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A comprehensive list of Siri voice commands you can use on an iPhone
Melanie Weir
Nov 16, 2020, 9:19 AM

article
man using siri voice assistant smartphone
Your iPhone's Siri assistant can help you with more than you may think. 
fizkes/Getty Images
list of 3 items
You can use Siri voice commands to control certain features of your iPhone 
through the virtual assistant hands-free.
Siri has an ever-growing list of commands you can give, and some of them can 
be enormously helpful in day-to-day life.
Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.
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When voice commands first came out on
phones,
it was a bit of a joke — they were finicky, hard to control, and would often 
misunderstand the user and perform the wrong task.

But voice commands have significantly evolved, and become built-in 
assistants that we now know by name.
Siri,
the
iPhone
 assistant, now has an expanded list of varied commands that it can help you 
with.

How to wake Siri
list of 2 items
• Press and hold the home button: if you have a newer model without a home 
button, hold the side button down.
• "Hey Siri": the standard wake-up greeting should wake Siri to listen to 
your commands regardless of where you are, as long as you have an
iPhone
 model 6S or later. If you have the 6 or earlier, your
phone
 has to be plugged in and charging for the command to work.
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Neither of these commands will work, however, if you don't have them enabled 
in Settings. To do so, tap "Siri & Search," in the Settings app, and toggle
the relevant switch — "Listen for 'Hey Siri'" or "Press Home/Side Button for 
Siri" — to the "on" position.

If you want to issue commands even when the
phone
 is locked, make sure "Allow Siri When Locked" is switched on, too.

Siri_voice_commands_ _1
Make sure these settings are enabled in the "Siri & Search" menu. Melanie 
Weir/Business Insider
list of 2 items
• On Apple Earpods: Press and hold the center button and speak into the 
built-in microphone to issue your command or ask your question.
• On Apple Airpods: Double tap on either ear to activate Siri.
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Voice commands for Siri to make calls or send messages

Once you've woken Siri and made sure your
phone
 is listening for your command, there are any number of vocal directives 
that it will recognize. These include ones for communication, like:

list of 5 items
• Call or FaceTime someone on your contacts list, or call an emergency 
number: "Call Mom" or "Call the Fire Department." You can also add more 
specific
commands on top of these basic ones, like "Call Mom on speaker."
• Reading text messages or emails: "Read new messages" or "check my email."
• Sending text messages: "Tell [contact name] that I'll be home at seven."
• Sending emails: "Send email to [contact name] about [subject] and say 
[message]."
• Checking voicemail: "Do I have any voicemail?" or "Play new voicemail from 
William."
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Asking Siri questions
list of 8 items
• Weather: "What's the weather today?" or the more specific "Do I need an 
umbrella?"
• Math: "What's 25 times 36?" or any number of other math problems, 
including tip calculations.
• Mathematical conversions: "How many cups are in a quart?" or "How many 
feet in a meter?"
• Time zone conversions: "What time is it in Chicago?"
• Definitions, synonyms, antonyms, or etymologies of words: "What's the 
definition of arduous?" or "What's the etymology of arduous?"
• The dates of holidays: "When is Easter this year?"
• Site searches: "What's trending on Twitter?" or "What's Brendon Urie 
saying?" or "Search Twitter for…"
• Any question Siri can't answer: if Siri can't answer a question itself, it 
will send it to Google, and present you with the top result from there. You
can also start a question with "Search Google for…" if you want.
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Voice commands for Siri to search your
phone

You can even use Siri to search your phone for things using keywords. So if 
you can't find something in your phone, Siri might be of help. Searches Siri
can perform include:

list of 3 items
• Notes: "Find my note about…"
• Emails: "Find the email about…"
• Your photos: "Find photos of [person]" will work if you have photos 
associated with a certain contact, or if you have gone through in your 
Photos app
and labeled a person using the facial recognition software. "Find photos 
from [place]" will also work if you had location services enabled when you 
took
the photos, and "Find photos from [date or time period]" should always work.
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Voice commands for Siri to set schedules

You can also use Siri as a personal assistant, and have it help you set 
schedules and reminders. You can:

list of 9 items
• Schedule a meeting in your calendar: "Schedule a meeting with [name] 
tomorrow at [location] at [time]."
• Set reminders: "Remind me to pick up my dry cleaning tomorrow at 2pm." You 
can also set these reminders for places instead of times, if you have 
location
services turned on. For example, you might say, "Remind me to start the wash 
when I get home," and when your phone sees that you've arrived at your home
address, it will remind you.
• Set alarms: "Set an alarm for 7 a.m."
• Turn off or delete alarms, reminders, or events: "Cancel my 3 o'clock 
appointment" or "Turn off all alarms" or "Delete my 6:55 alarm."
• Countdowns: "How many days until Christmas?" or "How many days until April 
25?"
• Make reservations: "Make a reservation for two tonight at Boccone South at 
7:30 p.m.," or even "Find a table for eight in Philadelphia tonight."
• Find out more about your area: you can ask questions as simple as "Where 
am I?" or "What bridge is this?" As long as your location is updating 
actively,
Siri should be able to answer you.
• Check your calendar events: "What's on my schedule for today?"
• Check on a flight's status: "Check flight status of [airline and flight 
number]"
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Voice commands for Siri to help with directions

You can also ask navigation questions, which Siri will be able to answer 
using the Apple Maps app — questions like:

list of 8 items
• "What's traffic like on the way home?"
• "Where is the nearest pizza place?"
• "Where is The Pizza Grill?"
• "Find walking directions to The Pizza Grill."
• "Find driving directions to the Four Seasons Hotel."
• "How do I get to work by transit?"
• If you are already using maps to get you to a destination, you can ask 
"What's my ETA?"
• "How much does gas cost right now?"
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Voice commands for Siri to control Apple Music
list of 10 items
• Basic commands: "Play," "Pause," "Stop," "Go back," and "Next song" all 
work.
• Play specific music: "Play [artist] or [song name] or [album]."
• Play music radio: Saying "Play some music" will create a custom Apple 
Music radio station based on your tastes.
• Like a song: "Like this song" will have the app "like" the song currently 
playing.
• Shuffle: "Shuffle my [playlist name] playlist" should usually work — 
although if you have emojis in the names of any of your playlists, it's less 
reliable."
• Queue songs: "After this, play Feels So Nice by The Wrecks" queues that as 
the next song.
• Play popular music: "Play the top songs from 2010" — Siri will play you 
some of the most popular music from any era of your choosing.
• Play related music: "Play more like this" — Siri will play more songs that 
sound like the one you're currently listening to in genre and tone — this
ability is more accurate the more Apple Music knows about your tastes.
• Purchase music: "Buy this song" will take you to a purchase confirmation 
for the song.
• Identify songs: "What song is this?" works if you're playing a song 
through Apple Music, or if you hear a song while you're out somewhere and 
you have
Shazam installed.
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Siri can also usually accomplish basic tasks in popular third-party apps. To 
check which apps on your
phone
 you can control using Siri, try issuing a basic command, like "Pay Jordan 
10 dollars on Venmo" — or see if the app is on
this ongoing list
 of Siri-compatible apps.

There are also a few random commands you can give Siri just for fun, like 
"Roll two dice for me", "Tell me a joke," and "What planes are flying above 
me
right now?" The Apple team is constantly updating Siri's software, and the 
program is also constantly learning from you, so try issuing different 
commands
and see what happens!

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