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Mortuary MnemonicsAuthor: Damon de la Cruz
A place to help Funeral Service Education Students study. We share mortuary science mnemonics that will help with classes, NEB and state exams. We also help licensed practitioner review concepts from the course they took while in school. This is a Tuesday Evening Publications production. Language: en-gb Genres: Life Sciences, Science Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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HONC
Saturday, 28 March, 2026
Podcast Title: HONC – The Shortcut to Bonding PatternsIn embalming chemistry, we only need to know severalelements and how they interact with each other. For example, how they will bond with one another. If you’ve ever looked at a chemical structureand thought, how many bonds should this atom make? There’s a simple mnemonic that can guide youevery time: HONC.H-O-N-C.Each letter represents a common element and the number ofbonds it typically forms.H is 1.O is 2.N is 3.C is 4.That’s it.This comes from the idea of valence electrons, butyou don’t need to get lost in the theory. What matters for us is recognizingpredictable bonding patterns.Hydrogen wants one bond. It’s stable when it shares oneelectron.Oxygen typically forms two bonds. Nitrogen forms three bonds.And carbon forms four bonds. This is why carbon is thebackbone of organic chemistry, it can build complex, stable structures.So when you’re visualizing molecules or thinking about howchemicals interact, HONC gives you a quick mental check.If something looks off—too many or too few bonds—you’llcatch it.In fields like embalming chemistry, where we’re dealing withreactive molecules like formaldehyde, understanding these bonding patternshelps explain how crosslinking happens and why preservation works the way itdoes.So remember:HONC.1, 2, 3, 4.










