Kent
[ kent ]
/ kɛnt /
noun
Definition for kent (2 of 2)
ken
[ ken ]
/ kɛn /
noun
knowledge, understanding, or cognizance; mental perception: an idea beyond one's ken.
range of sight or vision.
verb (used with object), kenned or kent, ken·ning.
verb (used without object), kenned or kent, ken·ning.
British Dialect.
- to have knowledge of something.
- to understand.
Origin of ken
before 900; Middle English
kennen to make known, see, know, Old English
cennan to make known, declare; cognate with Old Norse
kenna, German
kennen; akin to
can1
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH ken
ken kinExample sentences from the Web for kent
British Dictionary definitions for kent (1 of 4)
British Dictionary definitions for kent (2 of 4)
Kent
1
/ (kɛnt) /
noun
a county of SE England, on the English Channel: the first part of Great Britain to be colonized by the Romans; one of the seven kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England until absorbed by Wessex in the 9th century ad . Apart from the Downs it is mostly low-lying and agricultural, specializing in fruit and hops. The Medway towns of Rochester and Gillingham became an independent unitary authority in 1998. Administrative centre: Maidstone. Pop (excluding Medway): 1 348 800 (2003 est). Area (excluding Medway): 3526 sq km (1361 sq miles)
British Dictionary definitions for kent (3 of 4)
Kent
2
/ (kɛnt) /
noun
William. ?1685–1748, English architect, landscape gardener, and interior designer
British Dictionary definitions for kent (4 of 4)
ken
/ (kɛn) /
noun
range of knowledge or perception (esp in the phrases beyond or in one's ken)
verb kens, kenning, kenned or kent (kɛnt)
Scot and Northern English dialect
to know
Scot and Northern English dialect
to understand; perceive
(tr) archaic
to see
Word Origin for ken
Old English
cennan; related to Old Norse
kenna to perceive, Old High German
kennen to make known; see
can
1