In the rest of this document, I present acronyms that I've collected from other sources. In addition to providing good examples and ideas, you might learn a few new things easily thanks to these acronyms. There's a few non-acronyms in here, but oh well!
I also like acronyms. Like for the classification system (at least the way I
learned it in high school): King Philip Can Only Find his Green
Slippers = Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species.
or the classification for humans: Antropology Can Make People Hate
Helping the Sick = Anamalia Cordata Mamalis Primate Hominidae Homo
Sapien.
My favorite one of all though is to remember the bill of rights.
Our history teacher taught it to us and it involved a rather heavy-set man
who student taught at our school and used to make jokes about how heavy he
was (his name was Joe Bones). It goes: FATS AS Joe Bones are
Positavely Stupid which equals Freedoms (SPRAP
another acronym for the freedoms = Speech Press Religion Assembly Petition),
Arms (right to bear), Troops (no more quartering), Search (unreasonable
search and seasure), Accused (rights of the accused), Speed (right to a
speedy trial), Jury (right to a jury trial), Bail (no escessive bail/fines
or unusual punnishment), People (rights not mentioned in the constitution
are reserved for the people), and State (powers not delegated to the U.S.
are reserved for the states). It makes a real easy way to remember
something that would have been nasty to remember otherwise.
Nearly 100 years ago, during our days in grade school, we learned
a way to remember the names of the Great Lakes.
Just think of HOMES -- Huron, Ontario, Michigan,
Erie and Superior.
Using the word "homes" like that is a mnemonic. Here's another:
What words are the exceptions to the I before E rule? We were
taught a sentence that includes all the exceptions. It makes the
rule go like this:
I before E, except after C, with the exceptions of Neither
Financier Conceived Either Species of Weird Leisure.
And there's this one: Any word that fits in the blank of this
sentence is a preposition: The squirrel ran --- the
tree. Over, under, after, around, through, etc.
Trying to explain a mnemonic to someone, we attempted to find it
in the dictionary and without any luck. We had to call Debbie
Hamble at the reference desk at the city library.
We had tried nemonic and pnemonic and knemonic. What could be
left? She called back and put us onto the M. In fact, in our
lexicons, it's the only word spelled mn. Look in yours.
Our book says: mnemonic, assisting or intended to assist memory;
of or relating to memory; a mnemonic device or code. Mnemonics, a
technique of improving memory.
We have another assignment for you. Send us your favorite or
unusual mnemonic. Did you use a mnemonic to help you learn
something in particular? We'll pass along some of them.
Post them to Gamboling, c/o NewsPress, Box 2288, Stillwater,
74076.
:
In this space last week, we discussed mnemonics -- a tool to aid
memory.
We mentioned HOMES as an example of a way to
remember the Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie and
Superior.
We also asked you to submit mnemonics you recall from your school
days. And we received several responses. It seems the spelling of
arithmetic and geography was especially difficult because they
drew the greatest response. Here are a few:
Bethel Simmons of Stillwater wrote the following:
I am over 50 and went to school in Kansas and I read with interest
your Sunday article on mnemonics. I, too, learned the Great Lakes
with HOMES. Other spellings that I learned are as
follows:
Geography: George Edwards Old Grandma Rode A Pig Home
Yesterday.
Arithmetic: A Rat In The House May Eat The Ice
Cream.
When we learned the provinces in Canada in the fifth grade, we
were taught an easy way to remember how to spell Saskatchewan, one
of the harder to spell, as follows:
Ask At Chew An with an S in front of it.
I have always used mnemonics to learn lists of things for
different classes or to help me remember what I would write in an
essay question, etc.
My I before E rule went like this, but I'm sure you will get many
of these:
I before E except after C or when sounded as A as in
neighbor or weigh.
Dona Cooper recalled from her country school days this help for
geography (similar, but different): George Edison's Oldest
Girl Rode A Pony Home Yesterday.
And these two from Mken Mbreuninger of Stillwater: George
Ellis' Oldest Girl Rode A Pig Home Yesterday. And,
A Rat In Tom's House Might Eat Tom's Ice Cream.
(Not so fast. Go back to that last paragraph. Did you catch the
contributor's gag?)
Mildred Lee of Stillwater also mastered the I-E rule during her
days at Stillwater public schools with the neighbor and weigh
mnemonic.
Mary Sawyer of Glencoe (thanks for the coverage of the Glencoe
United Methodist Women's New Year's Day dinner, we served more
than 400, the largest ever) wrote to say she had not heard of the
word mnemomic, but she has used the method.
Especially this example she sent along. She said she has used it
many times ... especially since she has been helping her
grandchildren choose colors for the rainbows they were coloring:
Roy G. Biv, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and
violet, the colors of the spectrum.
Then comes this letter from James M. Price, associate professor in
the psychology department at OSU. We'll pass along his note:
Here are some that you may have received from a number of people,
he writes, since they were commonly learned by people in public
schools (or other places) a few years back.
For those who had to deal with the color coding on electronic
resistors:
Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls, But Violet Gives Willingly
for Silver or Gold.
[KJN Note: Good grief! That's not very nice... but I guess it
is memorable, and that is the whole point of
mnemonics. Well, here's the one I learned that isn't so shocking:
Bad Beer Rots Our Young Guts But Vodka Goes
Well.]
The capital initials, he writes, are a reminder as to the color
codes on a numerical scale (black, brown, red, etc.), with silver
and gold indicating the tolerance (precision) of the resistor.
From astronomy, he said, here is one indicating the coding for the
age and size of stars: Wow! Oh Be A Fine Girl! Kiss Me
Right Now, Sweetie.
Price also included the foil rule for multiplying the individual
terms in two binomial quantities, like (x+4)(Y+8):
FOIL -- First terms, Outside, Inside, Last.
(Just last evening, Mrs. Gibbs asked about the order of precedence
among arithmetical operators. Well, Price covered that, too).
He said it's Eek! My Dear Aunt Sally!
(Exponentiation, multiplication, division, addition, subtraction.)
Price concluded by saying such memory aids are fairly common and
have been studied by psychologists for at least 25 years.
"I haven't the slightest idea why. Have fun!"
:
A Helen Gibbs writes from Oklahoma City to say, "During Bible
class last Wednesday, we were trying to remember the names of the
disciples when Ralph (the Rev. Ralph Ranney of St. Stephen's
Presbyterian Church) told of learning their names through a
mnemonic."
Mother, we mean, Mrs. Gibbs, went on to recite the aid:
"This is the way the disciples run
Peter, Andrew, James and John
Phillip and Bartholemew
Thomas next and Matthew, too.
James the less and Judas the greater
Simon the zealot and Judas the traitor."
Dr. Don Cooper said almost every medical school anatomy class he
ever heard of used the following to remember the eight small bones
in the wrist:
"Never Lower Tilly's Pants, Mother Might Come
Home." That helps in recalling navicular, lunate,
triquetrum, pisiform, greater Multongular, lesser Multongular,
capitate and hamate.
Now that will come in handy.
He also submitted one to remember all 12 of the cranial nurves and
used by almost all medical students. Pat Loveland of Stillwater
submitted the same one, but with a bit softer wording here and
there. They read:
"An Old Olympus Towering Tops, A Finn And German Viewed
Some Hops."
Remember that sentence and it will be easy to remember the
nerves: olfactory, optic, oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal,
abducens, facial, acoustic, glassopharyngeal, vagus, spinal
accessory and hypoglossal.
And there's no excuse for not knowing the function of each nerve,
be it sensory, motor or both. Pat said it's a help to remember,
"Some say marry money but my brothers say bad business
marry money." Now you know whether the nerves are S
(sensory), M (motor) or B (both).
Pat's mom gave her this one to learn the planets in order
according to their distance from the sun: "Mercy! Vera
Ellen Made Johnnie Sit Under Nine Planks." (Her mom had
said Vera Ellen was a movie star "before my time.")
We'll wrap this up with some sent in by students of Martha Olsen:
David DeWeese, "eat all dead gophers before
Easter" (EADGBE, the strings on a guitar).
Laura Brown, "never eat sour wheat" (points on a compass).
Stacy Baker and Feather Jim, "Mimal" (the shape
of these states makes a person, his name is Mimal, Minnesota,
Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana.)
Kristin Terrill, "please excuse my dear Aunt
Sally," (a mnemonic device applied in pre-algebra which
my teacher says is the most important rule you can learn, to get
you going: parenthesis, exponents, multiplication, division,
addition and subtraction."
And with that we'll bid farewell to mnemonics.
Document last modified
11 Mar 00. (C) 1996-98,2000 by
Kevin Jay North; see also full
copyright notice & disclaimers..
Here's a couple of acronyms for memorizing the first 20 periodic table
elements from Enid and Philip Yim:
Hi! He Lies Because Boron CanNot Oxide Fluoride
H He Li Be Bo C N O F
New Nation Might --- Sign Peace Security Clause
Ne Na Mg Al Si P S Cl
A King Can
Ar K Ca
It looks as if Aluminum was forgotten, but perhaps you can invent your
own word to fit! (One word I thought of is "Also".)
From the column "Gamboling" by Lawrence Gibbs, in the
Stillwater (Oklahoma) NewsPress, 19 Jan 97, 26 Jan 97 and 02 Feb
97. (C) 1997 Stillwater Publishing Company. Used by
permission.
![]()


