Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Memorize
1.
To cause to be remembered ; hence, to record.
[Obs.]
They neglect to
memorize
their conquest. Spenser.
They meant to . . .
memorize
another Golgotha. Shakespeare
2.
To commit to memory; to learn by heart.
Webster 1828 Edition
Memorize
MEM'ORIZE
,Verb.
T.
They neglect to memorize their conquest of the Indians.
1.
To cause to be remembered. They meant to memorize another Golgotha.
Definition 2024
memorize
memorize
English
Alternative forms
- (UK) memorise
Verb
memorize (third-person singular simple present memorizes, present participle memorizing, simple past and past participle memorized)
- To learn by heart, commit to memory.
- 2007, Don DeLillo, Underworld: A Novel, New York, N.Y.: Scribner Classics, ISBN 978-1-4165-9585-4, page 543:
- I wanted to look up velleity and quotidian and memorize the fuckers for all time, spell them, learn them, pronounce them syllable by syllable—vocalize, phonate, utter the sounds, say the words for all they're worth.
- 2009, A Practical Study of Argument (ISBN 0495603406), page 123:
- Many years ago there was a rumor that a basketball star (Jerry Lucas of the New York Knicks) had memorized the entire Manhattan phone book.
- 2009, Hailey Abbott, The Perfect Boy (ISBN 006197157X), page 258:
- She was so used to the way he moved—they'd been practicing together for years, and she'd memorized the way his body worked.
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Derived terms
Translations
to commit to memory, to learn by heart
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