Science is full of long lists of important information that can be very difficult to remember. A mnemonic is a small phrase or word that helps us to remember these things. This is a list of 10 mnemonics to help you learn some important scientific terms. This is to be the first in a series of lists of mnemonics.
10. The Speed of Light
Remember this phrase and when you want to know the speed of light, count the letters in each word of the sentence.
We guarantee certainty, clearly referring to this light mnemonic
299,792,458 m/sec
9. First Eighteen Elements
Memorize these phrases to learn the first eighteen elements – when you are done, make up your own phrases for some of the others.
Happy Henry Likes Beer But Could Not Obtain Four Nuts
That gives us the first 10: Hydrogen, Helium, Lithium, Beryllium, Boron, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Neon.
Naughty Magpies Always Sing Perfect Songs Clawing Ants
That gives us the next 8: Sodium (NA), Magnesium, Aluminum, Silicon, Phosphorous, Sulfur, Chlorine, Argon
8. The Earth’s Atmospheres
Here is a phrase to help you remember the order of the earth’s atmospheres:
The Strong Man’s Triceps Explode
This stands for: Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere, Exosphere.
7. The Colors of the Rainbow
This is one I learnt in school and it is an excellent way to remember the colors of the rainbow.
Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain
Which, of course, stands for: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet. It is interesting to note that many modern scientists no longer consider Indigo to be a part of the rainbow.
6. The Brightest Stars in the Sky
The brightest stars in the sky (excluding the Sun) can be remembered with this simple mnemonic:
Sir Can Rig A VCR, Pa!
The stand for: Sirius in Canis Major, Canopus in Carina, Rigil Kent in Centaurus, Acrturus in Bootes, Vega in Lyra, Capella in Auriga, Rigel in Orion, Procyon in Canic Minor, Achernar in Eridanus
5. The 9 Principal Moons of Saturn
Saturn has a large number of moons (35 of which have names). If you wish to remember the 9 principle moons, remember your last doctors visit:
Met Dr Thip
The letters stand for: Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, Iapetus, Phoebe
4. The Order of the Planets
Here is a mnemonic to remember the order of the planets – starting from closest to the sun to furthest. Pluto is included.
My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizzas
Giving us: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto (my favorite).
3. Cranial Bones
Here is a mnemonic to help you remember the bones of the skull:
Old People From Texas Eat spiders
This stands for: Occipital, Parietal, Frontal, Temporal, Ethnoid, Sphenoid
2. Biological Classifications
Here is an easy way to remember the biological classifications:
[Limping Dreadfully,] King Phillip Came Over From Great Spain
Standing for: [Life, Domain,] Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.
1. Geological Ages
Here is a great mnemonic to teach you the geological ages:
Camels Often Sit Down Carefully. Perhaps Their Joints Creak. Possibly Early Oiling Might Prevent Premature Rheumatism
Which stands for: Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous, Permian, Triassic, Jurrasic, Cretaceous, Pliocene, Eocene, Oligocene, Myocene, Pileocene, Pleistocene, Recent.
Bonus: Can you guess?
Here is another scientific mnemonic – can you guess what it represents?
Sergeant Major Hates Eating Onions
I will give you two clues: it comes from the category of Geography, and it has nothing to do with the image above.































Sorry for the double post…editing
Mikerodz: My Dear Aunt Sally was apart of the order of operations mnemonic for mathematical problems…
Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally = Parentheses, Exponents, Multiply, Divide, Add & Subtract.
Amazing that I remember these but I always forget my keys!
I never heard that one My Dear Aunt Sally.interesting enough
Don’t worry about the keys…I always forget something everytime I walk out the door. Never fails that i have to make a trip around the block just to get something
for the 13 cranial nerves (at least in a cat)
tsk
oh
oh
oh
to
touch
and
feel
a
girl’s
vagina
so
hot
don’t remember the nerves, i got a D in that class!
One we used in the Marines was for the controls of a helicopter
Young Cun** Are Pink
Yaw Collective Attitude Pitch
Brotherman: that’s NEWS to me
for biology we are taught ….King Phillip Came Over For Great *****, far more memorable!
we used Mrs VanderTamp for irregular french verbs
also ipmat for cell division
interphase
prophase
metaphase
anaphase
telophase,,lord i still remember grade 8 biology
and i’m old
long time lurker – I’ll just pop my head out of the woodwork.
OILRIG.
Oxidation
Is
Loss
Reduction
Is
Gain
how electrons are lost/gained in chemistry – I didnt get it either but it has stuck with me al lthe same.
The old electrical engineering mnemonic for remembering the numerical values of the color bands on resistors (the old leaded type that would have three color bands) was “Bad boys rape our young girls, but Violet gives willingly.”
I’m ashamed to say that’s one of the few things I remember from EE undergrad…
Umm… ours was much more dignified it went like this B.B. ROY go bring very good wife.:)
In high school we learned the organic elements:
C HOPKINS CaFe, Mg F, CoCl Be MnNa CuZn ZiBr
Pronounced “See Hopkins’ cafe, mighty good food, cook’ll be mine-uh cousin Zieber.” Hey, it worked… 12 years later and I still remember it.
Of course I could have missed the abbreviations for some of those.
Ok, so I registered and everything just to tell you this so you better appreciate!
Pi can be remembered with this couplet:
Sir, I send a rhyme excelling
In sacred truth and rigid spelling.
3.14159265358
Truth be told, this is just the opening of a poem that is dozens of lines long. Of course I didn’t remember the whole thing. This is already longer than I need.
For the plant/animal thing we learned
Keep playing checkers on father’s gold stool
I always thought Indigo was sort of a weird color to include myself. Why not include all the colors that occur when they blend together then? like lime?
is there a particular reason why Indigo was different and got included? I thought it was just blue and purple mixed. And we learned it as ROY G BIV when i was a kid, I was trying to remember what it was so I had to scan the comments, knowing someone would mention it
Also… why violet? not purple?
I learned the biological classification as
King Kingdom
Phillip Phylum
Came Class
Over Order
For Family
Great Genus
***** Species
Nelia:
Basically Purple is a shade of the combine blue and red where there product is more towards the red than the blue. Violet is the equal portions of red and blue. On a color wheel it is between magenta and violet.
Purple
Hope that helps
does anyone know what this is made to help you remember?
2 S’s, 2 D’s and 3 emotions
10 bonus points for the first person who gets it. no using google dangor
DiskHuker: When I see 2 S’s, 2 D’s i think of Same *****, Different Day.
Sorry for the double post…
2 s’s 2 d’d and 3 emotions is not exactly scientific… I know what it stands for though…
ur right ravyn, i realized that after i posted. oh well, think of it as random pneumonic trivia.
I Victorious x- men Lover Can’t Date Much
This is the roman numerals Its not science but its the stickiest mnemonic I have ever learned.
Hello everybody, my first post here. A mnemonic I learned for biological classification was
Kendra
Puts
Cheese
On
Fried
Goat
Skins
kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species
I also know the ROY G. BIV one for colors and HOMES for the Great Lakes.
Whew, commenting wasn’t so bad, expect more . . . maybe.
I think it was on Robert Smigle’s “TV Funhouse” they had a mock educational film that used for biological classification: “Karl, please come over for gay *****.” Weird thing is it worked. I laughed so hard I have never forgotten it.
For the Biological Classifications, i always used:
King
Prawn
Curry
Or
Fat
Greasy
sausage
Ed: that is a good one – easy to remember.
Those damned astronomers will never take my pizza!!!
SocialButterfly (#60): we used BODMAS for that, Brackets, Divide, Multiply, Add, Subtract.
Worked pretty well.
I should have checked listverse BEFORE going to my chem exam this morning!! Gah! I have heard of some of these. I’ll give you all one that I can 80% garuntee that no one will know…
All Fat Bay Mares Can Hardly Ever Kick
or, for those of you who may be more advanced,
All King Victor Emmanuel’s Show Horses Can Make Really Beautiful People Fall
And what about popme?
Power of a power–multiply exponents! Okay, not really a mnemonic, but still really helpful.
And dangor: We learned it as Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally. Brackets? Nah. Parentheses.
Trig ratios!! That takes me back … I came up with a mnemonic device for myself (and my friends), but it only works if you’re doing trig in spanish!
It was: “Co-Ca-Coca”. It corresponds to:
Sine = Co/H
Cosine = Ca/H
Tangent = Co/Ca
Since the “h” is silent in spanish, it reads as “Co-Ca-Coca!” ^_^
Thanks Ravyn, good to know. Science was never my thing (i’m an english grad student who will run screaming from equations of any kind), but it is interesting stuff. Probably more so when you understand it.
Hey, Jamie, I believe Anne had a correction for you @ #14: I believe it is Silurian, not Sirillian. Also, in List Item #7, you forgot to enumerate Yellow while explaining the mnemonic. That’s okay. Remember Tom Ridge, America’s illustrious first Secretary of Homeland Security? When he came up with the color code system for National Threat Alerts, he switched purple and blue — and apparently no one had the brains or the balls to tell him until a writer from the New Yorker spoke up while interviewing him!
And as long as I’m nitpicking, it’s not pileocene among the geological ages either.
From our old friends at Wikipedia:
“The Pliocene epoch (spelled Pleiocene in some older texts) is the period in the geologic timescale that extends from 5.332 million to 1.806 million years before present.”
Just trying to help make a great list even better in my own small but obnoxious way.
Martin L: thank you – I have made the corrections that both you and Anne have suggested!
Roy G. Biv, colors of the rainbow, haven’t heard of it? Maybe your method is British, considering no one in America knows of any Richard of York, let alone a battle he gave in vain.
oh yeah, HOMES is also my method of memorizing the great lakes.
P.S. sorry for commenting about Roy G. Biv, somebody already did.
for number 2 instead of that one remeber Kim Please Come Omar Fixing Get Shot
Here are a few more:
* The Planets
Mother Very Thoughtfully Made A Jelly Sandwich Under No Protest (Mercury, Venus, Terra, Mars, Asteroids, Jupiter..etc)
also my favourite: Many Very Educated Men Are Justly Satisfied Using Novelty Paperclips!
* Network Protocol Stack layers
Princess Diana Never Took ***** from Prince Andrew
(Physical, Datalink, Network, Transport, Session, Presentation, Application)
And yes, JC, number 7 about Richard of York is indeed British, and very likely refers to Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York (1411-1460) who was killed by Lancastrian forces. The phrase is much more memorable (I think) than an invented name, and has the benefit of teaching you a little about history!
Oh yes JC, the “Princess Diana” one is also British, and teaches a snippet of history as well..!
Actually it’s in use in Australia, but I don’t know if originated here or in the UK.
actually… my mneomonic for the colors of the rainbow is the shorter “Roy G. Biv”
For directions I was taught
Never
Eat
Soggy
Waffles
Silly anatomy mnemonic…
On Occasion Our Trusty Truck Acts Funny. Very Good Vehicle Any How.
For the 12 cranial nerves: olfactory, optic, oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal, abducens, facial, vestibulocochlear, glossopharyngeal, vagus, (spinal) accessory, hypoglossal
While going to school to be an optician, I came up with one to remember the 5 layers of the cornea.
Every Boy Strokes During *****s
=
Epithelium, Bowman’s layer, Stroma, Descemet’s membrane, Endothelium
Nobody in my class ever forgot that one!
Back in middle school for Biological Classifications, we came up with, Kinky People Can Often Find Great *****.
My niece was on here looking at this with me and wanted to know why nobody said the lucky charms marshmellow as a way of remembering the colors of the rainbow… just wanted to throw that out there. Also, i remember that epeisode with the Karl, please come over for gay ***** mnemonic. very catchy.
Oh, I know one we use a lot in our English class. Order of adjectives: OASCOMP.
Opinion, Size, Age, Shape, Colour, Origin, Material, Purpose.
I mean OSASCOMP, sorry.
For the planets:
Many Very Elderly Men Just sit Under Nodding Palms…that’s how I learned them when I was little
In recent years, I have used a South Park reference as a mnemonic suggestion for my students to remember biological classification:
Omit LIFE
Dammit Domain
Kitty, Kingdom
Please Phylum
Come Class
Out Order
For Family
Goodness Genus
Sakes! Species
In the voice of Eric Cartman. Enjoy
My favorite for biological classification is
King Pancho Came Over For Great Salsa.
Stars have a surface temperature classification system. The main classifications in order of decreasing surface temperature are O, B, A, F, G, K, and M.
And here’s the easy mnemonic:
Oh Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me.
i thought for sure noone would still be commenting but they are! this is a sweet site and a great list.
i dont have a catchy device but just wanted to say that i just remember the speed of light as about 186,000 miles/second. i know it is in miles but some of us stubborn people still use miles/feet etc. even though the metric system makes much better sense
(it is also more of an approximation)
Is the bonuspicture by any chance The Three Sisters in the Blue Mountains Australia? The legend is that these three where turned into stone-pillars by an evil sorcorer because they did not want to get involved with him or marry him.
I saw this one when we where there. It is very familiar picture to me.
Don’t know about anyone else but it always has been easier for me to memorize the actual facts than a mnemonic that relates to a fact.
ethmoid bone
Pluto is no longer in the solar system, but here is another way to remember the nine planets.
My
Very
Easy
Method -
Just
Set
Up
Nine
Planets
My favorite on isn’t on here! (Yes, I have a favorite and yes, I am a geek) For Mohs hardness scale: Tall girls can flirt and feel queasy towards cool dudes. Which is the minerals from softest to hardest: talc, gypsum, calcite, fluorite, apatite, (orthoclase) feldspar, quartz, topaz, corundum, and diamond.
COMPASS POINTS:
Never eat shredded wheat
Naughty Elephants squirt water
SPECTRUM:
Richard Of york Gave Battle In vain
Rich Old Yanks Get babies In Vests
Guitar Strings
Edward And Daryl Go Blasting Englishmen
French irregular Verbs (takes etre in p.t):
anne………aller
requested….reste
a…………arriver
million……monter
entrees……entrer
to………..tomber
party……..partir
down………descendre
royaly…….retourner
mourned……mourir
nevil……..naitre
so………..sortir
vigorously…venir
LAKES: Sam’s Horse must eat oats
Life Processes
MRS NERG
Movement
Reproduction
Sensitivity
Nutrition
Excretion
Respiration
Growth
I hate hate hate hate hate this particular mnemonic, but it has succeeded, where one of my own making would not suffice, more than likely. And as an added ‘bonus’, my boyfriend remembers it as well – and he hasn’t studied biology for 3 years, certainly not at A-level – [it's for the biological classification] – my biology lecturer made it up; KP Crisps Only For Good Students *sigh* my boyfriend says it every time he sees KP crisps.
It’s strange how some things work, really. I remember my GCSE maths teacher giving us ‘Some Old Horses Can Always Hear Their Owners Approach’ for the Trigonometric identities, but I never remembered it that way (odd as I’m an enthusiastic horseperson) – I remembered it simply as ‘Soh Cah Toa!’
OILRIG has worked for me
hehe, last ever A-level chemistry lesson on Thursday! Wow.
The irregular french verbs will ALWAYS be ‘The DRAPER’S VAN’ verbs to me, heh, and for the letters around an equestrian ménage (basic ménage) – All King Edward’s Horses Can Manage Big Fences.
Interesting (IMO) thing about the life processes – I was taught MRS NERG (pronounced ‘nurg’ by the teacher) but my father took one look at my work back in primary school and said ‘Oh, Mrs N ER G’ [Mrs Energy, if I hadn't made that clear] and I thought that was a much better way of teaching it.
another way to remember the seven levels of classification (kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species) is:
Kids Playing Chicken On Freeways Get Smushed.
My teacher taught the biological classifications as “King Phillip Came Over For Great *****.” Especially considering we were 13-year-olds, she said anything with ***** in it we would remember. She was right.