释义 |
recall
re·call R0078400 (rĭ-kôl′)tr.v. re·called, re·call·ing, re·calls 1. To ask or order to return: recalled all workers who had been laid off.2. a. To remember; recollect: I don't recall her name.b. To be reminiscent of; seem similar to: a movie that recalls the screwball comedies of the 1940s.c. To summon back to awareness of or concern with the subject or situation at hand: The opening of the door recalled me from my reverie.3. To cancel, take back, or revoke: recall a move in chess.4. To bring back; restore: "an atmosphere of penetrating fragrance, the gentle potency of which had recalled her from her death-like faintness" (Nathaniel Hawthorne).5. To subject (an elected official) to a recall.6. To request return of (a product) to the manufacturer, as for necessary repairs or adjustments.n. (also rē′kôl′)1. The act of recalling or summoning back, especially an official order to return: the recall of the ambassador.2. A signal, such as a bugle call, used to summon troops back to their posts.3. The ability to remember information or experiences: has total recall of the accident.4. The act of revoking: the recall of an answer in a spelling bee.5. a. The procedure by which an elected official may be removed from office by popular vote.b. The right to employ this procedure.6. A request by the manufacturer of a product that has been identified as defective to return it, as for necessary repairs or adjustments. re·call′a·ble adj.recall (rɪˈkɔːl) vb (tr) 1. (may take a clause as object) to bring back to mind; recollect; remember2. to order to return; call back permanently or temporarily: to recall an ambassador. 3. to revoke or take back4. to cause (one's thoughts, attention, etc) to return from a reverie or digression5. poetic to restore or reviven6. the act of recalling or state of being recalled7. revocation or cancellation8. the ability to remember things; recollection9. (Military) military (esp formerly) a signal to call back troops, etc, usually a bugle call: to sound the recall. 10. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) US the process by which elected officials may be deprived of office by popular vote reˈcallable adjre•call (v. rɪˈkɔl; n. rɪˈkɔl, ˈri kɔl for 7-13;) v.t. 1. to bring back from memory; recollect; remember. 2. to call or order back: to recall an ambassador. 3. to bring (one's thoughts, attention, etc.) back to matters previously considered. 4. to revoke or withdraw: to recall a promise. 5. to revive. n. 6. an act of recalling. 7. recollection; remembrance. 8. the act or possibility of revoking something. 9. the removal or the right of removal of a public official from office by a vote of the people. 10. a summons by a manufacturer for the return of a product, as from a consumer, because of a known defect or hazard in it. [1575–85] re•call′a•ble, adj. recall- lethologica - If you cannot recall the precise word for something, you have a case of lethologica, which may lead you to an obsession with trying to recall it—loganamnosis.
- remember - From Latin rememorari, "recall to mind."
- reduce, reduct - Reduce first meant "bring back or recall in memory" or "take back or refer (a thing) to its origin," from Latin reducere, "lead back"; reduct means "simplify."
- tartle - From Scottish, to hesitate in recognizing a person or thing, as happens when you are introduced to someone whose name you cannot recall; so you say, "Pardon my tartle!"
recall Past participle: recalled Gerund: recalling
Present |
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I recall | you recall | he/she/it recalls | we recall | you recall | they recall |
Preterite |
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I recalled | you recalled | he/she/it recalled | we recalled | you recalled | they recalled |
Present Continuous |
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I am recalling | you are recalling | he/she/it is recalling | we are recalling | you are recalling | they are recalling |
Present Perfect |
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I have recalled | you have recalled | he/she/it has recalled | we have recalled | you have recalled | they have recalled |
Past Continuous |
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I was recalling | you were recalling | he/she/it was recalling | we were recalling | you were recalling | they were recalling |
Past Perfect |
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I had recalled | you had recalled | he/she/it had recalled | we had recalled | you had recalled | they had recalled |
Future |
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I will recall | you will recall | he/she/it will recall | we will recall | you will recall | they will recall |
Future Perfect |
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I will have recalled | you will have recalled | he/she/it will have recalled | we will have recalled | you will have recalled | they will have recalled |
Future Continuous |
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I will be recalling | you will be recalling | he/she/it will be recalling | we will be recalling | you will be recalling | they will be recalling |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been recalling | you have been recalling | he/she/it has been recalling | we have been recalling | you have been recalling | they have been recalling |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been recalling | you will have been recalling | he/she/it will have been recalling | we will have been recalling | you will have been recalling | they will have been recalling |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been recalling | you had been recalling | he/she/it had been recalling | we had been recalling | you had been recalling | they had been recalling |
Conditional |
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I would recall | you would recall | he/she/it would recall | we would recall | you would recall | they would recall |
Past Conditional |
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I would have recalled | you would have recalled | he/she/it would have recalled | we would have recalled | you would have recalled | they would have recalled | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | recall - a request by the manufacturer of a defective product to return the product (as for replacement or repair)callbackasking, request - the verbal act of requesting | | 2. | recall - a call to return; "the recall of our ambassador"call - a request; "many calls for Christmas stories"; "not many calls for buggywhips" | | 3. | recall - a bugle call that signals troops to returnbugle call - a signal broadcast by the sound of a bugle | | 4. | recall - the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort); "he has total recall of the episode"recollection, reminiscenceremembering, memory - the cognitive processes whereby past experience is remembered; "he can do it from memory"; "he enjoyed remembering his father"mind - recall or remembrance; "it came to mind"reconstructive memory, reconstruction - recall that is hypothesized to work by storing abstract features which are then used to construct the memory during recallreproductive memory, reproduction - recall that is hypothesized to work by storing the original stimulus input and reproducing it during recallregurgitation - recall after rote memorization; "he complained that school was just memorization and regurgitation" | | 5. | recall - the act of removing an official by petitionabrogation, repeal, annulment - the act of abrogating; an official or legal cancellationU.S.A., United States, United States of America, US, USA, America, the States, U.S. - North American republic containing 50 states - 48 conterminous states in North America plus Alaska in northwest North America and the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific Ocean; achieved independence in 1776 | Verb | 1. | recall - recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection; "I can't remember saying any such thing"; "I can't think what her last name was"; "can you remember her phone number?"; "Do you remember that he once loved you?"; "call up memories"recollect, remember, call back, call up, retrieve, thinkknow - perceive as familiar; "I know this voice!"recognize, recognise - perceive to be the samebrush up, refresh, review - refresh one's memory; "I reviewed the material before the test" | | 2. | recall - go back to something earlier; "This harks back to a previous remark of his"hark back, come back, returndenote, refer - have as a meaning; "`multi-' denotes `many' "go back, recur - return in thought or speech to something | | 3. | recall - call to mind; "His words echoed John F. Kennedy"echoresemble - appear like; be similar or bear a likeness to; "She resembles her mother very much"; "This paper resembles my own work" | | 4. | recall - summon to return; "The ambassador was recalled to his country"; "The company called back many of the workers it had laid off during the recession"call backsend for, call - order, request, or command to come; "She was called into the director's office"; "Call the police!" | | 5. | recall - cause one's (or someone else's) thoughts or attention to return from a reverie or digression; "She was recalled by a loud laugh"focus, pore, rivet, center, centre, concentrate - direct one's attention on something; "Please focus on your studies and not on your hobbies" | | 6. | recall - make unavailable; bar from sale or distribution; "The company recalled the product when it was found to be faulty"strike down, cancel - declare null and void; make ineffective; "Cancel the election results"; "strike down a law"retire - withdraw from circulation or from the market, as of bills, shares, and bondsissue, supply - circulate or distribute or equip with; "issue a new uniform to the children"; "supply blankets for the beds" | | 7. | recall - cause to be returned; "recall the defective auto tires"; "The manufacturer tried to call back the spoilt yoghurt"call back, withdraw, call intake - take into one's possession; "We are taking an orphan from Romania"; "I'll take three salmon steaks"decommission - withdraw from active service; "The warship was decommissioned in 1998" |
recallverb1. recollect, remember, call up, evoke, summon up, reminisce about, call to mind, look or think back to, mind (dialect) I recalled the way they had been dancing together.2. bring to mind, call up, evoke, conjure up, call to mind, put you in mind of His speech recalled that famous election pledge of his father.3. call back, bring back, order back, summon back Parliament was recalled from its summer recess.4. annul, withdraw, call in, take back, cancel, repeal, call back, revoke, retract, rescind, nullify, countermand, abjure More than 3,000 cars were recalled because of a brake problem.noun1. recollection, memory, remembrance He had a total recall of her spoken words.2. calling back, bringing back, summons, summoning back The recall of the ambassador is a public sign of concern.3. annulment, withdrawal, repeal, cancellation, retraction, revocation, nullification, rescission, rescindment The appellant sought a recall of the order.recallverb1. To renew an image or thought in the mind:bethink, mind, recollect, remember, reminisce, retain, revive, think.Idiom: bring to mind.2. To take back or remove:lift, repeal, rescind, reverse, revoke.3. To disavow (something previously written or said) irrevocably and usually formally:abjure, recant, retract, take back, withdraw.noun1. The power of retaining and recalling past experience:memory, recollection, remembrance, reminiscence.2. The act of reversing or annulling:repeal, rescission, reversal, revocation.Translationsrecall (riˈkoːl) verb1. to order (a person etc) to return. He had been recalled to his former post. 召回 召回2. to remember. I don't recall when I last saw him. 記起 回想,记起 noun1. an order to return. the recall of soldiers to duty. 召回令 撤回命令2. (ˈriːkoːl) the ability to remember and repeat what one has seen, heard etc. He has total recall. 回想 回忆
recall
beyond recallImpossible to change, reverse, retrieve, or restore. The union is immovable on the issue, so it looks like a workers' strike is beyond recall now. Your truck's engine is completely shot; I'm afraid it's beyond recall at this point.See also: beyond, recallrecall from (something)1. To be able to remember someone or something from some event, location, or previous point in time. I recall from my childhood a place beside the lake where my friends and I used to spend our summers. I think I recall him from a television show I used to watch. I recall a few things about that from my last job.2. To summon, request, or call someone back from some place or thing. We've already recalled our workers from the offices there. The prime minister announced that he would be recalling all foreign aides and ambassadors from the region until the unrest began to settle.3. To jolt or restore someone back to clarity of mind from some mental lapse. The sound of the chalk screeching on the board recalled me from my daydream. Use these smelling salts to recall her from her stupor.4. To command or request that a product be returned to a manufacturer from something or some place. The company was forced to recall the product from store shelves after a third case of poisoning came to light. The automaker is recalling their newest model of sedan after a major concern about its airbag system was raised with regulators.See also: recallrecall to (someone or something)1. To cause someone to remember or think about something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "recall" and "to." The tune on the radio recalls to me my time spent in Paris as an undergraduate. One scene in particular recalled an event to me that I hadn't thought about in nearly 20 years.2. To summon, request, or call someone back to some place or thing. A noun or pronoun is used between "recall" and "to." The specialist recalled me to her office in Chicago for a follow-up evaluation. The president has recalled our ambassadors back to the United States, effective immediately.3. To jolt or restore someone back to some clear, focused, or purposeful state of mind. A noun or pronoun is used between "recall" and "to." Her impassioned letter recalled me to a sense of purpose I hadn't felt in years. Use these smelling salts to recall her to consciousness.See also: recallrecall to mindTo cause one to remember or think about something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "recall" and "to." The tune on the radio recalls to mind my time spent in Paris as an undergraduate. One scene in particular recalled an event to mind that I hadn't thought about in nearly 20 years.See also: mind, recallrecall someone from somethingto call someone back from something or some place. The president recalled our ambassador from the war-torn country. I was recalled from retirement to help out at the office.See also: recallrecall someone or something from somethingto remember someone or something from some event or some place. I recall someone by that name from my days at the university. Mary recalled the appropriate fact from her history studies.See also: recallrecall something to mindto cause [someone] to remember something. The events of the day recall similar days in the past to mind. This book recalls a similar book published some years ago to mind.See also: mind, recallrecall something to someoneto bring something to the mind of someone. Your comments recall another event to me—something that happened years ago. What you just said recalled an old saying to me.See also: recallword (once) spoken is past recallingProv. Once you have said something, you cannot undo the result of having said it. Hilary apologized for having called Mark's suit cheap, but Mark was still offended. A word once spoken is past recalling.See also: past, recall, spoken, wordbeyond recallIrreversible, irretrievable, as in We can't repair this screen-it's beyond recall, or It's too late to cancel our plans-they're beyond recall. This idiom employs recall in the sense of revoking or annulling something. [Mid-1600s] See also: beyond, recallbeyond reˈcall impossible to bring back to the original state; impossible to remember: When the plans to build the new highway were announced, we knew that the beautiful landscape around our house would soon be damaged beyond recall.See also: beyond, recallrecall
recall US the process by which elected officials may be deprived of office by popular vote recall[′rē‚kȯl] (communications) A flashing signal to the attendant's switchboard; the operator may be recalled by the subscriber operating the switch hook of the subscriber's set. recall
recall 1. (re-kawl´) to remember or recollect.2. (re´kawl) the process of bringing information back into consciousness.re·call (rē'kawl), The process of remembering thoughts, words, and actions of a past event in an attempt to recapture actual happenings.recall Medical devices noun The retiring of a device from the medical marketplace or suspension of its approval pending investigation or addressing of a defect. Medspeak-UK verb To request—usually by letter—that a woman return for a repeat cervical screening test, which is done in 3- or 5-year cycles under the NHS Cervical Screening Programme. Neurology noun The process of bringing a memory into consciousness; the recollection of past facts, events, feeling; invoking the memory of experiences or learned information. verb To remember experiences or learned information. Public health noun A public announcement by a manufacturer or producer of a particular product—e.g., motor vehicles, toys, drugs, medical devices, foods—asking the purchaser of a particular product or model to return the goods as they may have defects posing a health hazard; the collecting by a manufacturer of a product that has been deemed unsafe, or otherwise unsuitable, after being sold or available for sale to the public.recall Neurology noun–pronounced ree CALL The process of bringing a memory into consciousness; the recollection of past facts, events, feelings; invoking of the memory of experiences or learned information verb–pronounced ricall To remember experiences or learned information. See Class recall, Immediate recall, Memory Public health noun–pronounced REE call, drug recallA public announcement by a manufacturer or producer of a particular product–eg, motor vehicles, toys, drugs, medical devices, foods, asking the purchaser of a particular 'lot, ' or model to return the goods as they may have defects posing a health hazard. re·call (rē'kawl) 1. The process of remembering thoughts, words, and actions of a past event in an attempt to recapture actual happenings. 2. To remove a product (e.g., drug) from use due to possible safety issues with the product. Recall Related to Recall: Total RecallRecallThe right or procedure by which a public official may be removed from a position by a vote of the people prior to the end of the term of office. Recall is the retiring of an elected officer by a vote of the electorate. Some state constitutions prescribe the procedure that must be followed in a recall—for example, requiring the filing of a petition containing the signatures of a specific number of qualified voters. TO RECALL, international law. To deprive a minister of his functions; to supersede him. RECALL
Acronym | Definition |
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RECALL➣Repairing Errors in Computer Aided Language Learning | RECALL➣Rosiglitazone Effects on Cognition for Adults in Later Life (clinical trial) |
recall Related to recall: Total RecallSynonyms for recallverb recollectSynonyms- recollect
- remember
- call up
- evoke
- summon up
- reminisce about
- call to mind
- look or think back to
- mind
verb bring to mindSynonyms- bring to mind
- call up
- evoke
- conjure up
- call to mind
- put you in mind of
verb call backSynonyms- call back
- bring back
- order back
- summon back
verb annulSynonyms- annul
- withdraw
- call in
- take back
- cancel
- repeal
- call back
- revoke
- retract
- rescind
- nullify
- countermand
- abjure
noun recollectionSynonyms- recollection
- memory
- remembrance
noun calling backSynonyms- calling back
- bringing back
- summons
- summoning back
noun annulmentSynonyms- annulment
- withdrawal
- repeal
- cancellation
- retraction
- revocation
- nullification
- rescission
- rescindment
Synonyms for recallverb to renew an image or thought in the mindSynonyms- bethink
- mind
- recollect
- remember
- reminisce
- retain
- revive
- think
verb to take back or removeSynonyms- lift
- repeal
- rescind
- reverse
- revoke
verb to disavow (something previously written or said) irrevocably and usually formallySynonyms- abjure
- recant
- retract
- take back
- withdraw
noun the power of retaining and recalling past experienceSynonyms- memory
- recollection
- remembrance
- reminiscence
noun the act of reversing or annullingSynonyms- repeal
- rescission
- reversal
- revocation
Synonyms for recallnoun a request by the manufacturer of a defective product to return the product (as for replacement or repair)SynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a call to returnRelated Wordsnoun a bugle call that signals troops to returnRelated Wordsnoun the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort)SynonymsRelated Words- remembering
- memory
- mind
- reconstructive memory
- reconstruction
- reproductive memory
- reproduction
- regurgitation
noun the act of removing an official by petitionRelated Words- abrogation
- repeal
- annulment
- U.S.A.
- United States
- United States of America
- US
- USA
- America
- the States
- U.S.
verb recall knowledge from memorySynonyms- recollect
- remember
- call back
- call up
- retrieve
- think
Related Words- know
- recognize
- recognise
- brush up
- refresh
- review
verb go back to something earlierSynonymsRelated Wordsverb call to mindSynonymsRelated Wordsverb summon to returnSynonymsRelated Wordsverb cause one's (or someone else's) thoughts or attention to return from a reverie or digressionRelated Words- focus
- pore
- rivet
- center
- centre
- concentrate
verb make unavailableRelated WordsAntonymsverb cause to be returnedSynonymsRelated Words |