I remember them all, but those who were never elected , served less than a full term and did not run for another term would seem to be the most forgettable.
These people are John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson and Chester Arthur. You might add Gerald Ford, but he ran for president and you might take away Millard Fillmore who made a run as a third party candidate that may have tipped an election. Andrew Johnson served in memorable times and had a tumultuous administration which makes him less forgettable. In most polls taken of "experts" in the field of the Presidency, the president who tends to turn up dead last as an effective president is James Buchanan, also making him very "forgettable".
The Presidents during the gilded age are referred to as "forgettable" because America was going through its Industrial Revolution at that time, and the powerful business leaders at the time (Andrew Carnegie, John Rockefeller, J.P. Morgan, etc) dominated the nation rather than the government. Additionally, there was much corruption going on throughout America, and the forgettable Presidents did not do a successful job of properly eliminating this corruption. Thus, they are deemed forgettable.
The possessive form of the plural noun Presidents is Presidents'.Examples: All of the Presidents' portraits lined the walls.
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A+ Egyptian presidents are Not Directly elected by the voters
They are all male, over 35 when elected, and citizens of the United States. Presidents have lived in very different time periods, with very different understandings of country, society and the world. There have been brave presidents and cowardly presidents, intelligent presidents and not-so-intelligent presidents, warlike presidents and peaceful presidents... the list goes on. To try to choose a set of traits that encompasses all of them is an exercise in futility, and anyone who says otherwise is merely venturing a guess.
The Presidents during the gilded age are referred to as "forgettable" because America was going through its Industrial Revolution at that time, and the powerful business leaders at the time (Andrew Carnegie, John Rockefeller, J.P. Morgan, etc) dominated the nation rather than the government. Additionally, there was much corruption going on throughout America, and the forgettable Presidents did not do a successful job of properly eliminating this corruption. Thus, they are deemed forgettable.
The prefix for "forgettable" is "un-".
I can give you several sentences.That movie had some forgettable characters in it!I just sat through a forgettable lecture.That book had the most forgettable plot.
Last night's dinner was very forgettable.
The lecture I listened to yesterday was forgettable.
unforgettable
forgettable
Forgettable - 2010 was released on: USA: 15 October 2010 (Los Angeles, California)
The book had the most forgettable plot because it was similar to many other story plots, there was nothing special about it.
interesting, to remember
Not forgettable; enduring in memory.
One opposite is "forgettable."