0 past simple and past participle of recollect --
1 to remember something: --
[ + -ing verb ] He does not recollect seeing her at the party.
[ + question word ] Do you recollect where she went?
[ + (that) ] She suddenly recollected (that) she had left her jacket in the restaurant.
Can you recollect his name?
Hendrickse recollected the systematic discrimination inherent in his training.
A man in remission recollected a first memory at the age of four of crying lots and playing with the other children at the children's home.
Hypothetically, any number of stories could be recollected and articulated by victims and perpetrators of political violence, and all could appear to be equally plausible versions of the past.
The model was not able to represent processes that, starting from an incomplete input, the incomplete memory would develop into a stable state: the recollected memory.
For example, sitting down to play the piano in the morning you may find that the passages you labored over the night before are now effortlessly recollected.
Some of those with dementia reminisced about a previous period of their life, such as childhood, and recollected specific past experiences, at times reliving them in the present.
Then, the recollected version of the story even began to have detail added to it, but of course, detail drawn from the second culture.
The contributors typically recollected beginning to sing or play instruments prior to secondary school; the youngest began at six years of age.