“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.”
“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.”
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.
Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer.
“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.”
“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.”
“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
The act of committing something to memory or memorizing.
“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.”
“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.”
“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.”
“The Vietnam War films are forms of memory that function to provide collective rememberings, to construct history, and to subsume within them the experience of the veterans.”
“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.”