Advertisement

Advertisement

recency

[ ree-suhn-see ]

noun

  1. the fact of being recent, of having occurred a relatively short time ago; closeness of a past event to a later past time or to the present:

    The general nervousness during that period was mostly due to the recency of the great stock market crash.

  2. the fact of being more recent than something else and therefore more salient or memorable (often used attributively):

    The data might be showing recency effects—that is, choices presented later were more likely to be selected by participants.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Discover More

Example Sentences

Even among those who manage to finish, more than 40 percent of recent graduates aged 22 to 27 are underemployed, meaning that they’re working in jobs that don’t require their degree, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reports.

Castel blamed part of the recent rise in cases on fatigue with following safety protocols such as social distancing, wearing masks and staying at home.

The Smithsonian will close the National Zoo and the seven museums it had reopened in stages since July and the National Gallery of Art will shutter its galleries in response to the Washington region’s recent spike in coronavirus cases.

On a recent visit, I was able to see Kehinde Wiley’s popular portrait of Barack Obama without waiting in a line fit for a ride at Disney World.

“The Pull of the Stars” Donoghue’s 13th novel — set during the 1918 Great Flu, the deadliest pandemic in recent history — was, by mere coincidence, published as the coronavirus was sweeping the globe.

The factors that strengthen these tendencies or connections are the frequency, recency, primacy, and vividness of experience.

That Mount Rainier should still retain so much of its internal heat is not surprising in view of the recency of its eruptions.

Once more, then, we find in our results no correspondence between recency of defect and quick mental recovery.

What particular word shall be recalled depends on the frequency, recency and intensity of past linkage.

We must add to this the comparative recency of geological study in this rich field.

Advertisement

Word of the Day

inveterate

[in-vet-er-it ]

Meaning and examples

Start each day with the Word of the Day in your inbox!

By clicking "Sign Up", you are accepting Dictionary.com Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policies.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


receiving setrecency effect