(~s, ~ting, forgot, forgotten)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
If you ~ something or ~ how to do something, you cannot think of it or think how to do it, although you knew it or knew how to do it in the past.
Sometimes I improvise and change the words because I ~ them...
She forgot where she left the car and it took us two days to find it.
? remember
VERB: V n, V wh
2.
If you ~ something or ~ to do it, you fail to think about it or fail to remember to do it, for example because you are thinking about other things.
She never ~s her daddy’s birthday...
She forgot to lock her door one day and two men got in...
Don’t ~ that all dogs need a supply of fresh water to drink...
She forgot about everything but the sun and the wind and the salt spray.
? remember
VERB: V n, V to-inf, V that, V about n
3.
If you ~ something that you had intended to bring with you, you do not bring it because you did not think about it at the right time.
Once when we were going to Paris, I forgot my passport.
VERB: V n, also V about n
4.
If you ~ something or someone, you deliberately put them out of your mind and do not think about them any more.
I hope you will ~ the bad experience you had today...
I found it very easy to ~ about Sumner...
She tried to ~ that sometimes she heard them quarrelling.
VERB: V n, V about n, V that
5.
You say ‘Forget it’ in reply to someone as a way of telling them not to worry or bother about something, or as an emphatic way of saying no to a suggestion. (SPOKEN)
‘Sorry, Liz. I think I was a bit rude to you.’—‘Forget it, but don’t do it again!’...
‘You want more?’ roared Claire. ‘Forget it, honey.’
CONVENTION formulae
6.
You say not ~ting a particular thing or person when you want to include them in something that you have already talked about.
The first thing is to support as many shows as one can, not ~ting the small local ones.
PHRASE: PHR n