memoried

English

Etymology

From memory + -ed.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmɛməɹiːd/, /ˈmɛməɹɪd/

Adjective

memoried (comparative more memoried, superlative most memoried)

  1. (poetic, literary or computing, in combination) Having a memory (of a given kind).
    • 1992, The Journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan, page 105:
      Recently, such price-reduction strategies have been replaced by a stable pricing system for our much more powerful, large-memoried machines of today.
  2. (obsolete, poetic, literary) Memorized, committed to memory.
    • 1818, John Keats, To—:
      And yet I never look on midnight sky, / But I behold thine eyes' well memoried light [...].
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