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60 Calculus Puns That Push You to the Limit

By
Olivia Reeves
60 calculus puns

Calculus is the only subject where you can feel genuinely smart and profoundly stupid in the same minute. I took Calc II twice in college (we don’t need to talk about it) and somehow came out the other side with a personality trait instead of just a credit. Anyway, here are way too many calculus puns, some of which I’m proud of and some of which should probably be deleted.

1. The Classic Breakup

Why did the derivative break up with the function? Because it couldn’t handle her constant need for change. Honestly this one’s been floating around math departments since the 90s but it still lands every time.

2.

I’m an integral part of this team, and I will not be replaced by a Riemann sum of interns.

3. Don’t

“Can we please stay focused?”
“Sorry, I went off on a tangent.”
“You only touched on the topic at one point!”

4.

The sky’s the limit. Unless the limit doesn’t exist, in which case all bets are off.

5. The Party Animal

What’s a mathematician’s favorite type of party? A function. (What’s their least favorite? One that’s undefined at too many points.) I actually told this at a party once and got a laugh from exactly one person, who I later married. That’s a lie. But it would’ve been a great story.

6.

Don’t be so derivative. Get an original thought for once.

This one works as an Instagram caption, a text to a friend, or a thing you mutter under your breath at a meeting. Versatile queen of a pun.

7.

I’m constantly thinking about calculus. And by constantly, I mean the value never changes.

8. A Triple Threat of Terrible Ones

  • My love for you is like an improper integral, it’s infinite.
  • I’m trying to derive some meaning from this relationship.
  • Let’s integrate our friend groups. Area under the social curve.

None of those are good. I know. Moving on.

9.

Why was the integral so popular at parties? It knew how to sum things up.

10. The One I’m Actually Proud Of

I told my therapist I was going through an inflection point. She asked if my life was changing concavity. I said yeah, I used to be concave up, all smiles, and now I’m concave down, and I don’t know where the second derivative switched signs. She referred me to a mathematician.

That one took me twenty minutes to write and I regret nothing.

11.

Feeling e-lated about my grade. Naturally.

(The “naturally” is doing double duty there because natural log. Please clap.)

12.

This is a product of hard work. Also the product rule, which was harder work.

13. The Gradient

This problem is giving me a lot of grief-ient.

Yeah, that’s a stretch. I’m including it because I already typed it and the backspace key is far away.

14.

Why did the function go to therapy? It had too many issues with its domain.

15.

“What’s the delta between your opinion and mine?”
“It’s approaching zero.”
“So we agree?”
“Only in the limit.”

16. Optimization Station

I’m trying to optimize my study time but I keep hitting local maxima where I feel productive for ten minutes and then watch videos about raccoons for an hour. Related: did you know raccoons can open jars? Anyway.

17.

Don’t curve your enthusiasm!

18.

My calculus teacher told me I had potential. Then she said “energy” after it and made me solve a physics problem.

19. The Chain Rule Cluster

  • Don’t break the chain rule, it’s the only thing holding composite functions together.
  • The chain rule is just peer pressure: the outer function makes the inner function do the work, then takes credit.
  • I tried explaining the chain rule to my dog. He derived nothing from it.

20.

I hope it all works out. L’Hôpital’s Rule, don’t fail me now.

Okay sidebar, L’Hôpital’s Rule is genuinely one of the most satisfying things in all of math. You’ve got 0/0 staring you down like a final boss and then you just… differentiate top and bottom and walk away? Incredible. Broken. Needs a nerf.

21.

To sum it all up, calculus is just addition that got way too ambitious.

22. The Slope of Things

I can’t get a slope on this problem. The rate of my understanding is approaching zero.

23.

What do you call a calculus student who just got dumped? A partial derivative, they can only handle one variable at a time.

This is one of my favorites, ngl. It works on like three levels if you’re sad enough.

24.

Everything is back to normal. Perpendicular to the tangent, as it should be.

25.

I’m reaching my maximum potential. Or maybe it’s a local max. Hard to tell without checking the second derivative.

26. Epsilon Yourself

I’m just an epsilon of a person, arbitrarily small but technically still positive.

Instagram caption energy right there. Post it with a selfie where you look slightly defeated at a coffee shop. Trust me.

27.

My computer isn’t functioning properly. Its output is undefined for half the inputs I give it.

28.

I’m trying to minimize my mistakes but the error function keeps growing exponentially.

29. The Convergence Conversation

“Do you think our opinions will ever converge?”
“Only if we’re bounded and monotonic.”

If you got that one without Googling, you were either a math major or you’re lying.

30.

What’s a vector, Victor? It’s magnitude with direction, which is more than I’ve ever had in my life.

31.

This is a rate-her difficult problem.

I’m sorry. That one’s bad. That one’s really bad. I’m leaving it in as a monument to poor judgment.

32. The Series Relationship

I’m in a series relationship with calculus. It started with a few terms and now it’s gone on way too long, but I think it might converge to something meaningful eventually. My friends say it diverges. They might be right.

33.

Why did the asymptote feel so lonely? It could get infinitely close but never actually touch.

Honestly that’s more sad than funny. Gonna leave it here anyway because it’s 2026 and we’re all the asymptote.

34.

I want a slice of pi. Approximately 3.14159 slices, to be exact-ish.

35. The Substitution

My friend asked me how to solve a tough integral. I said “try u-substitution.” He said “no, YOU substitution.” We’re not friends anymore.

36.

Calculus students have their limits. But they approach them.

37.

What do you call a argument between two mathematicians about integrals? A fight over boundaries.

38. The Volume Problem

I’m trying to get a volume of work done today. Specifically, using the disk method, rotating my motivation around the axis of productivity. The resulting solid of revolution is… small.

39.

My ex was like a removable discontinuity, the relationship looked like it should work, but there was just a hole.

TOP FIVE PUN ON THIS LIST. I will die on this hill. Send it to your math friends. Screenshot it. Tattoo it. Idc.

40.

Why do calculus students make bad comedians? Their jokes are too complex, half real, half imaginary.

(Okay technically that’s more of a complex analysis pun but calculus students encounter it, so it counts. My blog, my rules.)

41.

I tried to make a difference quotient but the limit of my patience was zero.

42. Quick Fire Round

  • Leibniz notation: dy/dx. Also what I say when my friend asks how I’m doing. “Changing with respect to everything, man.”
  • Newton and Leibniz both invented calculus independently. History’s biggest group project where nobody communicated.

43.

My love for you is like a divergent series, it just keeps growing without bound and probably isn’t healthy.

44. The Mean Value Theorem

Why is the Mean Value Theorem so rude? Because at some point, it’s guaranteed to be average.

Wait no, the theorem says there EXISTS a point where the instantaneous rate equals the average rate. So it’s not mean, it’s just… honestly pretty reasonable. This pun is falling apart. Let’s keep going.

45.

Taylor would approve of this series of events.

46.

Why did the Maclaurin series feel special? Because it was centered at zero, just like my bank account.

47.

I told my professor his lecture was monotonically decreasing in quality. He said that was bounded to happen.

48. The Squeeze Theorem

I got stuck between two functions at a concert once. Classic squeeze theorem situation. We all converged to the same limit eventually, which was the bar.

49.

What did the continuous function say to the discontinuous one? “I can’t relate, you’re full of gaps in this relationship.”

50.

Are you the second derivative? Because you make me change the way I feel about the way I feel.

That’s genuinely a good pickup line tbh. The concavity of my heart, etc.

51. Jacobian Aside

I mentioned the Jacobian determinant at dinner and my family asked me to leave. In fairness, we were at Olive Garden, not a math conference. But the coordinate transformation from Cartesian to polar was RELEVANT to the bread stick distribution, and I stand by that.

52.

Why do integrals never win arguments? They always give in to the bounds.

53.

Rolle’s Theorem walks into a bar. The bartender says, “Same value at both ends of the night, huh?” Rolle’s Theorem nods. “Somewhere in the middle, I must’ve hit zero.”

54. The Fundamental One

The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus is basically just: differentiation and integration are exes who still need each other. They’re inverse operations. They pretend they’ve moved on. They haven’t.

55.

My student loans accumulate interest like a continuously compounding nightmare. Euler’s number is involved. It’s not fun.

56.

What did the dx say to the integral sign? “I feel like I’m just along for the ride and you’re getting all the credit for the area.”

57. The Stokes’ Theorem Pun (For the 3% of You Who Will Get This)

My friend asked me to summarize what was happening inside a region. I told him I could figure it out just by walking along the boundary. He said that was a very Stokes’ move.

If you laughed at that, we should be friends. If you didn’t, that’s valid. It’s a multivariable thing. The curl of the situation was just right.

58.

Partial derivatives are like divorced parents, they only pay attention to one variable and pretend the others are constant.

59.

I asked a calculus student what’s at the center of gravity. They said “v.”

Get it? The letter v is at the center of gra-v-ity? Yeah. That’s where we’re at now. Pun 59. The barrel has been scraped. We’re mining bedrock.

60. The Residue

“Why do you keep going back to calculus puns?”
“I don’t know. There’s always a residue of humor left.”
“That’s complex analysis.”
“Everything is complex analysis if you’re tired enough.”

And look, if you’ve made it this far, your attention span is more convergent than I expected. Go text someone pun #39 and ruin their afternoon. That’s all I’ve got.

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