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Knave

From Dontopedia, the open, paraconsistent wiki. (Last updated 2026-06-07.)

Knave has 8 facts recorded in Dontopedia across 3 references.

8 facts·7 predicates·3 sources

Mostly:rdfs:label(2), unable to(1), rdf:type(1)

Maturity scale raw canonical shape-checked rule-derived certified

Rdfs:labelrdfs:label

  • knave[2]sourceall time · 84
  • knave[3]sourceall time · 69

Unable tounableTo

Rdf:typerdf:type

Described AsdescribedAs

  • rude[1]sourceall time · 68

Metaphorically Identified AsmetaphoricallyIdentifiedAs

Throw DirectionthrowDirection

Jowlsjowls

Inbound mentions (1)

Other subjects in dontopedia point AT this entity as a value. These are inverse relationships — e.g. "X motherOf this subject" — and answer questions the forward facts can't. Grouped by predicate.

characterizedAsCharacterized As(1)

Timeline

Timeline axis is valid_time — when each source says the fact was true in the world, not when Dontopedia learned about it. Retracted rows are kept for provenance; coloured stripes indicate the context kind.

describedAshamlet/68
rude
jowlshamlet/68
ex:skull
metaphoricallyIdentifiedAshamlet/68
ex:ass
labelseven-sisters-of-sleep/84
knave
labelhamlet/69
knave
typeseven-sisters-of-sleep/84
ex:Role
throwDirectionhamlet/68
ex:ground
unableToseven-sisters-of-sleep/84
ex:speak-for-himself

References (3)

3 references
  1. customctx:books/hamlet/68
    • full texttmptjllqy9c_hamlet_68
      text/plain2 KBdoc:agent/tmptjllqy9c_hamlet_68/26872880-a8c7-4ccc-8183-92e1f9da493b
      Show excerpt
      HAMLET. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing once. How the knave jowls it to th’ ground, as if ’twere Cain’s jawbone, that did the first murder! This might be the pate of a politician which this ass now o’er-offices, one that woul
  2. customctx:books/seven-sisters-of-sleep/84
    • full texttmpf5_vdakx_seven-sisters-of-sleep_84
      text/plain613 Bdoc:agent/tmpf5_vdakx_seven-sisters-of-sleep_84/dfa0b1a2-d0d7-46c9-b187-35f3fb42f8d0
      Show excerpt
      “I grant your worship that he is a knave, sir; but yet, Heaven forbid, sir, but a knave should have some countenance at his friends’ request. An honest man, sir, is able to speak for himself, when a knave is not.”—— King Henry IV., part 2.
  3. customctx:books/hamlet/69
    • full texttmpsscgmr09_hamlet_69
      text/plain2 KBdoc:agent/tmpsscgmr09_hamlet_69/5a577d54-84c5-45e3-ad5f-731b3eb79509
      Show excerpt
      FIRST CLOWN. ’Tis a quick lie, sir; ’t will away again from me to you. HAMLET. What man dost thou dig it for? FIRST CLOWN. For no man, sir. HAMLET. What woman then? FIRST CLOWN. For none neither. HAMLET. Who is to be buried in’t?

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