But I will passe over all those matters scito pede, and leave euerye manne to his owne iudgemente therein for this tyme.
These visions from Hildegard's Book of the Rewards of Life may be supplemented by one or two selected from the curious and lengthy work which she named Scivias, signifying Scitovias domini (know the ways of the Lord).
Possibly when reading the Scito te ipsum one is conscious of a dialectician drawing distinctions, rather than of a moralist searching the heart of the matter.
He called his Ethica, Scito te ipsum, Know Thyself: understand thy good and ill intentions, and what may be vice or virtue in thee.
They are found partly in Master Peter’s book of theology, partly in his Sentences, and partly in his Scito te Ipsum.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "scito" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.