Ainda não temos significados para "know to posterity".
1To be more intimately known to posterity than other men are known to their contemporaries!
2The story of his dilemma, and of how he was forced to act against his convictions, is well known to posterity.
3He wore his own beard hanging down to his waist, from whence the name by which he is best known to posterity.
4The act of 1866 gave the Freedmen's Bureau its final form,-theform by which it will be known to posterity and judged of men.
5His great contemporary, Mozart, cut off while yet his light was crescent, is known to posterity only by the products of his early manhood.
6Even Holmes, the genial humorist, wished to be known to posterity by his trumpet call to the soul to build itself more stately mansions.
7Duke's(509) leg; I hope he and you will be known to posterity together by more dignified wounds than the kick of a horse.
8Yet it is by the former, added to the few works of imagination which he has left besides, that he will be known to posterity.
9I think highly of his "Joan of Arc", and cannot help prophesying that he will be known to posterity, as Shakspeare's great grandson.
10But for the title by which he is known to posterity -"Dr Johnson" -this country can claim at least some of the credit.