| 释义 | 
		omniscientom‧nis‧cient /ɒmˈnɪsiənt, -ˈnɪʃənt $ ɑːmˈnɪʃənt/ adjective formal    omniscientOrigin: 1600-1700 Medieval Latin, Latin omni- ( ➔ OMNI-) + scientia ( ➔ SCIENCE)  - Even the botanical garden's omniscient botanist couldn't explain the meaning of the flower's name.
 
 - And, above all, who was the omniscient Dario?
 - Being pictured as super-humans, they could not be omnipresent or omniscient.
 - If the centre were omniscient, none of this would matter.
 - In other words, only an omniscient analyst can judge the degrees of cost and pay-off to both utterer and receiver.
 - It brings the latest news, day and night, and seems omniscient.
 - That was shocking; for him, the novelist's duty was to remain invisible, inaudible, discreetly omniscient.
 - The man reassuring him is, or has the authority of, the omniscient and omnipotent novelist.
 - Therefore, we should not expect the centre to be omniscient.
 
    knowing everything:   the book’s omniscient narrator—omniscience noun [uncountable]  |