I Know may refer to:
"I Know (I Know)" is a song written by John Lennon released on his 1973 album Mind Games. The song is included on the 1998 box set, John Lennon Anthology. Lennon called the song, "just a piece of nothing," though some have read the song as a confession of troubles with his relationship with Yoko Ono.
The musicians who performed on the original recording were as follows:
"I Know" is a song by British producer and DJ Shift K3Y. The song was released in the United Kingdom on 21 September 2014 as a digital download. The song peaked at number 25 on the UK Singles Chart. It was written and produced by Shift K3Y.
A music video to accompany the release of "I Know" was first released onto YouTube on 12 August 2014. The video has accumulated over fourteen million views.
John Davies or Davis (fl. 1816 – 1850) was an English scientist in Victorian Manchester. He was a lecturer and private tutor who played an important role in the administration of some of the city's learned societies.
Little is known about Davies. He was elected to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society in 1816 and served as its librarian from 1819 to 1827, and as secretary in the 1840s. He also lectured on chemistry at the Society.
In the 1820s, he advertised himself as a "Private Teacher of Mathematics, Chemistry and Natural Philosophy" and his most famous student was the young James Prescott Joule who studied chemistry and medicine with Davies.
In 1824, Davies was a member of the executive committee charged with establishing the Manchester Mechanics' Institute and Davies managed the Institute's laboratories until the late 1840s, serving as vice-chairman and vice-president under Sir Benjamin Heywood. Davies lectured on chemistry at the Institute in 1828, 1832 and 1847. Davies lectured at the Pine Street Medical School and was a promoter of the earliest, unsuccessful, attempt to found a university in Manchester in 1836.
John Griffith Davies (born 17 May 1929) is an Australian breaststroke swimmer of the 1940s and 1950s who won a gold medal in the 200-metre breaststroke at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. After retiring from competition swimming, he became a prominent lawyer in California, and after becoming a naturalized American, he was appointed a judge of the United States District Court by Ronald Reagan in 1986, and presided over the trial of the Los Angeles Police Department officers charged with assaulting Rodney King.
Growing up in Willoughby, Sydney, where his father was an accountant and his mother a nurse, Davies learnt to swim at the tidal pool in Northbridge, where he enjoyed competing against his friends. He and his brother spent their teenage years separated from their father, who joined the Royal Australian Air Force and was a Japanese prisoner of war for three years. Davies left Narrabeen High School in 1945 and worked for the Caltex oil company, who often granted him leave to compete at swimming competitions. He entered and won both breaststroke events at the 1946 New South Wales Championships held at Manly.
John Davies (1679–1732) was an English cleric and academic, known as a classical scholar, and President of Queens' College, Cambridge from 1717.
He was born in London on 22 April 1679. His father was a merchant or tradesman in that city, who died while he was young, and his mother a daughter of Sir John Turton, knight, justice of the court of king's bench. He was educated at Charterhouse School, and on 8 June 1695 was admitted to Queens' College, Cambridge. He graduated B.A. in 1698, was elected a fellow of the college 7 July 1701, and commenced M.A. in 1702.
In 1709 Davies was junior proctor of the university. He was collated in 1711 by John Moore, the bishop of Ely, to the rectory of Fen Ditton, near Cambridge, and to a prebend in Ely Cathedral. In the same year he took the degree of LL.D. On the death of Dr. Henry James he was chosen to succeed him as president of Queens' College, 23 March 1717.
Davies was created D.D. in 1717, when George I visited Cambridge. In 1718 he resigned the rectory of Glemsford in Suffolk, a benefice in the bishop of Ely's patronage. A close friend of Richard Bentley, he nevertheless condemned Bentley's behaviour in his acrimonious dispute with the university.
Hey honey,
I know I’ve lied, but I’d like to make it up.
I know this sort of thing is not easily explained,
but girl give me a chance.
Don’t you see I’ve been stuck in my head.
It’s never been so clear exactly what you do to me,
you make me insane, you drive me crazy.
And I’ll slip back, into my head.
In this place I’ve lost myself.
Stuck, trapped, imprisoned, in a nueronic cage.
There’s no way out from here.
There’s no way to escape.
It’s never been so clear exactly what you do to me,
you make me insane, you drive me crazy.
And I’ll slip back, into my head.
In this place I’ve lost myself.
There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for you.
Be mine set me free.
The intensity of my love, over flow my veins, spill on to the floor
Maybe then you’ll see what is internalized inside of me.
All love all hate, all the world for you.
I’ll slip back, into my head.
In this place I’ve lost myself.
And it’s never been so clear what you do to me,