verb

definition

To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person).

synonyms

Examples of reminds in a Sentence

Reminds me of when we just met.

This spending of the best part of one's life earning money in order to enjoy a questionable liberty during the least valuable part of it reminds me of the Englishman who went to India to make a fortune first, in order that he might return to England and live the life of a poet.

She really reminds me of somebody.

And reminds me of the old days.

This reminds me that Dr. Hale used to give a personal touch to his letters to me by pricking his signature in braille.

Which reminds me - have you set a date yet?

Reminds me of someone else I know.

It's what reminds us of why we fight for humanity, and it's what makes us who we are.

I purchased it because it reminds me of my beloved Venice.

Right now it reminds me of Ben and me on the Amherst playground as kids arguing who owns the ball and who owns the bat.

Only I don't know what it is that reminds me of what.

We are most horrified by that which strikes closest to us and reminds us of our own mortality.

Swimming lessons reminds me, Vinnie.

It reminds us of a similar property of animal protoplasm which finds its expression in the rhythmic beat of the heart and other phenomena.

It merely reminds me of her.

Actually, it reminds me that I can't use it.

Which reminds me, you've got a ten o'clock today with your producer to plan out shooting for the next season, Ingrid said.

The choice of this man as a possible Italian liberator reminds us of the choice of Don Micheletto as general of the Florentine militia.

Cleisthenes, for instance, enfranchised many slaves and strangers, a course which certainly formed no part of the platform of Licinius, and which reminds us rather of Gnaeus Flavius somewhat later.

So far he reminds one of Herbart, who founded his " realistic " metaphysics on similar misunderstandings; except that, while Herbart concluded that the world consists of a number of simple " reals," each with a simple quality but unknown, Bradley concludes that reality is one absolute experience which harmonizes the supposed contradictions in an unknown manner.

They are written in the Doric dialect, with epic licences; the metre is dactylico-trochaic. Brief as they are, they show us what Longinus meant by calling Stesichorus "most like Homer"; they are full of epic grandeur, and have a stately sublimity that reminds us of Pindar.

In some of his books he reminds the reader of Turgeniev.

But the chief significance of the man is his "combination of zeal for legal observances with bold criticism of the Law itself as a whole and of its origin," which reminds us of the Clementine Recognitions.

He is writing a letter to encourage a little Christian society which he, a Jew, had founded in a distant Greek city; he reminds his readers of many things which he had told them when he was with them.

On the one hand, the tols or seminaries for teaching Sanskrit philosophy at Benares and Nadiya recall the schools of Athens and Alexandria; on the other, the importance .attached to instruction in accounts reminds us of the picture which Horace has left of a Roman education.

The close is fine, and reminds us of Job.

Science, he reminds us, is based on final inexplicabilities; and its attempts by theories of evolution to find an historical origin for humanity in rudimentary matter show a misconception of the problem.

But Schopenhauer reminds us that the welfare of society is a temporal and subordinate aim, never to be allowed to dwarf the full realization of our ideal being.

The existence of ciliated micrococci together with the formation of endospores - structures not known in the Cyanophyceae - reminds us of the flagellate Protozoa, e.g.

Some Commelinaceae and Marantaceae approach grasses in foliage; the leaves of Allium, &c., possess a ligule; the habit of some palms reminds one of the bamboos; and Juncaceae and a few Liliaceae possess an inconspicuous scarious perianth.

Elsewhere (b) Caleb the Kenizzite reminds Joshua of the promise at Kadesh; he asks that he may have the "mountain whereof Yahweh spake," and hopes to drive out the giants from its midst.

In the midst of the torrent of his most strenuous and passionate deliverances, he suddenly rises aloof from his immediate subject, and in all tranquillity reminds us of some permanent relation of things, some enduring truth of human life or human society.

Yet the very word reminds us of the legal piety which is characteristic of Western popular religion through all its history.

But ideas themselves are, he reminds us, " neither true nor false, being nothing but bare appearances," phenomena as we might call them.

Here, as elsewhere, the future master of Greece reminds us of Napoleon on the eve of the first empire.

The tortoise from which all things sprang, in a myth of the Satapatha-Brahmana, reminds us of the Iroquois turtle.

My trusted advisor reminds me I am a servant of Tiyan.

For reasons I can't quite fathom he reminds me of Tiny Tim.

It reminds me of when you see circus acrobats building a human pyramid all balanced on the central person.

Which reminds me of a story of a wealthy Texan businessman who held a large party at his ranch with 32 oz steaks galore.

Its warm, spicy, citrus fragrance reminds people of sunny climes, which is cheering in Winter.

The postmodern critique reminds us all that the future is not in the past!

The interior decoration reminds me of a Thai backpacking resort.

He reminds me of a little dormouse, the way he curls up, with his little feet all tucked up.

It reminds me of nothing so much as the old drinking fountain in Christchurch Park.

The opening to ' Someone Like You ' reminds everyone of New Orders influence over dance music.

When he gets even more excitable he reminds you of Robin Williams.

Anyway, that reminds me of an interesting factoid.

The Boy Least Likely To also reminds me a bit of the Russian futurists.

The project, to occupy 1.3 square kilometers, reminds me of " Mr.

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