Dear Madhav,I remember when you explained this to me and to my then classmate, Ed Hamlin. Ed, with a background in computing, immediately said: that's how hard drives look for data!Good memories of your book-crowded office in the Frieze building, back there in the corner of the ground floor, almost 40 years ago!!JonathanOn Mon, Aug 23, 2021 at 11:34 PM Madhav Deshpande via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:It depends upon how narrowly or widely one defines the word "mnemonic". There are a good deal of aids for memorization in Sanskrit, especially in various Śāstras and for the Vedic reciters. One such device is used in helping memorize Pāṇini's Aṣṭādhyāyī. For each Pāda, there is a string that includes the first words of rules 1, 20, 40, 60 etc. and the number of rules in the final odd lot. For example, the string for the first Pāda is: वृद्धिराद्यन्तवदव्ययीभाव:प्रत्ययस्यलुक्पञ्चदश. There are 32 such strings for the entire Aṣṭādhyāyī. One is expected to memorize the entire Aṣṭādhyāyī. But to find the numerical place of any given rule, if one begins reciting with that rule, very quickly one hits one of the location markers in one of these strings, and then it is an easy calculation. My senior classmate in Pune, Mr. S.L. Athlekar used to do this in a split second, and then he taught his 8 year old daughter to do this. So this was a very efficient system.Madhav M. DeshpandeProfessor Emeritus, Sanskrit and LinguisticsUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USASenior Fellow, Oxford Center for Hindu StudiesAdjunct Professor, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India[Residence: Campbell, California, USA]On Mon, Aug 23, 2021 at 12:34 PM Christian Ferstl via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:Dear all,
are there really no other mnemonics or are they perhaps too childish to
post them on this list? I also like to use the verse rāmo rājamaniḥ
etc., but rather in order to recall the order and numbering of
vibhaktis.
Is there a common word for "mnemonic" in Sanskrit?
Christian
Am 20.08.2021 19:56, schrieb sellmers--- via INDOLOGY:
> Dear Antonia,
> I use the verse rāmo rājamaniH ... for the masc.sg. forms of the -a
> declension.
> Best wishes,
> Sven
>
> Am 20.08.21 um 19:26 schrieb Antonia Ruppel via INDOLOGY
>
> Von: "Antonia Ruppel via INDOLOGY" <indology@list.indology.info>
> Datum: 20. August 2021
> An: "Indology" <indology@list.indology.info>
> Cc:
> Betreff: [INDOLOGY] Sanskrit mnemonics?
>
> Dear all,
>
> Whenever I've learnt a language in a classroom setting, we'd get
> mnemonics to help us remember word forms or uses. (I am thinking of
> things like 'after si, nisi, num, ne, all the ali's fly away', or 'If
> one shwa by another is hounded, the first is silent, the second
> sounded.')
>
> Do any of you have any such mnemonics (no matter how silly - or dare I
> say: the sillier, the better?) for Sanskrit? So far I only have
> minuscule things like reminding students of Har*e* Kṛṣṇa (for
> the vocative of i-stems), and also verses like
>
> gurureva gatirgurumeva bhaje guruṇaiva sahāsmi namo gurave |
> na guroḥ paramaṃ śiśurasmi gurormatirastu gurau mama pāhi guro
> ||
>
> If you have anything you use that works well with your students, I'd
> be grateful if you were willing to share it. I'll happily sum up
> everything I get in an email to the List.
>
> Many thanks, as always,
> Antonia _______________________________________________ INDOLOGY
> mailing list INDOLOGY@list.indology.info
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>
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--J. Silk
Leiden UniversityLeiden University Institute for Area Studies, LIASMatthias de Vrieshof 3, Room 0.05b2311 BZ LeidenThe Netherlandswebsite: www.OpenPhilology.eucopies of my publications may be found at