Memorise in a sentence as a verb

... Where each one of us has to memorise a web page in html format.

More that you have to memorise what the word is and what letters they're removing from it.

Fragments of memorised dialogue will pop into your head exactly when you need them, just like when you said Thank you.

I read a lot of amazing books because I couldn't be bothered to memorise facts in a sub-par geography class.

In the case of a new project, I build up a mental map of how the program works - and memorise the conceptual organisation.

People would still have to memorise the major timezone offsets, and this would negate any purported advantages.

Education teaches pupils to memorise and not understand.

'All that said, there are things it makes sense to memorise after you understand them - low level components where the speed gained in doing so allows you to use them in higher level abstractions.

Surely it would be better to learn history, economics, sociology and to read the international section of a newspaper than to memorise cities?

Playing the game doesn't just help you memorise the rules of algebra, it actually makes you think about how you use those rules to manipulate and transform expressions, which is the fundamental skill underlying "real" algebra.

I'll be charitable and assume you meant something like "using the same mechanism" but even that is barely less deranged as an advantage except for those so slow on the uptake that they can only memorise one way of doing things.

Memorise definitions

verb

commit to memory; learn by heart; "Have you memorized your lines for the play yet?"

See also: memorize learn