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Definition of Memoriter
1. adv. By, or from, memory.
Definition of Memoriter
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Memoriter
Literary usage of Memoriter
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sources of Effectiveness in Public Speaking: Psychological Principles by Charles Edmund Neil (1920)
"The memoriter Style of Delivery.—The difference between the Reading Style and
the memoriter ... The memoriter Style was formerly quite extensively used, ..."
2. Rationale of judicial evidence, specially applied to English practice, from by Jeremy Bentham (1827)
"But, in the language of classical education, the term memoriter is already in
... In its original import, the term memoriter is not more properly applicable ..."
3. Elocution: The Sources and Element of Its Power. A Text Book for Schools and by Joshua Hall McIlvaine (1876)
"A good memory is a source of power in all the methods of delivery, but most of
all in memoriter speaking-, FACILITY of recalling what has been committed to ..."
4. King's College Lectures on Elocution: Or, The Physiology and Culture of by Charles John Plumptre (1881)
"... of delivering written Speeches memoriter—Suggestions in reference to the Art
of Extempore Speaking—The Exordium, or introduction of a Speech—1'he ..."
5. Elocution: the Sources and Elements of Its Power: A Textbook for Schools and by Joshua Hall McIlvaine (1871)
"But its most important relations, of course, are those which it bears to memoriter
speaking, in which the whole discourse is delivered in the very words in ..."