Memorize \Mem"o*rize\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Memorized}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Memorizing}.] [See {Memory}.] 1. To cause to be remembered; hence, to record. [Obs.]
They neglect to memorize their conquest. --Spenser.
They meant to . . . memorize another Golgotha. --Shak.
2. To commit to memory; to learn by heart.
Instead of chemicals, the cameras use floppy disks that memorize images in analog, the same technology motion video uses.
A student whose extraordinary memory has enabled him to memorize 35,000 digits of an equation _ and pick up a few bar bets along the way _ is the subject of a $157,000 federal study, a newspaper reported today.
So badly do they want this that they will memorize the entire starting lineup of the New York Giants so as to be fluent in American football.
It's never preachy. No dates to memorize.
While one of you is cooking, the other can catch up on back issues of Literaturnaya Gazyeta or memorize some Pushkin.
She impressed relatives with her ability to memorize poetry and was soon writing her own.
But like most storytellers, Mr. O'Callahan doesn't memorize lines, so they'll always sound spontaneous.
"When you were very young," he says, "you could stay up overnight and memorize a whole course for a test.
Any time users have to deal directly with the operating system, rather than with a specific software application, the "shell" will present them with a menu of choices that will relieve them of having to memorize so many arcane commands.
Certainly it's a cut above the type of college course in which students squint at blurry slides and memorize dates without grasping the broader historical context.