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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

1014.0. "Mnemonic Needed" by IMTDEV::DWENDL::ROBERTS$P (Reason, Purpose, Self-esteem) Wed Nov 04 1992 12:59

    Here's a chance for creativity.
    
    I need a mnemonic device to remember, in order, the following words:
    
    Name (of the organization)
    Object
    Members
    Officers
    Meetings
    Executive (Board)
    Committees
    Parliamentary (Authority)
    Amendments
    
    (which are the articles typically found in the bylaws of the average
    unincorporated society).
    
    I currently use "No, mom. Easy pa." which is a rather poor mnemonic.
    Can you suggest a better one?
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1014.1RDVAX::KALIKOWLe not justeWed Nov 04 1992 13:1617
    Try remembering the following sentence, whose first letters (and
    occasionally more, up to entire words) are the same as the desired
    sequence of words...
    
     "Now only members of meetings (except children) pass amendments"
      =   =    ======= == ========  ==     =         ==   ==========
    
    Not a bad hit rate, I daresay...  Now about whether there'd be any
    destructive interference between the mnemonic and the string of words
    to be mnemoned, only your head knows for sure. ... :-)
    Dan
    
    PS -- rathole alert -- whence the expression "Red Tape"?  I just got an
    entire roll of it, for use in anti-bureaucracy propaganda, and a friend
    just this moment asked exactly where the expression comes from.  Was
    there ever an actual bureaucracy that marked troublesome dossiers with
    such tape?
1014.2COOKIE::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Wed Nov 04 1992 14:029
    Re: red tape
    
    Perhaps it comes from the little red ribbons that are stuck with wax
    onto official documents to seal them.  Over a period of time, the
    documents themselves, and then their procedural contents, take on the
    name red tape.
    
    "Suit" seems to be following the same path.  "Oh, no!  More suits!"
    "Oh, no!  More red tape!"  They sound the same to me.
1014.3PEKING::RANWELLJknock a little louder sugar!Thu Nov 05 1992 01:493
    How about "Nomomecpa" ?
    
    ;^)
1014.4Gay bandageFORTY2::KNOWLESSpelling chequers ah knot the hole answerThu Nov 05 1992 05:3410
    Re red tape: I have always thought (since I was told by a school-teacher
    who I beilieved at the time) that the papers in a barrister's brief
    were (still are?) tied up with red tape, although this discussion
    should really be moved to the Fictionary note to get the Real Story.
    
    Re mnemonic. I find the interference of the near-anagram
    M-N-E-M-O-n-i-c (well, near enough for lots of cross-talk)
    too strong to think straight.
    
    b
1014.5JIT081::DIAMONDIt's been a lovely recession.Thu Nov 05 1992 18:323
    >a barrister's brief
    
    Ah yes, "brief", the one-word oxymoron.
1014.6Red or pink?KERNEL::MORRISWhich universe did you dial?Tue Nov 10 1992 09:1815
    Not only barrister's briefs (how many puns can you find in there?)...
    
    When I was at school we used to bind up sheets of paper used in
    examinations with red tape.  Well actually it was a shade of pink
    rather than red but is the same stuff that barristers use.
    
    We had a kind of giant darning needle with a wooden handle and the
    Magister would walk up and down the line of exhausted,
    brain-in-meltdown pupils, gleefully spearing bundles of paper at their
    top left hand corners (the corners of the papers rather than the
    pupils).
    
    Oh, nostalgia ain't what it used to be :*)
    
    Jon