TOP

Definition of recite verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

recite

verb
 
/rɪˈsaɪt/
 
/rɪˈsaɪt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they recite
 
/rɪˈsaɪt/
 
/rɪˈsaɪt/
he / she / it recites
 
/rɪˈsaɪts/
 
/rɪˈsaɪts/
past simple recited
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪd/
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪd/
past participle recited
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪd/
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪd/
-ing form reciting
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪŋ/
 
/rɪˈsaɪtɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. [transitive, intransitive] to say a poem, piece of literature, etc. that you have learned, especially to an audience
    • recite (something) (to somebody) Each child had to recite a poem to the class.
    • recite what… She recited what she had learned.
    • + speech ‘I wandered lonely as a cloud,’ he recited.
  2. [transitive] recite something (to somebody) | recite what… | + speech to say a list or series of things
    • They recited all their grievances to me.
    • She could recite a list of all the kings and queens.
  3. Word Originlate Middle English (as a legal term in the sense ‘state (a fact) in a document’): from Old French reciter or Latin recitare ‘read out’, from re- (expressing intensive force) + citare ‘cite’.
See recite in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
baseball
noun
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 3000
A2
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day