- Joined
- Mar 25, 2004
- Messages
- 493
- Reaction score
- 0
what's your fave? which ones are most helpful??
Too many letters in the alphabet anyways. Spelling is so overrated... that's why there's google and word.EvoDevo said:[Grammar & Spelling Nazi]
It's "Mnemonics," derived from the Greek Muse of Memory who was named Mnemosyne.
[/Grammar & Spelling Nazi]
Megalofyia said:Oh Oh Oh to touch and feel a girl's vagina and hymen. -- For the 12 cranial nerves.
Prob my fav cause it's the easiest to remember.
Megalofyia said:Number one is the olfactory nerve
It branches into two below the frontal lobe
Number two is the optic nerve
When these nerves cross the chiasm they then are optic tracts
Number three is the ocluomotor nerve
It moves most of the muscles of the eyes
Number four is the trochlear nerve
It moves the superior obliques of the eyes
Number five is the trigeminal nerve
It has three sensory parts and one motor part
Number six is the abducens nerve
Last of the nerves that can move the eyeballs
Number seven is the facial nerve
Yes that's right! It moves muscles of the face
Number eight's the vestibulocochlear nerve
Which helps you hear and also balance yourself
Number nine's the glossopharyngeal nerve
It has motor and sensory endings in the pharynx
Number ten is the vagus nerve
Responsible for organs like the heart and the lungs
Number eleven is the (spinal) accessory nerve
They're nerves to the neck so you can move your head
Number twelve is the hypoglossal nerve
Which moves the tongue in so many many ways
Two Zebras bit my c***shocker said:Here is one I just heard, it isn't the best and doesn't make much sense, but I cannot forget it.
Facial nerve (CN VII) distribution:
To Zanzibar By Motor Car
Temporal, Zygomatic, Buccal, Maxillary, and Cervical
Adcadet said:apparently our anatomy guys got in a bit of trouble one year for dirty mnemonics, so they've toned it down a bit. One they gave us, for what I no longer remember, was:
Some TA's (teaching assistants) like F*, other like S* and M*
They suggested that the astericked letteres stood for fudge, snickers, and M&M's. And I'm sure that's what everybody was thinking.
Anybody know what that's for? Arterial branches for something? Thoracoacromial branches?