The answer is "semantic memory".
Semantic memory alludes to a bit of long haul memory that forms thoughts and ideas that are not drawn from individual experience. Semantic memory incorporates things that are regular learning, for example, the names of hues, the hints of letters, the capitals of nations and other fundamental certainties gained over a lifetime.
The idea of semantic memory is genuinely new. It was presented in 1972 as the aftereffect of coordinated effort between Endel Tulving of the University of Toronto and Wayne Donaldson of the University of New Brunswick on the effect of association in human memory.