Remember about

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Hello

I am a bit confused about using remember + about to express the following idea:

1. I hardly remember about Eric's birthday.
2. Do you remember about Eric's birthday? Don't forger to buy a gift.

Are these sentences OK?
 
Both sentences would be more natural without "about".
 
By the way, Eric is invariably a man's name in English, so you would be unlikely to need to buy Eric a present for her birthday. If it's Eric, then use "his". If it's Erica, use "her".
 
Hmmm. I don't see a "her" in the OP's post.
 
Yup, tz is right. I was reading it on my phone and I saw "don't forger to buy a gift" as "don't forget to buy her a gift". Apologies.
 
"Remember + about" can be used in another sense, as long as you put an indefinite pronoun between them.
"Do you remember anything about your childhood?"
"I got so drunk last night, I remember nothing about the party!"
"Try to remember something about what I taught you."
An 'about' phrase is common with 'remember' in this context.
 
'I don't remember much about my childhood.'
Is 'much' an indefinite pronoun?
 
'I don't remember much about my childhood.'
Is 'much' an indefinite pronoun?
Yes
http://englishplus.com/grammar/00000027.htm
I'm not suggesting that you can put just any indefinite pronoun there though.
There are other words you can put there too - though I'm not recommending them:
"I don't remember jack sh*t about my childhood" (vulgar)
The dictionary below describes this as a noun, but I'd call it an honorary indefinite pronoun in this case. There are other slang terms that could fit there too.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/jack+shit
 
I wouldn't use a negative there: I remember jack sh*t about my childhood.
 
I wouldn't use a negative there: I remember jack sh*t about my childhood.
Yes, that's more grammatical. I used the double negative (if you consider 'jack sh*t' to be a negative) because people who use this phrase are just as likely to use a double negative.
 
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