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  1. Dictionary

    re·call
    verb[rəˈkôl, rəˈkäl]
    recall (verb) · recalls (third person present) · recalled (past tense) · recalled (past participle) · recalling (present participle)
    1. bring (a fact, event, or situation) back into one's mind; remember:
      "I can still vaguely recall being taken to the hospital" · "Annie recalled the event that led to the rift in their friendship" · "he recalled how he felt at the time" · "“He was awfully fond of teasing people,” she recalled"
      • cause one to remember or think of:
        "the film's analysis of contemporary concerns recalls The Big Chill"
      • (recall someone/something to)
        bring the memory or thought of someone or something to (a person or their mind):
        "the smell of a black-currant bush has ever since recalled to me that evening"
      • call up (stored computer data) for processing or display:
        "students can recall templates or stored formats"
    2. officially order (someone) to return to a place:
      "the Panamanian ambassador was recalled from Peru"
      • select (a sports player) as a member of a team from which they have previously been dropped:
        "the Fulham defender has been recalled to the Welsh squad for the World Cup"
      • (of a manufacturer) request all the purchasers of (a certain product) to return it, as the result of the discovery of a fault.
      • bring (someone) out of a state of inattention or reverie:
        "her action recalled him to the present"
      • archaic
        revoke or annul (an action or decision):
        "he sent another note to Lord Grey recalling his earlier communication"
    noun[ˈrēˌkôl, ˈrēˌkäl]
    recall (noun) · recalls (plural noun)
    1. an act or instance of officially recalling someone or something:
      "a recall of Parliament"
      • NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
        the removal of an elected government official from office by a petition followed by voting.
    2. the action or faculty of remembering something learned or experienced:
      "he has amazing recall" · "people's understanding and subsequent recall of stories or events"
      • the proportion of the number of relevant documents retrieved from a database in response to an inquiry.
    Origin
    late 16th century (as a verb): from re- ‘again’ + call, suggested by Latin revocare or French rappeler ‘call back’.
    Translate recall to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. bring (a fact, event, or situation) back into one's mind; remember:
      call to mind
      think back on/to
      look back on
      cast one's mind back to
      reminisce about
      hark back to
      Opposite:
    2. officially order (someone) to return to a place:
      summon back
      order back
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