[
UK
/æmnˈiːzɪˌæk/
]
[ US /æmˈniziˌæk/ ]
[ US /æmˈniziˌæk/ ]
NOUN
- a person suffering from amnesia
ADJECTIVE
- suffering from a partial loss of memory
How To Use amnesiac In A Sentence
- He might even say I'm his ex-wife and amnesiac and he's got to find me quickly. SOMEBODY
- An amnesiac, later identified asJake Lonergan Daniel Craig, recovers consciousness in the wilderness, horseless, a photo of a woman half-buried in the sand before him and a curious manacle or bracelet on his left arm, which, given the movie's title, suggests extraterrestrial origins. Cowboys & Aliens – review
- Even profound amnesiacs can usually recall how to perform daily activities.
- Whether or not this is a valid reading (the amnesiac flailing attached to the thickening stage in Clute's narrative grammar of horror seems at odds with the "quickened" state of a liminal hero), it seems entirely appropriate that the end-state of this singularity is a sort of total infusion of consciousness and worldscape, the hero telepathically aware of what everyone in the world is thinking. Notes on Strange Fiction: Seams
- An amnesiac mind is a bookstore whose books are shelved spine-in, so we cannot read the titles.
- Even profound amnesiacs can usually recall how to perform daily activities.
- There's a bit of a sag in the middle of the album, but on the whole Hail To The Thief is a noticeably more inspiring record than Kid A or Amnesiac.
- We are afraid of our loved ones becoming amnesiac - of seeing blank non-recognition in the faces of those who have been crucial in defining our identities.
- Even profound amnesiacs can usually recall how to perform daily activities.
- But what if the limpidly tutor to be a despotic maravilla blunderer, atonicity vet, calabura thunderer prisonbreak, increasing demurrage, hectogram crazy, and all tightly rijstaffel amnesiac of a guy? Rational Review