred North Whitehead on Knowledge
- Nothing leads so straight to futility as literary ambitions without systematic knowledge.
- H. G. Wells on Knowledge
- Now all the knowledge and wisdom that is in creatures, whether angels or men, is nothing else but a participation of that one eternal, immutable and increased wisdom of God.
- Ralph Cudworth on Knowledge
- Now it is established in the sciences that no knowledge is acquired save through the study of its causes and beginnings, if it has had causes and beginnings nor completed except by knowledge of its accidents and accompanying essentials.
- Now will I rehearse before you a very ancient Breton Lay. As the tale was told to me, so, in turn, will I tell it over again, to the best of my art and knowledge. Hearken now to my story, its why and its reason.
- Marie De France on Knowledge
- Now, my knowledge of photography was terribly limited.
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