S: (v) associate, tie in, relate, link, colligate, link up, connect (make a logical or causal connection) "I cannot connect these two pieces of evidence in my mind"; "colligate these facts"; "I cannot relate these events at all"
S: (v) remember (exercise, or have the power of, memory) "After the shelling, many people lost the ability to remember"; "some remember better than others"
S: (v) interrelate (place into a mutual relationship) "I cannot interrelate these two events"
S: (v) correlate (bring into a mutual, complementary, or reciprocal relation) "I cannot correlate these two pieces of information"
S: (v) identify (conceive of as united or associated) "Sex activity is closely identified with the hypothalamus"
S: (v) free-associate (associate freely) "Let's associate freely to bring up old memories"
S: (v) think of, have in mind, mean (intend to refer to) "I'm thinking of good food when I talk about France"; "Yes, I meant you when I complained about people who gossip!"
W: (n) correlation [Related to: correlate] (a statistical relation between two or more variables such that systematic changes in the value of one variable are accompanied by systematic changes in the other)
W: (n) correlation [Related to: correlate] (a statistic representing how closely two variables co-vary; it can vary from -1 (perfect negative correlation) through 0 (no correlation) to +1 (perfect positive correlation)) "what is the correlation between those two variables?"
W: (v) correlate [Related to: correlative] (to bear a reciprocal or mutual relation) "Do these facts correlate?"
W: (v) correlate [Related to: correlative] (bring into a mutual, complementary, or reciprocal relation) "I cannot correlate these two pieces of information"