NOUN
  1. the ability to recall past occurrences
  2. the case history of a medical patient as recalled by the patient
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How To Use anamnesis In A Sentence

  • Find it before it rots or is taped over, rip it to DVD or VCD, and upload it before it's gone, because the internet is all about anamnesis, if it's about anything.
  • Behan's recollection of his heroic role in the Rising is anamnesis, par excellence, of course.
  • He twice uses the term ‘represent’ with its unmistakable reference to the Latin anamnesis, usually associated with the making present of Christ's one atoning sacrifice in the celebration of the Eucharist.
  • Christianity pursues the reconciliation of differences through holy communion, by remembrance and anticipation, anamnesis and prolepsis.
  • It is my understanding that "anamnesis" means something more like "making present" than quite what we mean by remembrance. Stand Firm
  • The influence of Brand on the document was palpable and emphasized anamnesis, community with Christ and his body, the church, Eucharistic sacrifice, and the foretaste of the Messianic banquet.
  • This is called anamnesis, and it is the basis for our understanding of the Mass.
  • All that remains to Kaplan's industrial laborers is the nostalgia that blocks every aspect of anamnesis, even the capacity to forget.
  • In effect the Latin texts provide for congregational participation, respectively, in the anamnesis, the communion-epiclesis, and the intercessions.
  • The patient had a history of diabetes, but family anamnesis was unremarkable.
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