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词汇 mnemonic
释义

Definition of mnemonic in English:

mnemonic

noun nɪˈmɒnɪknəˈmɑnɪk
  • A system such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations which assists in remembering something.

    记忆方法;助记手段

    the usual mnemonic for star types is O Be A Fine Girl Kiss Me
    Example sentencesExamples
    • PEST (standing for political, economic, social, and technological change) roughly defines the scope of what is required but the word PEST is no more than a convenient mnemonic.
    • The tricolour is portrayed as a mnemonic of the country, which once stood for sacrifice, peace and fertility, and also as a country today fragmented by divisive political and religious forces.
    • It offered a succinct mnemonic for the significance invested in the engraving by Durer.
    • Because we sometimes learn and remember best through the use of mnemonics I have created the following mental touchstones.
    • The NO SPECS mnemonic often is used as a scoring system for severity of eye change.
    • I'll only say that we did have a mnemonic base, and now that we've changed to another combo, we still use a mnemonic.
    • S.T.O.P. refers to the survival mnemonic for Stop, Think, Observe and Plan.
    • As the CORE mnemonic device shows, it's all up to you.
    • A potentially helpful mnemonic for giving the diagnosis is ‘THREE’: time, hope, repetition, empathy and education.
    • The DREAMS mnemonic can help make the diagnosis when it is being considered.
    • The pocket guideline also features algorithms, tables and a treatment mnemonic.
    • When performing under divided attention at retrieval, an elaborate mnemonic may be produced at encoding and only partially accessed during retrieval.
    • To facilitate writing a question that will allow the student to seek out best evidence, use the teaching mnemonic PICO.
    • Short, succinct, and easy to remember - a mnemonic.
    • Though the four-syllable line is common in t'ai chi mnemonics as well, the pattern is not nearly as regular as in the pa kua verses.
    • The placement also made seeing the particulars of their relationship - they were perpendicular to each other, for instance - another mnemonic exercise.
    • It also makes a nice mnemonic for the various forms of election counterintelligence and disinformation.
    • Mike was given a chart that contained the three-step strategy and a mnemonic for SPACE.
    • They group together relevant action and zone modifiers into a single mnemonic.
    • Its database can be searched, browsed, and also enhanced with donations of other suitable mnemonics.
    Synonyms
    prompt, prompting, cue, nudge
adjective nɪˈmɒnɪknəˈmɑnɪk
  • 1Aiding or designed to aid the memory.

    助记(忆)的;用以助记的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The ‘young kids’ who ‘want to be them’ are provided with a mnemonic template to ensure that the desired identification is further solidified.
    • As London like other cities grew, in the eighteenth century into a city of secular institutions as well as churches, the possibilities for different mnemonic relationships proliferated.
    • Metrical speech not only produces some heightened form of attention that increases mnemonic retention; it also seems to provide innate physical pleasure in both the auditor and orator.
    • In this way it resonates with her own work, thematising and literalising mnemonic fragments and inscriptions - making conscious what has been unconscious or repressed.
    • Long ago, the U.S. Army developed a special mnemonic reporting format for combat information: SALUTE, meaning size, activity, location, unit, time, and equipment.
    • This symbol has a mnemonic function as one of the four injunctions of the Hoa Hao faith is to recognise one's debt to humanity.
    • This is so because their differences in mnemonic ability put them on a different scale.
    • To me, this isn't the occasional mnemonic hiccup, it's a cognitive hacking cough.
    • That is, attaching a story or other mnemonic device to what is to be recalled improves our memory.
    • They are forms of memory, mnemonic devices that encode the history of and knowledge about particular initiations.
    • She showed no evidence of using the mnemonic strategies she had practiced to help her solve the problems.
    • Photographs, for him, are mnemonic fields, but (as they are spatial cuts, not temporally extensive) they are inevitably severed from an immediate context.
    • Many kinds of mnemonic devices are based on this principle, such as the sentence codes you learned as a child to represent the notes of the treble clef or the rhymes that represent spelling rules.
    • But they also derived some very arcane and bizarre mnemonic devices with emblems or symbols that were meant to represent aspects of the Catholic faith.
    • Instructional materials for each strategy include mnemonic charts, graphic organizers, charts for graphing student progress, practice materials, reward certificates, and bulletin board ideas.
    • In fact, we can improve memory with mnemonic devices.
    • In other words, abstract, objective, and analytical thought reflects a literate society, and concrete, formulaic, and mnemonic thinking marks an oral culture.
    • When adjusted for differences in overall mnemonic ability, we demonstrate that the relationship between organization and learning remains invariant with normal aging.
    • It would appear that the parallel with medieval mnemonic techniques can only partially be justified.
    • The five ‘R's’ of the model (receive, relate, reflect, refine, and reconstruct) are a mnemonic device to represent the major areas of the experiential learning model.
    Synonyms
    figurative, representative, illustrative, emblematic, allegorical, parabolic, non-literal, allusive, denotative, connotative, suggestive
    1. 1.1 Relating to the power of memory.
      (与)记忆力(有关)的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Her poems often have a hip-hop feel, emphasizing repetition and the mnemonic power of the spoken word.
      • In this work, imagery is presented literally as a backdrop, reinforcing the mnemonic power of the artist's presence rather than representing it.
      • The second is that the mnemonic power of a life-size naturalistic effigy vivifies the presence of the dead during the second-burial ceremony, enabling mourners to treat the image as if it were alive.
      • The mnemonic power of poetry - the rhythmic organization of words as an aid to memory - however, is central, if not indispensable, to the transmission of a tradition in an oral society.
      • I thought, too, of mnemonic devices in memory palaces - but it is the power of language, with all its mysterious associations, that I was advocating.

Derivatives

  • mnemonically

  • adverb
    • In such works as the Homeric epics, stock formulas served to maintain the rhythm of the verse and were mnemonically useful for performers and listeners alike.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • One is the dual coding hypothesis that imaginal and verbal codes are mnemonically independent and, therefore, additive in their effects on item memory.
      • Yes, that spells CAMP for you mnemonically disposed readers.
      • The author offers one particularly intriguing example of how this sort of mnemonically based representation could include activities that modern scholars would describe as portrait making.
      • I often felt he was treating readers as if they had almost no attention span or were mnemonically challenged.
  • mnemonist

  • noun ˈniːmənɪst
    • Lia is almost a mnemonist and is able to recall every pot that she's ever looked and every catalog or book that she's read dealing with porcelain.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • You will find the same table and hints in many different places, as it is essentially public knowledge among mnemonists.
      • True mnemonists, or memorists have the ability to remember lists of words, number or pictures as an involuntary act.
      • For example, mnemonists with exceptional memory for numbers have near normal memory for letters.
      • From the fifth century B.C. through the eighteenth century, Western cultures produced and consumed collective memory with the aid of mnemonists who worked in mnemonic theaters.

Origin

Mid 18th century (as an adjective): via medieval Latin from Greek mnēmonikos, from mnēmōn 'mindful'.

Rhymes

anachronic, animatronic, bionic, Brythonic, bubonic, Byronic, canonic, carbonic, catatonic, chalcedonic, chronic, colonic, conic, cyclonic, daemonic, demonic, diatonic, draconic, electronic, embryonic, euphonic, harmonic, hegemonic, histrionic, homophonic, hypersonic, iconic, ionic, ironic, isotonic, laconic, macaronic, Masonic, Miltonic, monotonic, moronic, Napoleonic, philharmonic, phonic, Platonic, Plutonic, polyphonic, quadraphonic, sardonic, saxophonic, siphonic, Slavonic, sonic, stereophonic, subsonic, subtonic, symphonic, tectonic, Teutonic, thermionic, tonic, transonic, ultrasonic

Definition of mnemonic in US English:

mnemonic

nounnəˈmɑnɪknəˈmänik
  • A device such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations that assists in remembering something.

    记忆方法;助记手段

    the usual mnemonic for star types is O Be A Fine Girl Kiss Me
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I'll only say that we did have a mnemonic base, and now that we've changed to another combo, we still use a mnemonic.
    • S.T.O.P. refers to the survival mnemonic for Stop, Think, Observe and Plan.
    • The pocket guideline also features algorithms, tables and a treatment mnemonic.
    • To facilitate writing a question that will allow the student to seek out best evidence, use the teaching mnemonic PICO.
    • It also makes a nice mnemonic for the various forms of election counterintelligence and disinformation.
    • Its database can be searched, browsed, and also enhanced with donations of other suitable mnemonics.
    • Mike was given a chart that contained the three-step strategy and a mnemonic for SPACE.
    • They group together relevant action and zone modifiers into a single mnemonic.
    • A potentially helpful mnemonic for giving the diagnosis is ‘THREE’: time, hope, repetition, empathy and education.
    • The DREAMS mnemonic can help make the diagnosis when it is being considered.
    • PEST (standing for political, economic, social, and technological change) roughly defines the scope of what is required but the word PEST is no more than a convenient mnemonic.
    • As the CORE mnemonic device shows, it's all up to you.
    • Short, succinct, and easy to remember - a mnemonic.
    • The placement also made seeing the particulars of their relationship - they were perpendicular to each other, for instance - another mnemonic exercise.
    • Though the four-syllable line is common in t'ai chi mnemonics as well, the pattern is not nearly as regular as in the pa kua verses.
    • Because we sometimes learn and remember best through the use of mnemonics I have created the following mental touchstones.
    • It offered a succinct mnemonic for the significance invested in the engraving by Durer.
    • The tricolour is portrayed as a mnemonic of the country, which once stood for sacrifice, peace and fertility, and also as a country today fragmented by divisive political and religious forces.
    • The NO SPECS mnemonic often is used as a scoring system for severity of eye change.
    • When performing under divided attention at retrieval, an elaborate mnemonic may be produced at encoding and only partially accessed during retrieval.
    Synonyms
    prompt, prompting, cue, nudge
adjectivenəˈmɑnɪknəˈmänik
  • 1Aiding or designed to aid the memory.

    助记(忆)的;用以助记的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In this way it resonates with her own work, thematising and literalising mnemonic fragments and inscriptions - making conscious what has been unconscious or repressed.
    • That is, attaching a story or other mnemonic device to what is to be recalled improves our memory.
    • Metrical speech not only produces some heightened form of attention that increases mnemonic retention; it also seems to provide innate physical pleasure in both the auditor and orator.
    • In other words, abstract, objective, and analytical thought reflects a literate society, and concrete, formulaic, and mnemonic thinking marks an oral culture.
    • Many kinds of mnemonic devices are based on this principle, such as the sentence codes you learned as a child to represent the notes of the treble clef or the rhymes that represent spelling rules.
    • Long ago, the U.S. Army developed a special mnemonic reporting format for combat information: SALUTE, meaning size, activity, location, unit, time, and equipment.
    • It would appear that the parallel with medieval mnemonic techniques can only partially be justified.
    • Instructional materials for each strategy include mnemonic charts, graphic organizers, charts for graphing student progress, practice materials, reward certificates, and bulletin board ideas.
    • To me, this isn't the occasional mnemonic hiccup, it's a cognitive hacking cough.
    • She showed no evidence of using the mnemonic strategies she had practiced to help her solve the problems.
    • The ‘young kids’ who ‘want to be them’ are provided with a mnemonic template to ensure that the desired identification is further solidified.
    • In fact, we can improve memory with mnemonic devices.
    • This symbol has a mnemonic function as one of the four injunctions of the Hoa Hao faith is to recognise one's debt to humanity.
    • As London like other cities grew, in the eighteenth century into a city of secular institutions as well as churches, the possibilities for different mnemonic relationships proliferated.
    • But they also derived some very arcane and bizarre mnemonic devices with emblems or symbols that were meant to represent aspects of the Catholic faith.
    • Photographs, for him, are mnemonic fields, but (as they are spatial cuts, not temporally extensive) they are inevitably severed from an immediate context.
    • This is so because their differences in mnemonic ability put them on a different scale.
    • They are forms of memory, mnemonic devices that encode the history of and knowledge about particular initiations.
    • The five ‘R's’ of the model (receive, relate, reflect, refine, and reconstruct) are a mnemonic device to represent the major areas of the experiential learning model.
    • When adjusted for differences in overall mnemonic ability, we demonstrate that the relationship between organization and learning remains invariant with normal aging.
    Synonyms
    figurative, representative, illustrative, emblematic, allegorical, parabolic, non-literal, allusive, denotative, connotative, suggestive
    1. 1.1 Relating to the power of memory.
      (与)记忆力(有关)的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The mnemonic power of poetry - the rhythmic organization of words as an aid to memory - however, is central, if not indispensable, to the transmission of a tradition in an oral society.
      • I thought, too, of mnemonic devices in memory palaces - but it is the power of language, with all its mysterious associations, that I was advocating.
      • Her poems often have a hip-hop feel, emphasizing repetition and the mnemonic power of the spoken word.
      • In this work, imagery is presented literally as a backdrop, reinforcing the mnemonic power of the artist's presence rather than representing it.
      • The second is that the mnemonic power of a life-size naturalistic effigy vivifies the presence of the dead during the second-burial ceremony, enabling mourners to treat the image as if it were alive.

Origin

Mid 18th century (as an adjective): via medieval Latin from Greek mnēmonikos, from mnēmōn ‘mindful’.

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