What word did you learn to spell years ago with a tricky sentence that you still use in your adult years? For me it is geography, which I just used a few minutes ago.
Geography = George Eliots old grandfather rode a pig home yesterday.
Must have learned that when i was 8 or 9 years old. To this day when I have to spell geography I always say that little sentence to myself.
I still, today and all days, pronounce “government” with a strongly pronounced “n”, due to losing a spelling bee on it in 5th grade, and the teacher said “goverNNNment” to the other finalist. People look at me weirdly, but I don’t care. If I ever run into that Dutch girl again, she’ll know what it’s about.
Yeah, I do similarly. I mostly remember spellings mostly based on mispronunciations based on phonics. Though I do remember stuff like “The principal is your PAL” and such.
Same here, I don’t ever remember learning mnemonics like this for spellings of words, but more for lists of stuff, like the planets and colors of light and whatnot. For spelling, we did get that “principal is your pal” thing, and “separate has A RAT in it” (since a lot of people were spelling it “seperate”) and “minuscule has MINUS” and stuff like that. Those do still run through my head frequently when I spell those words.
Shit, that’s a lot of work to remember the spelling of geo+graph+y. (I see that there are two mnemonics for that word in this thread. I’m wondering how people misspell that word. I just don’t see the tricky part there.)
I usually memorize spellings by over-pronouncing the word in my head. Or for “weird,” I just remember that “weird” is weird in relation to the “i before e” rule.
Not exactly on point, but my late wife helped me deal with the word “significant”. Does it end in “cant” or “gant”? She said to remember “sign if I can’t”.
No sentences but my seventh-grade math teacher taught us a nifty mnemonic for the order of the Roman numerals for 50, 100, 500 and 1000: Laryngitis, Call Dr. Merrit (LCDM).