^Tutorial 10 - Remembering Very Long Numbers\ Having worked through Tutorials 8 and 9, you should now feel confident with transposing any number into a word or phrase. By combining this knowledge with the >Link System\ which you have already learned, you can easily memorise numbers with 15, 20, 50 or even 100 digits. Of course, it's unlikely that you'll ever need to remember a number with 15 or more digits. But it's an impressive memory feat, and anyone who can easily remember, say, 174120526400647 is unlikely to forget a telephone number or a bank account number. Let's take that number 174120526400647. In order to memorise it there are three steps involved : (1) |Divide\ the number up into several smaller groups of digits (2) Link System\ to each of those words or phrases For example, 174120526400647 could conveniently be divided into 5 groups of 3 digits - 174 120 526 400 647. Next we need to transpose each of those groups into a word or phrase.# Take the first group, 174. There are several words which would fit these digits - |tiger, dagger, digger, ticker, docker\ are a few examples. When you are trying to transpose digits into words for yourself, the first one you think of is usually best for you. Now move on to the next three digits. What fits 120 phonetically ?