Resources › For Students and Parents Memorizing the Bill of Rights Amendments Share Flipboard Email Print For Students and Parents Homework Help Study Methods Homework Tips Learning Styles & Skills Time Management Private School Test Prep College Admissions College Life Graduate School Business School Law School Distance Learning View More By Grace Fleming Grace Fleming Education Expert M.Ed., Education Administration, University of Georgia B.A., History, Armstrong State University Grace Fleming, M.Ed., is a senior academic advisor at Georgia Southern University, where she helps students improve their academic performance and develop good study skills. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on September 18, 2019 Are you required to memorize the Bill of Rights? It is sometimes difficult to match up amendments with the rights they provide. This exercise employs a memorization tool called the Number-Rhyme System. You start by thinking up a rhyming word for each amendment number. One-sticky bunTwo-big shoeThree-house keyFour-doorFive-bee hiveSix-bricks and cake mixSeven-heavenEight-fishing baitNine-blank lineTen-wooden pen Your next step is to visualize a story that goes with the rhyming word. Think about the stories below and create a picture of each rhyming word in your mind as you read the stories. 01 of 10 AMENDMENT ONE - sticky bun o Copyright iStockphoto.com On the way to church, you grab a sticky bun. It’s so sticky it gets all over your hands and the newspaper you’re holding. It looks so good that you take a bite of it anyway, but the bun is so sticky that you can’t speak afterward. The first amendment addresses the freedom of religion, the freedom of the press, and the freedom of speech. See how the story gives you clues to the specific amendment? 02 of 10 AMENDMENT TWO - big shoe Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine that you’re standing in the snow, and you’re very cold. You look down to see that you have big shoes covering your feet, but you have no sleeves to cover your arms. They are bare! The second amendment addresses the right to bear arms. 03 of 10 AMENDMENT THREE - house key Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Your house had been invaded by British soldiers and they all want to have a key so they can come and go as they please. The third amendment addresses the quartering of soldiers in homes. 04 of 10 AMENDMENT FOUR - door Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Picture yourself sleeping peacefully when you are rudely awakened by a pounding at your door. You see that the police are trying to break down your door and enter forcibly. The fourth amendment addresses the right to be secure in your home and with your private possessions—and establishes that the police cannot enter or seize property without good reason. 05 of 10 AMENDMENT FIVE - bee hive Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine yourself standing outside a courthouse where a bee hive is hanging from the roof. Suddenly you are stung twice by a bee. The fifth amendment addresses your right to a trial and establishes that citizens can’t be tried twice (stung twice) for the same crime. 06 of 10 AMENDMENT SIX - bricks and cake mix Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Amendment six is big enough for two words! Imagine that you’ve been arrested and locked up in a small brick building, and you’ve been confined there for a year! When you are finally able to go to trial, you are so relieved that you bake a cake and share it with the public, your lawyer, and the jury. Amendment six establishes the right to a speedy trial, the right to compel witnesses to attend your trial, the right to have a lawyer, and the right to have a public trial. 07 of 10 AMENDMENT SEVEN - heaven Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine a dollar bill flying up to heaven where a winged jury sits. The seventh amendment establishes that crimes may be treated differently if there is a small dollar amount involved. In other words, crimes involving a dispute less than $1500 can be tried in small claims court. The seventh amendment also forbids the creation of private courts—or courts other than government courts. The only court you have to worry about outside the government courts may be the one in the hereafter! 08 of 10 AMENDMENT EIGHT - fishing bait Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine you’ve done something wrong and now you’re forced to eat worms as punishment! The eighth amendment protect citizens from cruel and unusual punishment. 09 of 10 AMENDMENT NINE - blank line Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine the Bill of Rights followed by a lot of blank lines. The ninth amendment is a little hard to grasp, but it addresses the fact that citizens do enjoy rights that are not mentioned in the Bill of Rights—but there are too many basic rights to mention. It also means that the amendments that are listed must not infringe upon rights that are not listed. 10 of 10 AMENDMENT TEN - wooden pen Photo Copyright iStockphoto.com Imagine a big wooden pen surrounding each and every individual state. The tenth amendment provides individual states with powers not held by the federal government. These powers include laws concerning schools, driver’s licenses, and marriages. For best results: Say each number and its rhyming word out loud and remember how they sound to tap into your auditory learning ability. Get a clear mental picture (and the sillier the better) of each story to tap into your visual learning ability. Now go through the numbers one to ten in your head and remember the rhyming word. If you remember the rhyming word, you’ll be able to remember the story and the amendment! Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Fleming, Grace. "Memorizing the Bill of Rights Amendments." ThoughtCo, Aug. 27, 2020, thoughtco.com/memorizing-the-bill-of-rights-amendments-1857303. Fleming, Grace. (2020, August 27). Memorizing the Bill of Rights Amendments. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/memorizing-the-bill-of-rights-amendments-1857303 Fleming, Grace. "Memorizing the Bill of Rights Amendments." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/memorizing-the-bill-of-rights-amendments-1857303 (accessed May 29, 2023). copy citation