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  1. Dictionary
    un·known
    /ˌənˈnōn/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. an unknown person or thing: "she is a relative unknown"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Oct 14, 2011 · But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don't know we don't know. "Known unknown" implies there are things we know we don't know, while "unknown known" could imply things we know but don't yet realize the value. Thus, there is a difference in meaning. Wow - I got in 37 seconds after you. Man!

  3. Jun 22, 2014 · However, unknown has also taken up the meaning of unbeknown. i.e., unknown can be used in place of unbeknown, but not conversely. Unbeknownst is the more commonly used form of unbeknown. Unbeknownst, Unbeknown are used if we wish to clearly communicate the restricted direction/indirection of flow of knowledge.

  4. Jan 27, 2011 · beknownst is an archaic word, as it is beknown; the meaning of beknown is known. The word that is used in Modern English is unbeknown (or unbeknownst), which has its origin from beknown. unbeknown |ˌənbəˈnoʊn| (also unbeknownst) adjective [ predic. ] (unbeknown to) without the knowledge of someone: unbeknown to me, she made some inquiries.

  5. Jul 15, 2011 · 8. as-yet-unknown means that it is an unknown quantity (in the case above, that the person hasn't been identified). It also indicates that while that is the current state of things, that they are or will be working to identify the person. Share.

  6. Sep 7, 2015 · I'm downvoting this, because while the "FearOf.net" article cited does define xenophobia as quoted in the answer, it is a non-standard definition, and none of the 5 dictionaries I checked, including OED, lists any definition even approaching it.

  7. Sep 24, 2015 · 7. Take a look at the 1981 study by Sterling Eisiminger, “Etymology Unknown: Toward a Master List of Words of Obscure Origin”, and his 1984 followup, “Etymology Unknown: The Crème de la Crème de la Crème”. The author of the study wrote to Merriam Company and found that according to their dictionary there are 538 words of unknown origin.

  8. Dec 24, 2014 · In the first, “random” means “unknown,” “unidentified” as in “some random guy told me at the party that I reminded him of his old girlfriend.” The other is to use random to mean “weird,” “strange,” as in “The party at Jessica’s was so random, not what I was expecting at all!”

  9. Oct 20, 2017 · There is no difference in denotation. // 'Unknown' is further from the verby end of whatever continuum is involved than 'not known' is, so connotes (if it connotes anything) more strongly the unknown-ness of the values; 'not known' is closer to the verby end, and so connotes more strongly the scientists' ignorance of the facts.

  10. But as Stuart says, this plural form ('whereabouts') can nowadays be used with a plural verb form ('their/?his whereabouts are unknown'), so one needs to be specific. I'm wondering if 'His whereabouts are unknown' is a plural-form plural-agreement singular-concept (his location is unknown) usage, or perhaps 'their whereabouts are unknown' is a step towards countification (their locations are ...

  11. Apr 16, 2019 · The words “snot,” “snotty,” “snout,” “snoot,” “snooty” (in the sense of looking down one’s nose) and “schnoz” are all related to a similar prehistoric Germanic root associated with the nose, “snut.”. “Snob” is unrelated, and “snooze” is of uncertain origin. But “snitch,” meaning an informer, may be ...