Rember meaning

  1. Remember Definition & Meaning
  2. REMEMBER SOMEONE TO SOMEONE
  3. Remember definition and meaning
  4. remember verb


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Remember Definition & Meaning

I remember my first day of school like it was yesterday. Do you remember me? I used to work with you many years ago. Remember when we went hiking last summer? I remember telling him not to do it, but he did it anyway. I remember what that felt like. As far as I can remember, I've never been late to a meeting. I couldn't remember how to spell her name. I can't remember where I put that book. I remembered that I had left my wallet at home. What was it that I was going to ask him? I can't remember. See More Recent Examples on the Web Hefner was also remembered by the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association. — Alisha Ebrahimji, CNN, 10 June 2023 Mitchell is remembering last summer’s performance at the Newport Folk Festival. — Mikael Wood, Los Angeles Times, 10 June 2023 Just remember to wear a good mask on your way there and back. — Andrea Thompson, Scientific American, 9 June 2023 Fierro emphasized the importance of remembering those who died, including his daughter’s boyfriend, 22-year-old Raymond Green Vance, and the impact the tragedy had on their families. — Jay Valle, NBC News, 9 June 2023 Legendary stunt coordinator and second unit director Vic Armstrong remembers wandering around the set while it was still being built, sketching out action sequences in his head. — Devan Coggan, EW.com, 9 June 2023 Prager, the writer on LGBTQ+ history, remembers being congratulated when her books made a list of titles declared objectionable by a Republican Texas lawmaker. — Jorja Siemons,...

REMEMBER SOMEONE TO SOMEONE

• ayup • bump • bump into someone • counter-rally • cross • cross someone's path/cross paths with someone idiom • deal • encounter • farewell • hello • it's a date idiom • make yourself known idiom • meet-and-greet • meeting • reconvene • recross • red carpet • remember • roll out the red carpet idiom • town meeting

Remember definition and meaning

The old man remembers of his youth SYNONYMS 1. remember, recall, recollect refer to bringing back before the conscious mind things which exist in the memory. remember implies that a thing exists in the memory, though not actually present in the thoughts at the moment: to remember the days of one's childhood. recall implies a voluntary effort, though not a great one: to recall the words of a song. recollect implies an earnest voluntary effort to remember some definite, desired fact or thing: I cannot recollect the exact circumstances. ANTONYMS 1, 2. forget. I remember her perfectly. • American English: rɪˈmɛmbər/ • Arabic: يَتَذَكِّرُ • Brazilian Portuguese: lembrar • Chinese: • Croatian: zapamtiti • Czech: pamatovat si • Danish: huske • Dutch: herinneren (zich) • European Spanish: • Finnish: muistaa • French: se souvenir • German: erinnern (sich) • Greek: θυμάμαι • Italian: • Japanese: 思い出す • Korean: • Norwegian: huske • Polish: zapamiętać • European Portuguese: • Romanian: a ține minte • Russian: помнить • Latin American Spanish: • Swedish: komma ihåg • Thai: จำ • Turkish: hatırlamak • Ukrainian: пам'ятати • Vietnamese: nhớ

remember verb

[transitive, intransitive] to have or keep an image in your memory of an event, a person, a place, etc. from the past • remember somebody/something This is Carla. Do you remember her? • I don't remember my first day at school. • I'll always remember this holiday. • She doesn't remember a thing about it. • She fondly remembered her early years in India. • remember somebody/something as something He still remembered her as the lively teenager he'd known years before. • remember somebody/something from something I remember her from university . • remember somebody/something with something He will be remembered with affection by all who knew him. • As far as I can remember, this is the third time we've met. • remember doing something I remember seeing pictures of him when I was a child. • Do you remember switching the lights off before we came out? • I remember thinking what a brilliant idea that was. • I remember reading something in the paper about that. • I remember watching the film on television. • remember somebody/something doing something I can still vividly remember my grandfather teaching me to play cards. • I seem to remember the film being genuinely scary. • (formal) I can't remember his taking a single day off work. • remember (that)… I remember (that) we used to go and see them most weekends. Grammar Point want / like / love / hate / think want / like / love / hate / think • These verbs belong to a group known as stative verbs because they describe a state rather...