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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Memoirs

Memoir \Mem"oir\, or pl. Memoirs \Mem"oirs\, n. [F. m['e]moire, m., memorandum, fr. m['e]moire, f., memory, L. memoria. See Memory.]

  1. A memorial account; a history composed from personal experience and memory; an account of transactions or events (usually written in familiar style) as they are remembered by the writer. See History,

  2. 2. A memorial of any individual; a biography; often, a biography written without special regard to method and completeness.

  3. An account of something deemed noteworthy; an essay; a record of investigations of any subject; the journals and proceedings of a society.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
memoirs

"personal record of events," 1650s, plural of memoir.

Wiktionary
memoirs

n. 1 (plural of memoir English) 2 (context in the plural English) an autobiography

Wikipedia
Memoirs (Rox album)

Memoirs is the debut album by British singer Rox.

Memoirs (jazz album)

Memoirs is an album by pianist Paul Bley, bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Paul Motian recorded in 1990 and released on the Italian Soul Note label.

Memoirs (1984 film)

Memoirs is a 1984 drama film co-written and directed by Bashar Shbib based on the play The Memoirs Of Johnny Daze by John Becket Wimbs.

Usage examples of "memoirs".

Sully, who reports this fact in his Memoirs, does not throw the slightest doubt upon its exactness, and adds, that it was chiefly owing to the facility and ill-advised good-nature of his royal master that the bad example had so empoisoned the court, the city, and the whole country.

A memorable instance of the slightness of the pretext on which a man could be forced to fight a duel to the death, occurs in the Memoirs of the brave Constable, Du Guesclin.

Amelot de Houssaye, in his Memoirs, says, upon this subject, that duels were so common in the first years of the reign of Louis XIII, that the ordinary conversation of persons when they met in the morning was, "Do you know who fought yesterday?

Sir Jonah Barrington relates, in his Memoirs, that, previous to the Union, during the time of a disputed election in Dublin, it was no unusual thing for three-and-twenty duels to be fought in a day.

Simon, in his Memoirs, relates, with no little complacency, his share in this transaction.

Edward Gibbon so severely mulcted, has given, in the Memoirs of his Life and Writings, an interesting account of the proceedings in Parliament at this time.

In the Memoirs of the Duke of Guise upon the Revolution of Naples in 1647 and 1648, it is stated, that the manners, dress, and mode of life of the Neapolitan banditti were rendered so captivating upon the stage, that the authorities found it absolutely necessary to forbid the representation of dramas in which they figured, and even to prohibit their costume at the masquerades.