Random Memes

Prioritized like samples in your freezer

When Your Physics Homework Follows You Outside

When Your Physics Homework Follows You Outside
Every physics student has that moment of recognition when textbook diagrams suddenly manifest in real life! Those pulleys and tension systems that seemed like abstract torture devices in homework problems are actually EVERYWHERE once you start looking. The electrical line system is basically a living physics problem – complete with multiple pulleys, tension forces, and enough variables to make your TI-84 calculator cry. Next time your professor asks "when will you use this in real life?" just point at the nearest power line and say "it's been haunting me since chapter 3!"

Take My Number... All 6.02 × 10²³ Of It

Take My Number... All 6.02 × 10²³ Of It
The smoothest mathematician in history just slid into your DMs. That's Avogadro's number (6.02 × 10²³) on those tear-off tabs—the exact quantity of molecules in one mole of any substance. Dating a chemist means you'll always know exactly how many atoms are coming to dinner. Just don't expect them to be on time; they're too busy calculating how many moles of wine to bring.

Calculus Without Derivatives

Calculus Without Derivatives
This is like promising a swimming class without water! "Calculus Without Derivatives" is the mathematical equivalent of "Pizza Without Cheese" or "Skydiving Without Falling." Derivatives are literally THE POINT of calculus! It's like someone looked at math students suffering and thought "How can I make this more confusing?" Next up: "Astronomy Without Stars" and "Biology Without Living Things." Math professors everywhere are either crying or cackling at this paradoxical textbook that somehow made it through publishing!

Driving Through Function Composition

Driving Through Function Composition
The driver complains about fog while literally driving through the mathematical expression f(g(x)) — the composition of functions that haunts every calculus student's nightmares. This is peak math humor for people who've survived differential equations. The expression f(g(x)) represents a function composition where g is applied first, then f is applied to the result. Just like actual fog obscures your vision, function composition obscures what's happening to your poor variable x as it gets passed through multiple operations. No wonder the driver can't see where they're going — they're lost in a calculus hellscape!

People When They Die: The Chemical Truth

People When They Die: The Chemical Truth
The ultimate chemical punchline to life! That compound is diethyl azodicarboxylate (DEAD) - so when people die, they literally become DEAD. Chemistry humor at its finest! The universe's way of saying "I planned this pun for billions of years." Next time someone asks what happens after death, just draw this structure and walk away dramatically. Nobel Prize for darkest chemical wordplay goes to...

The Hands-On Approach To Calculus

The Hands-On Approach To Calculus
Who needs triple integrals when you've got an axe? While professors drone on about disk methods and shells, real calculus students are out here solving volume problems with pure brute force. "If I split this cube into enough tiny pieces, eventually one of them will give me the right answer!" Nothing says "I understand calculus" like turning a mathematical operation into a woodworking project. Next up: finding derivatives by aggressively drawing tangent lines with a chainsaw.

Potassium Ion Gets Friendzoned

Potassium Ion Gets Friendzoned
The potassium ion (K + ) is literally watching from the sidelines while the permanganate ion (MnO 4 - ) gets all the oxygen atoms! 💀 In this molecular soap opera, poor K + can only form ionic bonds while manganese is hoarding FOUR oxygen atoms in a committed covalent relationship. Talk about atomic inequality! This is what happens when you have just one valence electron to offer—you end up in chemistry's friend zone while transition metals steal all the electron-sharing action. The periodic table can be so cruel sometimes!

Can't Let Pi Slander Slide

Can't Let Pi Slander Slide
The mathematical equivalent of a bar fight. The little brother commits the cardinal sin of mathematics by calling π rational, and big bro swoops in with Lambert's proof like he's been waiting his whole life for this moment. Spoiler alert: π is transcendental, not just irrational. It can't be expressed as a fraction or as the root of any polynomial equation with rational coefficients. The ratio of circumference to diameter is an endless decimal that never repeats or terminates—much like this conversation at family gatherings.

Metric System Mayhem

Metric System Mayhem
The eternal nemesis of physics students everywhere: unit conversion. You've done the calculations perfectly, derived the equations flawlessly, and then missed the final answer by a factor of 1000 because you forgot to convert from feet to meters. The SI system watches from the sidelines, judging silently as another promising physicist gets derailed by imperial units. Next time just remember: the universe speaks metric, even if your textbook doesn't.

Pope Decrees Sine Is Not Sin

Pope Decrees Sine Is Not Sin
The Pope has finally had enough of the world's most overused math pun. Every mathematician knows the pain of hearing someone say "using sine is a sin" for the 1,000th time. The etymology lesson is actually correct – "sine" comes from Latin for "curved" while "sin" means "guilt." I've personally witnessed three professors throw chalk across lecture halls after hearing this joke. One muttered "I didn't get a PhD for this" before walking out. The math department coffee room has a swear jar specifically for this pun.

The Four Nations Of Vaalbara, Superia, Sclavia, And Oceanus Lived In Harmony. And Then The Oxygen Nation Attacked!

The Four Nations Of Vaalbara, Superia, Sclavia, And Oceanus Lived In Harmony. And Then The Oxygen Nation Attacked!
Content LIFE 2.5 MILLIARD YEARS AGO GYANOBACTERIA ABOUT TO RELEAST OKYGEN INTO THE SEA imgflip.com

Consistency Is Key

Consistency Is Key
The famous "Epic Handshake" meme showing the beautiful solidarity between scientists and students! Nothing brings people together quite like that magical "0% yield" in chemistry experiments or bombing an exam you studied all night for. The chemistry lab's version of "misery loves company" – where your theoretical calculations promised 98% yield but reality said "nope, not today!" Every organic chemist silently nodding right now while remembering that time they got nothing but a mysterious brown goo instead of their target compound.