Mawson, C.O.S., ed. (18701938). Rogets International Thesaurus. 1922.
Class IV. Words Relating to the Intellectual Faculties
Division (I) Formation of Ideas
Section VI. Extension of Thought
1. To the Past
505. Memory.
NOUN:
MEMORY, remembrance; retentivity, retention, retentiveness; tenacity; veteris vestigia flamm [L.]; tablets of the memory; readiness.
retentive -, tenacious -, trustworthy -, capacious -, faithful -, correct -, exact -, ready -, prompt- memory; Memorys halls, Memorys pictures.
RECOLLECTION, reminiscence, recognition, recurrence, rememoration [rare], rememorance [rare]; retrospect, retrospection; that inward eye [Wordsworth]; afterthought.
REMINDER; suggestion (information) [See Information]; prompting &c. v.; hint, token of remembrance, memento, souvenir, keepsake, relic, memorandum (pl. memoranda); remembrancer, flapper; memorial (record) [See Record]; commemoration (celebration) [See Celebration].
things to be remembered, memorabilia.
MNEMONICS; art of -, artificial- memory; memoria technica [L.]; mnemotechnics, mnemotechny; Mnemosyne.
AIDS TO MEMORY, jogger [colloq.], memorandum book, notebook, prompt-book, engagement book.
FAME, celebrity, renown, reputation (repute) [See Repute].
VERB:
REMEMBER, mind [obsoles.], rememorate [rare]; retain the -memory, - remembrance- of; keep in view.
have -, hold -, bear -, carry -, keep-, retain- in or in the -thoughts, - mind, - memory, - remembrance; be in -, live in -, remain in -, dwell in -, haunt -, impress- ones -memory, - thoughts, - mind.
sink in the mind; run in the head; not be able to get it out of ones head; be deeply impressed with; rankle (revenge) [See Revenge].
recognize, bethink oneself, recall, call up, conjure up, retrace; look -, trace- -back, - backwards; think upon, look back upon; review; call -, recall -, bring- to -mind, - remembrance; carry ones thoughts back; rake up the past.
redeem from oblivion; keep the -memory alive, - wound green; tangere ulcus [L.]; keep the memory green, keep up the memory of; commemorate (celebrate) [See Celebration].
RECOLLECT, recur to the mind; flash on the mind, flash across the memory.
REMIND; suggest (inform) [See Information]; prompt; put -, keep- in mind; fan the embers; call up, summon up; renew; infandum renovare dolorem [L.]; task -, tax -, jog -, flap -, refresh -, rub up -, awaken- the memory; pull by the sleeve; bring back to the memory, put in remembrance, memorialize.
MEMORIZE, commit to memory; con, - over; fix -, rivet -, imprint -, impress -, stamp -, grave -, engrave -, store -, treasure up -, bottle up -, embalm -, bury -, enshrine- in the memory; load -, store -, stuff -, burden- the memory with; get -, have -, learn -, know -, say -, repeat- by -heart, - rote; get -, drive- into ones head; bury in the mind; say ones lesson; repeat, - like a parrot; have at ones fingers ends.
make a note of (record) [See Record].
ADJECTIVE:
REMEMBERING, remembered &c. v.; mindful, reminiscential; alive in memory; retained in the memory &c. v.; pent up in ones memory; fresh; green, - in remembrance; still vivid, rememorant [rare]; not -, never -to be erased, - to be forgotten; unforgettable or unforgetable; enduring, - in memory; unforgotten, present to the mind; within ones memory &c. n.; indelible; uppermost in ones thoughts; memorable (important) [See Importance]; suggestive.
ADVERB:
BY HEART, par cur [F.], by rote; without book, memoriter [L.].
IN MEMORY OF; in memoriam [L.]; memoriâ in ternâ [L.].
QUOTATIONS:
Manet altâ mente repostum.Vergil
Forsan et hæc olim meminisse juvabit.Vergil
Absens hres non erit.
beatæ memoriæ.
Briefly thyself remember.Lear
Mendacem memorem esse oportet.Quintilian
Memory, the warder of the brain.Macbeth
Parsque est meminisse doloris.Ovid
To live in hearts we leave behind, Is not to die.Campbell
Vox audita perit littera scripta manet.
Monumentum re perennius.Horace
Music, when soft voices die, Vibrates in the memory; Odours, when sweet violets sicken, Live within the sense they quicken.Shelley
Lest we forget.Kipling
They flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude.Wordsworth