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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
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- From: eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan)
- Subject: Re: mnemonics in general
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.111927.1@wombat.newcastle.edu.au>
- Lines: 55
- Sender: news@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au
- Organization: University of Newcastle, AUSTRALIA
- References: <1992Nov9.110145.1@wombat.newcastle.edu.au> <1992Nov9.043447.5968@dg-rtp.dg.com> <1992Nov10.122923.25536@black.ox.ac.uk> <pqF=jL@engin.umich.edu>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 00:19:27 GMT
-
- In article <pqF=jL@engin.umich.edu>, cliff@engin.umich.edu (clifford kaminsky) writes:
-
- >>Again, it can't be a good mnemonic since I can't remember it, but isn't it
- >>something like
- >>"God, I need a drink (alcoholic of course) after that heavy
- >>lecture involving Quantum Mechanics?"
- >>(Would give 3.14159265457979... is that right, anyone?)
- >>
- >>Marc Read
- >
- > Get ready for this:
- >
- > 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937511
- >
- > Now maybe someone can write a new mnemonic.
-
- Having introduced pi into this conversation, I should apologise for
- having suggested that there was a mnemonic for about 100 digits.
- I've just tracked down one of my sources, and the mnemonic I had
- had in mind turned out to be "How I need a drink (alcoholic, of
- course) after the heavy chapters involving quantum mechanics",
- attributed to the physicist James Jeans (dammit, I suspect I've just
- got his name wrong; I need a mnemonic for that too). Not quite
- 100 words. I believe I've seen a longer version, but have been
- unable to find it.
-
- Many thanks to the person (whose name I've also forgotten - sorry)
- who produced four such mnemonics, two of which were verses of
- 31 words each. If anyone knows the missing French word, I'd love
- to hear about it.
-
- Observation: while trying to reconstruct these mnenomics, I found
- myself trying to find words which would fit the digits, which
- rather defeats the point. I find the numbers easy to remember,
- but not the words, and was trying to use the digits of pi as a
- mnemonic for the original quotations. Is this just me, or have
- others noticed the same thing?
-
- About thirty years ago, telephone numbers in large Australian cities
- consisted of two letters followed by four digits. This was
- replaced by an all-digit system, and I believe that the reason for
- the change was that digits were easier to remember than letters.
-
- In a similar vein, the mnemonics I learnt in high school for the
- colours of the rainbow and for the planets were the names
- "Roy Gbiv" and "Mvem Jsunp". These worked for me because they were
- nice and short. Most of the other mnemonics I've seen - usually in
- the form of complete sentences - have been quite useless to me
- because the only way I could reconstruct them was by using the
- original information as a mnemonic for the mnemonic. They are
- interesting curios, but I wonder whether anyone has found them to
- have any mnemonic value.
-
- --
- Peter Moylan eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au
-