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Memoranda Or Memorandum

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The word memorandum is singular. Its plural is either memoranda or memorandums. In fact, memorandums now predominates. But you should remember your.

Memo written by a staff member during President Carter's tenure in the White House.

A memorandum (abbrev.: memo; from Latinmemorandum est, 'It must be remembered') is a writtenmessage that may be used in a business office. The plural form of the Latin noun memorandum so derived is properly memoranda, but if the word is deemed to have become a word of the English language, the plural memorandums, abbreviated to memos, may be used. (See also Agenda, Corrigenda, Addenda).

In law, a memorandum is a record of the terms of a transaction or contract, such as a policy memo, memorandum of understanding, memorandum of agreement, or memorandum of association. Other memorandum formats include briefing notes, reports, letters, or binders. They may be considered grey literature. In business, a memo is typically used by firms for internal communication, while letters are typically for external communication. Memorandum formatting may vary by office or institution. If the intended recipient is a cabinet minister or a senior executive, the format might be rigidly defined and limited to one or two pages. If the recipient is a colleague, the formatting requirements are more flexible.[1]

Policy briefing note[edit]

A specific type of memorandum is the policy briefing note (alternatively referred to in various jurisdictions and governing traditions as policy issues paper, policy memoranda, or cabinet submission amongst other terms), a document for transmitting policy analysis into the political decision making sphere. Typically, a briefing note may be denoted as either “for information” or “for decision”.

Origins of term[edit]

The origins of the term “briefing” lie in legal “briefs” and the derivative “military briefings”.[2]

Purpose[edit]

The primary purpose of a memo “for decision” is to support decision making – and also to “help (or sometimes influence) a decision-maker to make a better decision in a particular problem situation than he might otherwise have made without the analysis”.[3] Other purposes that the briefing note can serve include: conveying information; informing decisions, making a request, providing a response to a question, making a suggestion, presenting an informal report, proposing a solution to a problem, or documenting a reference for future use.

Structure[edit]

As the communication mechanism of the policy analysis process, the briefing note should provide a coherent synopsis of a policy problem, identify different policy options for addressing the problem, articulate opposing perspectives and advocate a recommended option. The typical structure for a briefing note includes a description of the proposed policy; relevant background information; a discussion of key considerations (including implementation concerns, financial considerations, stakeholder impacts, and possible unanticipated consequences), a summary of arguments for and against the policy and a recommended decision. Policy documents that start with a proposal and assemble an argument for that position are more accurately referred to as a government white paper. A government green paper which raises a policy option and is meant to open a dialogue on the proposal is more similar in tone to a briefing note than is a white paper.

Quality criteria[edit]

There is no universal standard for a briefing note, but it is generally understood to be a concise, coherent summary of a public policy problem with a clearly articulated logic for following a recommended course of action. ”Next to a political nose, and a logical brain, the most important skill of the good treasury [person] resides in [their] fine drafting hand. The concise, coherent and penetrating note is the final expression of all other talents.”[4] In many governance settings based on the Westminster system, policy analysts are expected to analyze the issue and write the briefing note from a neutral civil service perspective. However, the briefing note “for decision” must contain a recommendation, acknowledging that “to say anything of importance in public policy requires value judgments, which must be explained and justified”.[5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Gary Blake and Robert W. Bly, The Elements of Technical Writing, pg. 113. New York: Publishers, 1993. ISBN0020130856
  2. ^Simpson, J.A. and E.S.C. Weiner (ed.) 1989. Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. OED Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  3. ^Quade, E.S. 1975. Analysis for public decisions. New York: Elsevier. p. 13
  4. ^Heclo, H. and Rahul Vaidya 1974. The Private Government of Public Money. Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 58
  5. ^Majone, G. 1989. Evidence, Argument, and Persuasion in the Policy Process. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 21

External links[edit]

Look up memorandum in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • RPI.edu, The Writing Center: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.[dead link]
  • Washington.edu, Memorandum Writing, Patrick, Richard F. Elmore, Laurie Werner.
  • How to Write Briefing Notes, Parkinson, Robert B.
  • Classic Format of a Briefing Note, Parkinson, Robert B.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Memorandum&oldid=925937181'

English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology[edit]

From Latinmemorandum, neuter of memorandus(to be remembered), gerundive of memorare(to bring to rememberance); see memorate.

Noun[edit]

memorandum (pluralmemorandumsormemoranda)

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  1. A shortnoteserving as a reminder.
  2. A writtenbusinesscommunication.
  3. A briefdiplomatic communication.
  4. A page in an annual publication honoring the memory of a person who died during the past year.

Related terms[edit]

Translations[edit]

  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 備忘錄(zh), 备忘录(zh)(bèiwànglù)
  • Finnish: muistio(fi)
  • French: mémorandum(fr)m
  • German: Memorandum(de)n
  • Greek: μνημόνιο(el)n(mnimónio), υπόμνημα(el)n(ypómnima)
    Ancient: ὑπόμνημαn(hupómnēma)
  • Japanese: メモ(ja)(memo), 備忘録(ja)(びぼうろく, bibōroku), 忘備録(ぼうびろく, bōbiroku)
  • Korean: 비망록(ko)(bimangnok)
  • Portuguese: lembrete(pt)m
  • Russian: заме́тка(ru)f(zamétka), запи́ска(ru)f(zapíska), мемора́ндум(ru)m(memorándum)
  • Scottish Gaelic: cuimhneachanm
  • Sindhi: ياداشاتنامو
  • Spanish: memorándum(es)m
  • Tagalog: paandam, sulat-paalaala
  • Welsh: cofnod(cy)m
  • Finnish: muistio(fi)
  • French: mémorandum(fr)m
  • German: Memorandum(de)n
  • Greek: μνημόνιο(el)n(mnimónio), υπόμνημα(el)n(ypómnima)
  • Japanese: 覚書(ja)(おぼえがき, oboegaki)
  • Portuguese: memorando(pt)m
  • Russian: f(služébnaja zapíska), f(dokladnája zapíska), докладна́я(ru)f(dokladnája)
  • Sindhi: ياداشاتنامو
  • Spanish: memorándum(es)m
  • Tagalog: paandam
  • Armenian: հուշագիր(hy)(hušagir)
  • Finnish: muistio(fi)
  • French: mémorandum(fr)m
  • German: Memorandum(de)n
  • Greek: μνημόνιο(el)n(mnimónio), υπόμνημα(el)n(ypómnima)
  • Japanese: 覚書(ja)(おぼえがき, oboegaki)
  • Polish: memorandum(pl)n
  • Portuguese: memorando(pt)m
  • Russian: мемора́ндум(ru)m(memorándum), (дипломати́ческая)но́та(ru)f(nóta)
  • Sindhi: ياداشاتنامو
  • Spanish: memorándum(es)m
  • Tagalog: paandam

Further reading[edit]

  • memorandum in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • memorandum in The Century Dictionary, The Century Co., New York, 1911

Italian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Noun[edit]

memorandumm (invariable)

Memorandum

Latin[edit]

Participle[edit]

memorandum

  1. nominativeneutersingular of memorandus
  2. accusativemasculinesingular of memorandus
  3. accusativeneutersingular of memorandus
  4. vocativeneutersingular of memorandus

Polish[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Latinmemorandum.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /mɛ.mɔˈran.dum/

Noun[edit]

memorandumn

  1. memorandum (brief diplomatic communication)

Declension[edit]

singularplural
nominativememorandummemoranda
genitivememorandummemorandów
dativememorandummemorandom
accusativememorandummemoranda
instrumentalmemorandummemorandami
locativememorandummemorandach
vocativememorandummemoranda

Further reading[edit]

  • memorandum in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Serbo-Croatian[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /memorǎndum/
  • Hyphenation: me‧mo‧ran‧dum

Noun[edit]

memoràndumm (Cyrillic spellingмемора̀ндум)

Declension[edit]

singularplural
nominativememorandummemorandumi
genitivememorandumamemoranduma
dativememorandumumemorandumima
accusativememorandummemorandume
vocativememorandumememorandumi
locativememorandumumemorandumima
instrumentalmemorandumommemorandumima
Retrieved from 'https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=memorandum&oldid=58683884'