How do you pronounce...
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thebigcheese
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How do you pronounce...
How do you pronounce Cognoscente?
In my head, I always read it as "Cog-no-es-scent" or "Cog-nes-scent". But then I was looking at the spelling the other day, and I have no bloody idea how it's actually pronounced! And since we're on the subject, what does it mean anyway?
P.S. I love that everyone uses the nickname Coggers. I wish I could have a cool nickname like that.
In my head, I always read it as "Cog-no-es-scent" or "Cog-nes-scent". But then I was looking at the spelling the other day, and I have no bloody idea how it's actually pronounced! And since we're on the subject, what does it mean anyway?
P.S. I love that everyone uses the nickname Coggers. I wish I could have a cool nickname like that.
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thebigcheese
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thebigcheese
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- Cognoscente
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It is the English singular form of the word cognoscenti. It has identical forms in Italian and Spanish because it is derived completely from Latin.
co·gno·scen·te (kÅn'yÉ™-shÄ›n'tÄ“, kÅg'nÉ™-)
n. pl. co·gno·scen·ti (-tē)
A person with superior, usually specialized knowledge or highly refined taste; a connoisseur.
[Obsolete Italian, from Latin cognÅscÄ“ns , cognÅscent- , present participle of cognÅscere , to know ; see cognition .]
cognoscente
1778, from It. cognoscente , Latinized from conoscente "connoisseur," lit. "knowing man," from L. cognoscentum , prp. of cognoscere "to know" (see cognizance).
I say "cog-no-SEN-tay" but I'm familiar with the word from Italian, where the "gn" is pronounced the same as a Spanish ñ.
So, everyone who pronounces it "cognizant" is wrong.
Now you know! And knowing (being cognizant!) is half the battle!
co·gno·scen·te (kÅn'yÉ™-shÄ›n'tÄ“, kÅg'nÉ™-)
n. pl. co·gno·scen·ti (-tē)
A person with superior, usually specialized knowledge or highly refined taste; a connoisseur.
[Obsolete Italian, from Latin cognÅscÄ“ns , cognÅscent- , present participle of cognÅscere , to know ; see cognition .]
cognoscente
1778, from It. cognoscente , Latinized from conoscente "connoisseur," lit. "knowing man," from L. cognoscentum , prp. of cognoscere "to know" (see cognizance).
I say "cog-no-SEN-tay" but I'm familiar with the word from Italian, where the "gn" is pronounced the same as a Spanish ñ.
So, everyone who pronounces it "cognizant" is wrong.
Now you know! And knowing (being cognizant!) is half the battle!
Early to bed and early to rise
Precludes you from seeing the most brilliant starry nights
Precludes you from seeing the most brilliant starry nights
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P.S. Claudio saddled me with that nickname and I've always hated it. "Coggers" doesn't sound like a scholar, it sounds like a mincing, punctilious grandfather clock.


Last edited by Cognoscente on Sat Apr 17, 2010 6:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Early to bed and early to rise
Precludes you from seeing the most brilliant starry nights
Precludes you from seeing the most brilliant starry nights
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thebigcheese
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Hmm...that's not quite what I would've pictured. If anything, it makes me think of bike parts. And bike parts make me happyCognoscente wrote:P.S. Claudio saddled me with that nickname and I've always hated it. "Coggers" doesn't sound like a scholar, it sounds like a mincing, punctilious grandfather clock.
Meh. I still like it.
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Eh eh eh. I think I've called you that more than my fair share of times.Cognoscente wrote:P.S. Claudio saddled me with that nickname and I've always hated it. "Coggers" doesn't sound like a scholar, it sounds like a mincing, punctilious grandfather clock.
But I've always said it COG-nuh-scent.
In my heart, however, you'll always be Coggers.