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What is the noun for rememorations?

What's the noun for rememorations? Here's the word you're looking for.

memory
  1. (uncountable) The ability of a system to record information about things or events with the facility of recalling them later at will.
  2. A record of a thing or an event stored and available for later use by the organism.
  3. (computing) The part of a computer that stores variable executable code or data (RAM) or unalterable executable code or default data (ROM).
  4. The time within which past events can be or are remembered.
  5. (attributive, of a material) which returns to its original shape when heated
  6. (obsolete) A memorial.
  7. (zoology, collective) (uncommon) A term of venery for an social group of elephants, normally called a "Herd".
  8. Synonyms:
  9. Examples:
    1. “I have an impeccable memory, and I can recount to you in detail the events of that fateful day.”
      “I have a vivid memory of the joyful times we spent together.”
      “Following the battle, the remnants of the army would gather together solemnly in memory of their fallen comrades.”
remembrance
  1. The act of remembering; a holding in mind, or bringing to mind; recollection.
  2. The state of being remembered, or held in mind; memory, recollection.
  3. Something remembered; a person or thing kept in memory.
  4. That which serves to keep in or bring to mind; a memento, a memorial, a souvenir, a token; a memorandum or note of something to be remembered.
  5. The power of remembering; the reach of personal knowledge; the period over which one's memory extends.
  6. (obsolete) Something to be remembered; an admonition, counsel, instruction.
  7. Synonyms:
  8. Examples:
    1. “Howie, you're a little bit younger than I am, but you may have a vague remembrance of this.”
      “During her remembrance, this knowledge came to her in an intuitive flash.”
      “We took part in a ritual in remembrance of the great victory.”
memorandum
  1. A short note serving as a reminder.
  2. A written business communication.
  3. A brief diplomatic communication.
  4. A page in an annual publication honoring the memory of a person who died during the past year.
  5. Synonyms:
  6. Examples:
    1. “The two countries signed a memorandum on cracking down on new psychotropic drugs.”
      “The chairman of the multilateral talks, Pierre Girard, a Swiss diplomat, circulated a memorandum Tuesday to member states to reconvene the meeting, according to the sources.”
      “When the interview is concluded, write a short memorandum, addressed to the head of human resources, summarizing your impression of the job candidate.”
memorial
  1. A structure, such as a monument, intended to celebrate the memory of a person or event.
  2. A service of remembrance or commemoration.
  3. (law) a statement of facts set out in the form of a petition to a person in authority, a court or tribunal, a government, etc.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “He understood that when the arch was first proposed, it had been intended as a memorial to asbestos victims but it had ended up more of a memorial to the carriageworks generally and its craftsmanship.”
      “The words written on the memorial describe beautifully what it takes to make a dream like this come true.”
      “He is buried in a memorial site in Oakland, California.”
memoir
  1. An autobiography; a book describing the personal experiences of an author.
  2. A biography; a book describing the experiences of a subject from personal knowledge of the subject or from sources with personal knowledge of the subject.
  3. Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “Kennan wrote a memoir that had enough literary merit to be turned into a play.”
      “As described in her personal memoir, Robson grew up adept at country living, crossing swollen rivers by horseback and navigating the giant thistles near her home.”
      “This was a memoir full of life. One will find Anderson's enthusiasm for scholarship, languages, and the arts to be precious.”
rememberer
  1. One who remembers, recalls from memory.
  2. (sociolinguistics) One who remembers several words and phrases from a moribund language, but never became fluent in it.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “The rememberer was able to evoke nostalgia and trigger vivid memories through their storytelling.”
      “The seat on the left has held Roosevelt the friend of labor, rememberer of the forgotten man, reformer and crusader.”
      “The result feels, to the rememberer, just as authentic as the real thing. What is not yet known is how this process works neurologically.”
memo
  1. A short note; a memorandum.
  2. (computing) A record of partial results that can be reused later without recomputation.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “Did you get the memo about the enhanced knowledge facilitation paradigm shift program the IT VP started?”
      “I even wrote a memo to myself in my field notes that I should be careful not to let my flights of fancy get grip on me.”
mem
  1. The thirteenth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others).
  2. Examples:
    1. “The initial mem found in the MT may have been added accidentally due to dittography with the final mem on the immediately preceding word.”
      “In the past, parents were concerned about getting a gori mem as a daughter-in-law, but I am modern.”
      “W hen I came back to work for the federal government in 1998 as a CS I imm ediately became a m ember and a steward and have represented our mem bers in the workplace since then.”
memorate
  1. (folklore) An oral narrative from memory relating a personal experience, especially the precursor of a legend.
memoization
  1. (computer science) A technique in which partial results are recorded (forming a memo) and then can be re-used later without having to recompute them.
memoria
  1. One of the five canons of classical rhetoric: the discipline of memory and recall.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Ars and techné of memoria in Greek and Roman mnemonics were space-oriented.”
      “He takes them from the same printed Horae of 1510 whence the memoria comes.”
      “The sentences abstracted in the memoria show that but few of them were concerned in it.”
memoriousness
  1. The state of being memorious; commemoration, remembrance.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Roman memoriousness was part celebration, part propitiation.”
memorialization
  1. The act or process of memorializing or creating a memorial.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “An important part of baseball's appeal is the continuous memorialization of great players and teams, outstanding plays, and thrilling games.”
      “Finally, the upkeep of many war memorials and monuments is an important facet of the war memorialization process.”
      “Yet how nationality was highlighted and impacted upon the memorialization of victims was very different in all three cases.”
rememoration
  1. Recall by means of the memory; remembrance.
mem
  1. (computing) A memory access as part of processing.
  2. Examples:
    1. “The initial mem found in the MT may have been added accidentally due to dittography with the final mem on the immediately preceding word.”
      “In the past, parents were concerned about getting a gori mem as a daughter-in-law, but I am modern.”
      “W hen I came back to work for the federal government in 1998 as a CS I imm ediately became a m ember and a steward and have represented our mem bers in the workplace since then.”
memorization
  1. The act of committing something to memory or memorizing.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The syllabic structure of Chinese requires memorization of at least three thousand characters to be literate.”
      “The educational system emphasizes rote learning and memorization, rather than analytical thinking.”
      “Canons of literature may fossilize their subject and reduce its study to dry memorization for its own sake.”
memorializer
  1. One who petitions by a memorial.
memorialisation
  1. Alternative form of memorialization
  2. Examples:
    1. “This is a superficial memorialisation which an analytical history ought not uncritically reproduce.”
      “The traditional, elaborate individual memorialisation of death was seen as unfitting, over the top and irrelevant.”
      “One must be conscious that the culture of catastrophic memorialisation is sinewed with manipulations, lacunae and corruptions of historical reality.”
memorist
  1. (obsolete) One who, or that which, causes to be remembered.
  2. Examples:
    1. “You could add Joan Brown, Hollis Sigler and Thomas Trosch, not to mention memorist painters like Loren MacIver and Anne Varnum Poor.”
      “Thus I am competent, I think, to speak on a subject curiously neglected by the memorist.”
      “He must be a memorist remembering the past.”
memorisation
  1. Alternative spelling of memorization
  2. Examples:
    1. “Obedience, rote memorisation, and neatness are enshrined as somehow intellectual achievements.”
      “But for Mr Savall memorisation is the same as playing on autopilot, and stifles a necessary element of unpredictability.”
      “Saudi education, with its heavy emphasis on Wahhabist values and rote memorisation, has often been blamed for narrowing minds.”
rememberability
  1. The property of being rememberable.
memorability
  1. The quality or state of being memorable.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Thinking beyond conventional boundaries and striving for differentiation and memorability is essential to the effectiveness of our design.”
      “However, differences in recall could be due to variations in the memorability of the associations to neutral and emotional words.”
      “Memorability Must contain an element of memorability so that the logo stays at the forefront of potential clients' minds.”
memoisation
  1. (British spelling) Alternative spelling of memoization
memorialiser
  1. Alternative form of memorializer
memorizability
  1. The quality of being memorizable.
memorialist
  1. A writer of memorials.
  2. Examples:
    1. “The commissioners transmitted the paper to Paris, and appointed the memorialist to the higher rank of acting commander.”
      “That your memorialist is a native of Africa, and has a knowledge of the manners and customs of the inhabitants of that country.”
      “Therefore your memorialist humbly prays your Lordship's encouragement and support in the undertaking.”
memoriser
  1. Alternative spelling of memorizer
remembraunce
  1. Obsolete form of remembrance.
memorizer
  1. One who, or that which, memorizes.
  2. Examples:
    1. “He went on to build a rather different persona as the suit-wearing master of metrics, glasses at the tip of his nose, a memorizer of business minutiae.”
      “Its Grand Ocean memorizer is one of the world's best products, which can be extended unlimitedly and distributes memory writing smartly.”
memoryful
  1. (rare) An amount that is held by the memory.
memorat
  1. Alternative spelling of memorate
memoranduming
  1. (rare) The writing of memoranda.
memoirist
  1. A person who writes a memoir.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The memoirist eloquently chronicled her life experiences in her best-selling autobiography.”
      “Purists may cavil at the liberties taken with scientific objectivity, but as a memoirist, he is a mensch, a prince among primates.”
      “He was a playwright and memoirist who clearly believed in a writer's artistic license to embroider.”
remembering
  1. The act by which something is remembered.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Her remembering of the past as present should prompt us to acknowledge our complicity, as global bystanders, in the pain and misery that she and others are subjected to.”
      “In this arduous process, her remembering of others' pain can serve as a vehicle for expanding her empathy beyond the narrow circle of caring.”
memorableness
  1. memorability
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “As it turns out, both entertainment value and memorableness are tricky quantities which psychologists are still just starting to classify.”
      “In the cultural model, the measure of success is a work's impact, influence and memorableness.”
      “But the bomber nicknamed for a faraway girlfriend had a certain memorableness.”
memoirs
  1. plural of memoir
  2. (plural) an autobiography
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “Some writers' memoirs make you so fond of them that you wish you knew them personally.”
      “Through their numerous recensions, Sarah's memoirs became more rather than less embittered.”
      “Most contemporary memoirs leave you feeling cheap, like you've been a fly on the wall at a particularly horrific therapy session.”
memorialisations
  1. plural of memorialisation
memorializations
memorialisers
  1. plural of memorialiser
memorializers
  1. plural of memorializer
memorisations
  1. plural of memorisation
remembraunces
  1. plural of remembraunce
memorizations
  1. plural of memorization
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “All of our Veda mantras, Agamas, Puranas and Smritis would have been forgotten but for the painstaking memorizations by generations of priests.”
      “Who needs to memorize 52 cards in a deck, or the first few hundred digits of pi? Third, I don't think learning all those memorizations had any effect on my memory.”
      “The program allows analog calculations, booleans operations, memorizations, treatment of the ten relays, four analog ouputs and mine display views.”
rememorations
  1. plural of rememoration
memorabilities
memorialists
  1. plural of memorialist
rememberings
remembrances
  1. plural of remembrance
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “When covering Glenn's early years, it reads like a mother's fond remembrances.”
      “From my vague remembrances of her, the role of Snow White seemed, at least physically fitting for her.”
      “My war museum must have empty rooms that will be filled with personal remembrances.”
memoranda
  1. plural of memorandum
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The Luftwaffe staff drew special attention to this collateral benefit in several of its tactical memoranda.”
      “He sent a flurry of memoranda to Johnson in May and June outlining the issues and his intended actions.”
      “More than 60 legal memoranda have been prepared by the Section, amounting to several hundred pages of text.”
memorandums
  1. plural of memorandum
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “We're taught how to write case briefs, memorandums, appellate briefs, and case citations.”
      “Seven memorandums have been submitted, pointing out the poor quality of potable water, the need for medical facilities and tests every week.”
      “Where appropriate, memorandums of understanding will be developed to detail collaborative contributions and agreements.”
rememberers
  1. plural of rememberer
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Compared with the run-of-the-mill rememberers, exceptional memorizers displayed greater activity in three brain areas linked to spatial memory and navigation.”
      “The last first language speakers of Auregnais, the dialect of Norman spoken on Alderney, died during the 20th century, although some rememberers still exist.”
      “Finally, the purposeful existentiality of this suffering helps rememberers to avoid negative or nihilistic aspects of suffering and to reflect upon its meaningful aspects.”
memorisers
  1. plural of memoriser
  2. Examples:
    1. “A group of young Emirati schoolchildren and Quran memorisers read verses from the Quran and offered prayers to Almighty Allah for Shaikh Zayed.”
      “He said not all memorisers have the chance to appear in public on the stage, and sometimes a few are sent back home.”
      “Bu Melha said the DIHQA is dedicated to encourage Quran memorisers, imams and muezzins, irrespective of how old they are.”
memoirists
memorizers
  1. plural of memorizer
  2. Examples:
    1. “Readers of Downbeat, vibraphone freaks, alternate-take memorizers, musicians of one kind or another.”
      “More than anything, what differentiates top memorizers from the second tier is that they approach memorization like a science.”
      “The honoring ceremony for 700 female Quran reciters and memorizers was held on June 8, in the city of Balikesir in Turkey.”
memorials
  1. plural of memorial
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Dasan took his time to makes memorials for all his people, 500 crosses with an amaryllis flower tied to it.”
      “For months he pestered her with calls, and persecuted her with letters, memorials, and remonstrances.”
      “In no time at all the firths were fishless deserts and the sea a cemetery without memorials.”
memorates
  1. plural of memorate
memorists
  1. plural of memorist
memorats
  1. plural of memorat
memories
  1. plural of memory
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Some of our strongest memories are triggered by the sudden waft of a particular scent.”
      “Through most of the two hours, Ann remembered and abreacted until the memories had no further power to torment her.”
      “I had my best results at a grand slam and my best memories stem from Wimbledon.”
memos
mems
  1. plural of mem
  2. Examples:
    1. “I should be very sorry to lose it, for there were in it some botanical mems.”
      “Particular embodiments of both methods may be applied to fabricating microelectromechanical systems especially MEMS mirrors.”
      “The gyroscopes sense angular motion by measuring the Coriolis effect induced by rotation, using a vibrating MEMS structure.”
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