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Answer for the clue "One might have a photographic memory ", 9 letters:
scrapbook

Alternative clues for the word scrapbook

Word definitions for scrapbook in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. an album into which clippings or notes or pictures can be pasted

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Scrapbook is a horror film about a young woman who is kidnapped, held captive, and repeatedly beaten and raped for several days. The title refers to a scrapbook that her captor uses as a record of the ordeals of his victims.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also scrap-book , 1821, from scrap (n.1) + book (n.). As a verb, by 1879. Related: Scrapbooked ; scrapbooking .

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ He keeps scrapbooks full of them at his home in Bradwell, Milton Keynes. ▪ He pasted it into his socialist scrapbook . ▪ I knew it was a mistake to help my silly wee sister paste pictures into her scrapbook in the sitting room. ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. a book, similar to a notebook or journal, in which personal or family memorabilia and photos are collected and arranged vb. to create scrapbooks

Usage examples of scrapbook.

Diocesan reports, financial statements, dozens of scrapbooks crammed with clippings, both pasted in and loose.

I spent the afternoons with her scrapbooks, with their clippings about teas and the visiting Fabians, and the explorers with their magic lantern shows and their accounts of quaint native customs.

When they grab me I'll say I'm Hal Conrad and all I wanted to do was get things organized for the upcoming Ali-Arum press conference -- and then you'll have a new picture for your scrapbook, a frontpage shot in the News of 'famous boxing wizard Harold Conrad.

Following Rudderford's return to his own home, Pons spent some time going through a bulky compendium of newspaper accounts of his own compilation--a collection of scrapbooks containing many thousands of stray bits of information relative to frauds, murders, larcenies and other offenses against the law.

With his broom handle the youth pointed to my scrapbook, lying on the floor where the shill had thrown it.

I attracted a cult following and built up a four-star review scrapbook.

He saw the oak table in the middle of the room, its sturdy legs and round top etched with marks and writing that Bethan had encouraged the young Thom to make, for they - the scratched names, dates, even the games such as hangman and noughts and crosses, together with little clumsily rendered drawings - gave the wood an extra dimension, turned it into a receptacle for Thom's earliest energies, his imagination, his raw but enthusiastic carvings, such efforts absorbed by grain and fibre and sealed within to create a scrapbook of scratchings, a wooden time-capsule of early impressions.

The feeble fingers were never idle, and one of her pleasures was to make little things for the school children daily passing to and fro, to drop a pair of mittens from her window for a pair of purple hands, a needlebook for some small mother of many dolls, penwipers for young penmen toiling through forests of pothooks, scrapbooks for picture-loving eyes, and all manner of pleasant devices, till the reluctant climbers of the ladder of learning found their way strewn with flowers, as it were, and came to regard the gentle giver as a sort of fairy godmother, who sat above there, and showered down gifts miraculously suited to their tastes and needs.

His mind had gone midnight dark, and the darkness served as the background for a kind of scrapbook slide show.

She thumbed through the scrapbook, her fingers going numb as she discovered page after page of Tristan's golden image tarnished by ugly slurs and black innuendo.

Disturbed, I began going through the scrapbook more methodically, and a name I had heard from both Hugh Coventry and Suki Teeter jumped out at me from the first few articles.

She also liked to leaf through my Grandmother Adelia’s tooled-leather scrapbooks, with their dainty embossed invitations carefully glued in, their menus printed up at the newspaper office, and the subsequent newspaper clippings—the charity teas, the improving lectures illustrated by lantern slides—the hardy, amiable travellers to Paris and Greece and even India, the Sweden-borgians, the Fabians, the Vegetarians, all the various promoters of self-improvement, with once in a while something truly outré—a missionary to Africa, or the Sahara, or New Guinea, describing how the natives practised witchcraft or hid their women behind elaborate wooden masks or decorated the skulls of their ancestors with red paint and cowrie shells.