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- ^Tutorial 3 - Substitute Words and Phrases\
-
- For your first exercise in using the Substitute Word System, you are going
- to memorise the twelve largest English counties, in order of area :
-
- [1]^ North Yorkshire\ (8,316 square Km)
- [2]$ Cumbria\ (6,809 square Km)
- [3]| Devon\ (6,715 square Km)
- [4]< Lincolnshire\ (5,885 square Km)
- [5]> Norfolk\ (5,515 square Km)
- [6]% Northumberland\ (5,034 square Km)
- [7]$ Hereford & Worcester\ (3,925 square Km)
- [8]^ Suffolk\ (3,807 square Km)
- [9]< Hampshire\ (3,772 square Km)
- [10]% Kent\ (3,730 square Km)
- [11]| Essex\ (3,674 square Km)
- [12]> Cornwall\ (3,546 square Km)
-
- There are two steps involved in memorising the list. Firstly, form a
- Substitute Word or Phrase to remind you of each of the county names.
- Secondly, apply the Link System to link those Substitute Words and Phrases
- together.#
-
- For each of the county names you are going to be given a Substitute Word or
- Phrase. If you can though, try and think up some Substitute Words or
- Phrases of your own for the names. Although using the suggested Substitute
- Words will normally work perfectly well, suggesting them to you does remove
- some of your Initial Awareness.
-
- Let's begin with the largest English County, ^North Yorkshire\. You need a
- Substitute Word or Phrase which will remind you of that county name. For
- ^North\ you might picture snow or a snowstorm. For |Yorkshire\ you might
- see a giant Yorkshire pudding. So to remember North Yorkshire, you could
- visualise an enormous Yorkshire pudding in the snow.
-
- The second largest county is $Cumbria\. The phrase $come near\, or perhaps
- $comb beer\ might remind you of that name. Choose one of these phrases or
- one you can think of yourself. Now start forming your link, by associating
- that phrase to your mental picture of North Yorkshire. For example, picture
- that huge Yorkshire Pudding in the snow $coming nearer\ and $nearer\, until
- it almost flattens you.#
-
- The next county is |Devon\. A convenient Sustitute Word here might be
- |heaven\, which rhymes with |DEVON\. Continue your link by associating
- |heaven\ to your Substitute Word or Phrase for Cumbria. For |heaven\ you
- might visualise, say, some angels sitting on a cloud playing their harps.
- As you watch, they $come nearer and nearer\, until the cloud envelopes you
- and you are sitting on it with the angels.
-
- Next comes <Lincolnshire\. <Link - on - chair\ sounds very similar, so you
- might try and associate that phrase to |heaven (Devon)\. Picture those
- angels standing on a gigantic chair. They <link\ arms <on\ the <chair\, and
- dance round and round in a circle.
-
- Next on the list is >Norfolk\. For this you might substitute >no fork\, or
- >north folk\. Now, continue your link. Picture, say, some >north Folk\ -
- Eskimos - standing on that huge chair. As you watch they <link\ arms <on\
- the <chair\.
-
- %Northumberland\ comes next. A good substitute phrase might be %no thumb
- hand\. Now associate that to >North Folk\. Picture those Eskimos - one by
- one, they hold up a %hand\ which has four fingers and %no thumb\. Make the
- hand as large as possible in your mental image, and the picture will stick.#
-
- The next county is $Hereford and Worcester\. For this you could picture a
- $'hairy' Ford\ car. The hair on the car is dripping with a thick black
- liquid - Worcestershire sauce. Now associate that to %no thumb hand\.
- Picture yourself trying to thumb a lift - without a thumb - as lots of Hairy
- Fords dripping with Worcestershire sauce drive past.
-
- ^Suffolk\ comes next. You might substitute ^South folk\ or ^surf fork\ for
- this name. Continue your link - visualise that $Hairy Ford\ ^surf\ing on a
- mammoth ^fork\ in the sea. Be sure to see that image clearly in your mind.
-
- Next on the list is <Hampshire\. An obvious substitute Word here is
- <Hamster\. Associate that to your Substitute Word for ^Suffolk\. Perhaps a
- giant <Hamster\ is ^surf\ing on that enormous ^fork.\ Remember to make the
- picture as silly as possible - perhaps the hamster is standing upright,
- wearing swimming trunks and a bathing cap.
-
- Tenth on the list is %KENT\. For this you might substitute %can't\ or
- %canned\. Choose one of these, or a Substitute Word of your own, and
- continue the Link. See yourself, say, opening a can and hundreds of
- hamsters jump out into the air - they are %canned\ hamsters.#
-
- Next comes |Essex\. For this you might substitute |yes eggs\. Associate
- that, or a substitute word of your own, to %canned (Kent)\. Picture
- yourself opening a can, when dozens of |eggs\ spring out - they all have
- faces, and are nodding busily and shouting |'yes'\.
-
- The final county in the list is >Cornwall\. A good substitute might be
- >corn\, or a packet of >Cornflakes\ growing on a >wall\. See that picture,
- and associate it to |Essex\. You might see those nodding |yes eggs\ popping
- out of the packet of >cornflakes\ growing on the >wall\.
-
- That completes the Link. If you've made all the suggested Associations (or
- used your own Associations), and really seen the images in your mind, then
- you know the twelve largest English counties, just as you knew the ten
- unrelated items at the end of Tutorial 1.
-
- One advantage of applying the Substitute Word System is that it %forces\ you
- to think about that name, to concentrate on it as you normally would not.#
-
- Of course, there are many other Substitute Words or Phrases you could have
- used for the above examples. If you thought of Clotted Cream or Devon Cream
- Teas or Dartmoor when you thought of Devon, then picturing one of those
- images would have served the purpose for you.
-
- Remember that Linking and associating are personal and individual -
- what ^you\ think of is usually best for you. Also, the ^first\ Substitute
- Word that comes to mind is normally the best to use.~
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