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The phrase "slip from memory" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe the phenomenon of forgetting something or when a memory fades away over time. Example: "As time passed, the details of that summer vacation began to slip from memory."
Exact(1)
Rather than let moments slip from memory to the cold bits of the cloud, Jagoe set out to redesign the digital picture frame.
Similar(56)
By contrast, the words of second inaugurals have largely slipped from memory.
The influence of black string bands on white country musicians slipped from memory.
One reason, Mr. Lowenfish writes, that "the full measure of Branch Rickey's life and accomplishments has largely slipped from memory" is that his experience in Brooklyn was sandwiched between stints elsewhere.
The Leahy Law was passed before the onset of the "war on terror", and it would appear that whatever lessons had been learned in Latin America are now slipping from memory.
Dumpster diving slipped from memory, replaced by a diet that's heavy on cheap Asian restaurants, takeaway coffees, and cheese on toast.
The president's next move in the international arena ― his "recognition" of Jerusalem as the capital of the state of Israel ― hasn't yet slipped from memory, in part because of the outrage it evoked around the world.
Dana is learning the familiar lesson that the famous are not forever so; names slip from collective memory, to be replaced by other names also destined for the tip of our tongues, and then gone.
As Roger Simon pointed out, one of the inherent problems with State Of The Union addresses is that, for the most part, they tend to slip from our memory with a studied speed.
Like a day in Leonard's life, it slips easily from memory, favoring sensation over insight and the frisson of artificial confusion over any contemplation of human reality.
The empire is slipping from living memory, perhaps taking the delusions of grandeur with it.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com