Oh, dude, a souvenir is like a little trinket or keepsake you get when you visit a place, you know, like a snow globe or a keychain with the name of the city on it. It's basically a way to remember that time you went on vacation and spent way too much money on stuff you don't really need. But hey, at least you have something to clutter up your house and remind you of that one time you went somewhere cool, right?
The likely word is the noun souvenir (a memento).
souvenir! like those little hats you get on a Disney trip.
The word "souvenir" as used today originated from the French language. It is from Old French, to recall, memory, from Latin subvenīre, to come to mind : sub-, sub- + venīre, to come.
french for a memory (not memory itself, but A memory).
something valuable boughten in your home state/country
"Souvenir" is a French word meaning "memory." By extension, it means an object that brings back a specific memory. English borrowed that word with the same meaning.
keepsake, memento
The root word of "souvenir" is the French word "souvenir," which means "to remember."
The word souvenir is pronounced \ˈsü-və-ˌnir and it has a total of three syllables.
I picked up this souvenir in a foreign country.
After the lantern festival, my friend brought back a homemade lantern as a souvenir.
I'm pretty sure there's no direct translate for the word keepsake in French. The closest French word for keepsake, an object kept for the sake of the giver, would be souvenir.
Memento or keepsake.
The word "souvenir" applies to a keepsake or an article from a different locale.
Well, 'souvenir' is a French word!
That which serves as a reminder; a remembrancer; a memento; a keepsake.
Jour de Souvenir