Mnemonics for Latin
Using the Method of Loci to Memorise the Verb Table.
by Evan Millner MA
by Evan Millner MA
The use of mnemonics can help speed up the learning of various elements of Latin Grammar. Methods like this were used successfully by Roman Orators, and studying how to apply mnemonics formed an important part of the curriculum, as one of the tools needed for rhetoric. The method comes down to us through a work in Latin by an unknown author. The piece, called Rhetorica ad Herennium, is estimated to have been written around 85 BC, though it is unlikely that it was original with this author. The author of this textbook of rhetoric examines each of the five parts of rhetoric, including as the fourth part memoria in which he explains the method of loci. It is the only complete source from the classical world to survive, although there are brief references to the method by others, including Cicero and Quintilian, the chief teachers of rhetoric in the ancient and medieval worlds, and later in the Renaissance.
A Verb Room using the Method of Loci.
The curious diagram you see here, is very useful, as it is a systematic method for the loci, developed by Feinagle in the early 1800's. When combined with Gouraud's perfection of the mnemonic system, (which Grey had attempted to base on the Ancient Hebrew mnemonic system of acrostics, known in Classical texts as 'Simanim'. ) we end up with a very powerful artificial memory system. All this sounds very arcane, but has a beautiful simplicity to it.
Step One:
Get comfortable. Sit with your back to the fireplace, or to a wall of your room.
Imagine the floor is divided into 9 squares, 3 squares per row.
Number them:
1-2-3
4-5-6
7-8-9
These 9 are represented in the diagram above, by the 9 squares in the middle.
On your left, is the first wall. Divide this, too into nine squares. Number them, starting from the top left
1-2-3
4-5-6
7-8-9
Now, compare your floor with your wall. None the consistency? This,however, is the FIRST wall, so each of the numbers has a ONE in front of it.
11-12-13
14-15-16
17-18-19
However, don't remember them like this, just as plain single digits.
Place the number TEN just above this wall, on the ceiling.
Then, do the same for the remaining two walls. The second wall will be the numbers 21,22,23 etc, and the third, 31,32,33, and the wall behind your back, 41,42,43 etc
Now, examine, the diagram above. If you cut it out, and folded it up, with the numbers on the INSIDE, you will have your room.
Take some time to get this pattern firmly into your head - I would spend a good 10 minutes, running over it in your mind's eye. The method for constructing this memory room is outlined very clearly is this little books by S.Sams
Ignore everything in the book, except for his very clear description of how to imagine the memory room.
You can put one of these memory rooms in every room and closet in your home. The first room would be for numbers 1 - 50, and the second for 50 -100 and so on.
Setting this system up in your head requires a small investment in time. Once you have it, you'll have it with you for life. Getting a large sheet of card, and drawing out the diagram above, and constructing the cube, can also be of assistance.
NOW, for memorising the verbs using the method of loci:
Turn to page 191 of Sam's Book, (i.e. the last 4 pages or so) where he sets out his system for using the memory cube for learning the Latin verbs. I used the system very successfully myself, so it appears to work for me. It might work for you as well. Sams does not give all forms in his example, you can supply the passive and deponents yourself on the remaining 2 walls of your first room, and place irregulars in another room - or put them alongside the regulars in the same boxes, once you have learned the regulars - remember to keep the tenses in the same loci, even in a new room.
IGNORE the number-word equivalent system given by Sams. If you want to play with this acrostic system, use the more advanced system developed by Gouraud:
Here is the floor of your room:
FIRSTLY, memorise the positions of these in their boxes. You may make up stories, visualise them. ( See the declension tower for examples of how to do this)
The first step is to be able to quickly recognise the forms. The second step, is to be able to give them over.
Here is a simplified set-up. We will learn it, then flesh it out with the full forms of the four paradigms for each tense. Aids to memory are in parentheses - feel free to make up your own ones)
1 I DO Am-o ( note how it resembles i do) | 2 I DID am-abam (I did fall on my bum) | 3 I HAVE am-avi (note the resemblance avi - have) |
4 I HAD am-averam (I had Avraham over for dinner) | 5 I WILL am-abo (I will be about to arrive) | 6 I MAY am-em (am-em, I may) |
7 I MIGHT OR COULD am-arem ( I might visit a hareem) | 8 I SHOULD HAVE am-averim | 9 I SHALL HAVE am-avero |
Note - all forms on the diagonal ( in green) from amo, end in o - i.e. amo, amabo, amavero.
The form 'I should have' (red) is almost identical to the form of I shall have.
You can think of your won mnemonics for the forms I have not given.
So, sit in your armchair, and imagine these arrrayed on the floor, in their boxes. Be as vivid as you can, make your images as concrete as you can.
Once you know exactly where the words fall, and which words are in which box, add the rest of the forms of the paradigms of each verb to each box. I would draw up a plan of the floor, and write out the tables in each square, as per the instructions in S.Sam's book.
An hour or so of effort should have you remembering where the things are.
Remember, make use of the objects in your room that happen by chance to fall in the squares. For example, in my room, the top right corner had a table with a top hat on it, so I thought up the line ' I have a top hat', and so immediately recalled that that square was occupied by 'I have'
Now we leave the floor, and turn our imagination to the wall on our left, which we divide into nine squares:
1 I WOULD HAVE (I would have missed him) am-avissem | 2 TO DO (the standard infinitives, amare, monere,regere etc) TO HAVE ...'D (To have missed the 'm; that fell off amavissem was really irresponsible!) amavisse ( with no final m) | 3 TO BE ABOUT TO To be about to put a suppository up your recturum esse |
4 DOING amandi IN DOING amando TO DO amandum (a giant eating almonds, while chanting fee fi fo fum) | 5 TO DO (To do: to lose some weight from my tummy) amatum TO BE DONE ( To be done, now that its gone, to keep it off) amatu ( the tum has gone!) | 6 DOING amans What am I doing? I'm eating almonds! (amans) What am I about to do? I'm about to give some almonds to this tourist! ABOUT TO DO amaturus |
7 DO! ama! | 8 SHALL DO! am-ato | 9 DONE amatus TO BE DONE amandus (This is the last square and we're all done, but there is still more to be done) |
If you have a reasonably good visual or spatial memory, you should be able to get all of this memorised in about one hour. Add all the other forms, as given in Sam's book at the very end. review it regularly...the first attempt will be really hard. Then it will get easier. You will find, even after one hour of this, that your comprehension of texts will jump, as you will recognise verb forms, and be able to relate them to their locations.
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