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Definition of Memoranda
1. Noun. A written proposal or reminder.
Generic synonyms: Note
Specialized synonyms: Aide-memoire, Position Paper
Definition of Memoranda
1. Noun. (plural of memorandum) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Memoranda
1. memorandum [n] - See also: memorandum
Lexicographical Neighbors of Memoranda
Literary usage of Memoranda
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1915)
"We find, then, that in this section Congress has authorized the Commission to
prescribe the forms of accounts, records, and memoranda, which shall include ..."
2. The Law of Evidence in Civil Cases by Burr W. Jones (1908)
"68 But, if there are any circumstances casting suspicion upon the memoranda, the
court should hold otherwise, as where the subsequent memorandum ..."
3. A Treatise on the Law of Negotiable Instruments: Including Bills of Exchange by John Warwick Daniel (1913)
"As to memoranda upon bills and notes, questions have frequently arisen as to whether
... Such memoranda, if made by agreement of the parties before signing, ..."
4. Auditing Theory and Practice by Robert Hiester Montgomery (1912)
"It is desirable that these credit memoranda be controlled by an account on the
general ledger. If this is done, it is possible for the auditor to satisfy ..."
5. The Quarterly Journal of Economics by Harvard University (1888)
"THE RATE OF INTEREST AND THE LAWS OF DISTRIBUTION, Sidney Webb NOTES AND memoranda.
Political Economy, Old and New. Extension of German Insurance ..."
6. The War with Mexico by Roswell Sabine Ripley (1849)
"THE WAR WITH MEXICO, CHAPTER I. General Scott's memoranda on Vera Cruz and its
Castle—Concentration of Forces under the Island of Lobos—Organization of his ..."
7. Report of the Annual Meeting (1855)
"The next series of memoranda had reference to the author's observations made in
sea-water aquaria, and were in continuation of those read at a former ..."
8. Life of Mrs. Siddons by Thomas Campbell (1834)
"But as she almost immediately passes into recollections of her second season,
and as I wished to break upon the continuity of her memoranda as little as ..."