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Memorise the Rivers of Bangladesh

Bangladesh’s Rivers are a short list. This guide locks the order into memory with one phrase and a map step for each.

This guide uses visual emoji anchors and a mnemonic phrase to lock all 2 into your memory. By the end, you’ll know every one.

Time-box it. Give yourself 5 focused minutes - no phone, no other tabs. That’s all this takes. Rushing memorisation never sticks; a short attentive session beats 20 distracted minutes.

The Mnemonic

One sentence to remember the order - each word starts with the same letter as each river:

Grape Ball

🌊 Grape = Ganj 🌊 Ball = Brahmaputra

Say it once. Now let’s meet each river and place them on the map.

Why this works: the mnemonic turns a list of 2 arbitrary names into a single sentence your brain already treats as one chunk. You’re not memorising 2 things - you’re memorising one short phrase with 2 hooks hanging off it. That’s how working memory gets leveraged into long-term recall.

The order matters. River lengths don’t change on human timescales · Bangladesh’s order is fixed by geography, not by population or politics.


1. 🌊 Ganj

🌊
#1 Ganj 795 km
The 795 km Bangladeshi course of the Ganges, locally called the Padma · the main river of central Bangladesh, joining the Brahmaputra at Goalundo to form the world’s largest delta.
🌊 Ganj · the river is sacred to Hindus, and even in Muslim-majority Bangladesh boat festivals still mark its flow.

Grape…” - Grape starts with G, just like Ganj.

GeographyOpen game →
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2. 🌊 Brahmaputra

🌊
#2 Brahmaputra 416 km
The 416 km Bangladeshi course of the Brahmaputra, locally called the Jamuna · enters Bangladesh from Assam and braids across the country in a vast 12 km-wide channel.
🌊 Brahmaputra · the river’s name means ‘son of Brahma’; only the Amazon and Congo carry more water by discharge.
Say it: brah-mah-POO-trah
Name: From Sanskrit, meaning son of Brahma, the Hindu creator god.

”…Grape Ball…” - B for Brahmaputra.

GeographyOpen game →
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The Complete Map

Close your eyes first. Before looking at the map below, try saying the mnemonic out loud and picturing each river’s position. Attempted recall - even if you get half wrong - cements memory far better than passive re-reading.

Rivers cluster by basin. Bangladesh’s major rivers usually share a small number of headwater regions and outflows · group them by basin (which sea, lake, or larger river they feed into) and rehearse each basin as one chunk. Anchor on Ganj, Brahmaputra first.

Grape Ball

GeographyOpen game →
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🌊 Ganj → 🌊 Brahmaputra

Now Test Yourself

Active recall beats re-reading. You’ll remember the list ten times better by trying to reproduce it from memory than by reading it again. Close this tab, say the mnemonic, then come back and check.

Think you’ve got it? The interactive game tests you step by step - place each river on the map in the right order.

Play Bangladesh Rivers →

Two modes: Locations (tap the right spot) and Names (pick the right name).

Come back tomorrow. Test yourself again 24 hours from now - that single follow-up session is what moves the list from “I learned it” to “I know it”. Spaced repetition works on river lists the same as everything else.

Mind the order. Mixing up the ranks of Bangladesh’s top rivers is the most common mistake · rehearse the mnemonic backwards once, then forwards, to lock the sequence both directions.

MemPi
Play on your next flight · works offline
Add PlayMemorize to your home screen
In Safari, tap Share , then choose “Add to Home Screen”.