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  2. Cultural depictions of elephants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of...

    The elephant has entered into popular culture through various idiomatic expressions and adages. The phrase "Elephants never forget" refers to the belief that elephants have excellent memories. The variation "Women and elephants never forget an injury" originates from the 1904 book Reginald on Besetting Sins by British writer Saki. [48] [49]

  3. The Science Behind the Incredible Long-Term Memory of Elephants

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    Elephants have excellent memories.In fact, researchers suggest their memory is just as good as that of dolphins and apes. An elephant never forgets might be an exaggeration, but elephants actually ...

  4. An Elephant Never Forgets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Elephant_Never_Forgets

    Among these animals is an elephant who leads the chorus, a piglet who is full of mud, and a highly indifferent hippopotamus who walks so slow that a snail rapidly passes him. When they arrive in class, the elephant sits in front of a hostile gorilla who uses a washboard to hit and annoy the elephant. In the meantime, the hippopotamus simply ...

  5. Musth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musth

    A bull elephant in musth, wild or otherwise, is extremely dangerous to humans, other elephants, and other species. Bull elephants in musth have killed keepers/mahouts, as well as other bull elephants, female elephants, and calves (the last usually inadvertently or accidentally in what is often called "herd infighting"). [13]

  6. Elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant

    The word elephant is derived from the Latin word elephas (genitive elephantis) ' elephant ', which is the Latinised form of the ancient Greek ἐλέφας (elephas) (genitive ἐλέφαντος (elephantos, [1])) probably from a non-Indo-European language, likely Phoenician. [2]

  7. List of mnemonics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mnemonics

    One way of remembering this is that the word 'noun' comes before the word 'verb' in the dictionary; likewise 'c' comes before 's', so the nouns are 'practice, licence, advice' and the verbs are 'practise, license, advise'. [27] Here or Hear; We hear with our ear. Complement and Compliment; complement adds something to make it enough

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  9. Elephant joke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_joke

    An elephant joke is a joke cycle, almost always an absurd riddle or conundrum and often a sequence of such, that involves an elephant. Elephant jokes were a fad in the 1960s, with many people constructing large numbers of them according to a set formula. Sometimes they involve parodies or puns. [1] [2] [3] An example of an elephant joke is: [1] [3]