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Definition of Random memory
1. Noun. The most common computer memory which can be used by programs to perform necessary tasks while the computer is on; an integrated circuit memory chip allows information to be stored or accessed in any order and all storage locations are equally accessible.
Terms within: Buffer, Buffer Storage, Buffer Store, Core, Magnetic Core, Ram Disk
Specialized synonyms: Core Memory, Magnetic Core Memory
Generic synonyms: Volatile Storage
Lexicographical Neighbors of Random Memory
Literary usage of Random memory
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Language Teaching in the Grades by Alice Woodworth Cooley (1913)
""A random memory" of Robert Louis Stevenson's forcibly illustrates the child's
habit of weaving the web of a poem or a story into his own life ..."
2. Language Teaching in the Grades by Alice Woodworth Cooley (1913)
""A random memory" of Robert Louis Stevenson's forcibly illustrates the child's
habit of weaving the web of a poem or a story into his own life ..."
3. Quiet Talks on Prayer by Samuel Dickey Gordon (1904)
"At random memory brings up a few very familiar passages, frequently quoted.
"Call unto Me, and I will answer thee, and will shew thee great things, ..."
4. The Twentieth Century American: Being a Comparative Study of the Peoples of by Harry Perry Robinson (1908)
"My quotations come from random memory, but the spirit is right It is the spirit
which Americans have been obliged to have since the days when the Fathers ..."