Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
memorious
1590s, from French memorieux or directly from Medieval Latin memoriosus, from Latin memoria (see memory).\n
Wiktionary
memorious
a. 1 (context of a person English) having an unusually good memory 2 easy to remember, often for specific reason 3 Relating to memory.
Usage examples of "memorious".
Cicero wrote De Oratore, and at about the same time as, in Argentina, Borges was writing Funes the Memorious, the Russian neuropsychologist Alexander Luria encountered a patient with a peculiar problem, an apparent inability to forget.
Cicero wrote De Oratore, and at about the same time as, in Argentina, Borges was writing Funes the Memorious, the Russian neuropsychologist Alexander Luria encountered a patient with a peculiar problem, an apparent inability to forget.