Could someone explain the difference between these two words? Here is an example of using each.
- Your hair and eyes remind me of your mother.
- I can remember people's faces, but not their names.
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Could someone explain the difference between these two words? Here is an example of using each.
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This question is too basic; it can be definitively and permanently answered by a single link to a standard internet reference source designed specifically to find that type of information. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.
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Briefly, remind is a causative verb, while remember is reflexive. The full meaning of remind is something like "to cause someone to bring to mind". I.e.:
As demonstrated in the examples above, remind is ditransitive, meaning that it has two objects: the first is the person who is caused to remember, the second is the thing which is remembered. Remember, on the other hand, is reflexive, meaning that the subject acts on himself to bring the object to mind:
As this illustrates, remember is a simple transitive verb that has only one object: the thing that the subject brings into memory. Both verbs mean the same or nearly the same thing, but they differ in the way that the subject relates to the object. |
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They are very similar in meaning and each is used as part of the definition of the other. They can be used nearly interchangeably without much issue and they both relate to memory obviously, but probably the biggest distinction is that In your example ("Your hair and eyes remind me of your mother"), |
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You can remind someone else that it is your birthday this weekend, so that they remember to buy you a present. |
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