Mood: Dead sleepy. Going to sleep after this post.
Amazing how patternal IQ tests tally with my mind. It's almost simple. I'm not bragging though. Here's my full IQ Report provided by Tickle.
Your Intellectual Type Is:
| You've got a very experiential way of learning and a strong mathematical mind. You're able to whittle even the most complex situation down to comprehensible component parts. In short, you have mastered the art and science of precision. That's what makes you a Precision Processor. For you, life is a series of equations. Your brain is naturally predisposed to intense mathematical acuity, and your understanding of numerical problems is unparalleled. It's second nature for you to cut to the heart of an issue, so that you can discover quick solutions to problems while others get bogged down in unnecessary details. |
Precision Processors can apply their mathematical skills to any situation involving numbers. That's a talent that will come in handy for everything from the workplace to splitting a bill 12 ways to converting foreign currency in your head. Others often look to you to do the math and luckily, you're well equipped.
Great Jobs For You |
Because of the way you process information, these are just some of the many careers in which you could excel:
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Some of Your Greatest Talents |
You've got tons of strengths. It wouldn't surprise us if you:
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Your 4 Intelligence Scales
Now let's look at the factors that contribute to you being a Precision Processor with a 126 IQ score.
Based on the results of your test, Tickle divided your scores into four distinguishable dimensions — mathematical intelligence, visual-spatial intelligence, linguistic intelligence and logic intelligence.
Here's how each of your intelligence scores break down:
Mathematical Intelligence
You scored in the 100th percentile on the mathematical intelligence scale.This means that you scored higher than 90% - 100% of people who took the test and that 0% - 10% scored higher than you did. The scale above illustrates this visually.
Your mathematical intelligence score represents your combined ability to reason and calculate. You scored relatively high, which means you're probably the one your friends look to when splitting the lunch bill or calculating your waitresses' tip. You may or may not be known as a math whiz, but number crunching might come a little easier to you than it does others.
This is the kind of question that helped to determine your mathematical intelligence score:
A boy is 4 years old and his sister is three times as old as he is. When the boy is 12 years old, how old will his sister be? 16, 20, 24, 28, 32.
answer: 20.
The sister is (3 )three times older than her (4) four-year-old brother. Three times 4 is 12, in other words, when he is four, she is 12. Twelve years old is 8 years older than 4 years old, which makes her 8 years older than him. This never changes. Therefore, when he is 12, she is still 8 years older, or 12+8=20.
Flexing Your Math Muscles |
Like anything, keeping or improving your math talents requires practice. Here are some everyday mental exercises that could be particularly helpful to you:
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Visual-Spatial Intelligence
You scored in the 70th percentile on the visual-spatial intelligence scale.
This means that you scored higher than 60% - 70% of people who took the test and that 30% - 40% scored higher than you did. The scale above illustrates this visually.
The visual-spatial component of intelligence measures your ability to extract a visual pattern and from that envision what should come next in a sequence. Your score was
Here's the type of question that contributed to your visual-spatial intelligence score:
is to | as | is to | |||
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Answer: |
The answer lies in recognizing not only the visual sequence of a square and then a line, but in the recognizing the solidity of the line in the first example and the broken quality of the line in the second example.
Vision Quest |
Like anything, keeping or improving visual-spatial talents requires some practice. Here are some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly helpful to you:
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Linguistic Intelligence
You scored in the 80th percentile on the linguistic intelligence scale.
This means that you scored higher than 70% - 80% of people who took the test and that 20% - 30% scored higher than you did. The scale above illustrates this visually.
Linguistic abilities include reading, writing and communicating with words. Tickle's test measures knowledge of vocabulary, ease in completing word analogies and the ability to think critically about a statement based on its semantic structure. Your score was relatively high, which could mean you know your way around a bookstore and maybe like to bandy about the occasional 25-cent word to impress friends.
Here's the type of question that contributed to your linguistic intelligence scale score:
Inept is the opposite of:
Answer: Skillful.
The answer is derived by prior knowledge that "inept" means "unskillful" (Oxford Concise Dictionary).
Word Power |
Like anything, keeping or improving linguistic talents requires some practice. Here are some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly helpful to you:
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Logical Intelligence
You scored in the 90th percentile on the logical intelligence scale.
This means that you scored higher than 80% - 90% of people who took the test and that 10% - 20% scored higher than you did. The scale above illustrates this visually.
Tickle's logical intelligence questions assess your ability to think things through. The questions determine the extent to which you use reasoning and logic to determine the best solution to a problem. Your logic score was relatively high, which could mean that when the car breaks down, your friends look to you to help figure out not only what's wrong, but how to fix it and how you're going to get to the next gas station.
Here's the kind of question that contributed to your logical intelligence score:
If some Wicks are Slicks and some Slicks are Snicks, then some Wicks are definitely Snicks.
Answer: False
The statement is false because while some Wicks might be Slicks, there is no conclusive proof that any of them might be Snicks.
Logic Lessons |
Like anything, keeping or improving logical talents requires some practice. Here are some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly helpful to you:
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What do all these percentiles mean? |
For each scale, Tickle determined how many people received scores above and below yours. Your "percentile" represents what percentage of people scored lower than you. In other words, 90th percentile means you scored higher than 80 to 90% of people did. How are the percentiles determined? These percentiles were determined based on the one million users who have already taken our test. We then adjusted these percentiles based on a nationally representative IQ distribution to make sure that no level of intelligence was over- or underrepresented in the analysis. Thus, the percentiles we present reflect your score compared with people in the United States in general. |
Test Question Answer Key Now that you know your IQ score, your Intelligence Type and your rank along the four intelligence scales (Mathematical, Visual-Spatial, Linguistic and Logical), we thought you might want to go back and see how you answered various questions. People often waver on at least a couple of questions, so we've provided the full set of questions along with the answer key.
= your answer
= correct answer
1. | Which one of the five choices makes the best comparison? LIVED is to DEVIL as 6323 is to: | |
2336 | ||
6232 | ||
3236 | ||
3326 | ||
6332 | ||
The most important thing to notice in comparing the words in this problem is that "devil" is "lived" spelled backwards. This is the pattern that you need to apply to the number 6323 - solve the problem by finding which number is 6323 "spelled" backwards. The answer is 3236, option C. |
2. | Which one of these is least like the four? | |
Horse | ||
Kangaroo | ||
Goat | ||
Deer | ||
Donkey | ||
Try picturing each of the five animals in the list and thinking of which characteristics 4 of them have in common that is not found in the fifth. You might start by thinking that some have fur. If you picture all of the animals on the list, you actually find that they all have fur. Because all the animals on the list are included in the group called "animals with fur," you know that this cannot be the right answer - you need a categorization that excludes one - and only one - animal from the group. The right answer is that the kangaroo is least like the other four, option B. One reason for this is that a kangaroo can get around on two legs, whereas all of the others are four-legged animals. Another reason is that a kangaroo carries her young around in a pouch, whereas none of the other animals have evolved with pouches to carry their young. There are other justifications as well - how many can you think of? |
3. | Which number should come next? 144 121 100 81 64 ? | |
17 | ||
19 | ||
36 | ||
49 | ||
50 | ||
The most important thing to notice in comparing the words in this problem is that all of these numbers are the product of a number multiplied by itself - they are all squares. In addition, the pattern is a descending list of sequential numbers, squared. Here is the pattern: 144 = 12 x 12 121 = 11 x 11 100 = 10 x 10 81 = 9 x 9 64 = 8 x 8 The next number must be the product of 7 x 7. Therefore, the correct answer is 49, or option D. |
4. | Even the most ___________ rose has thorns. | |
Ugly | ||
Weathered | ||
Elusive | ||
Noxious | ||
Tempting | ||
This incomplete sentence is focused on the fact that roses have thorns. When thinking about this fact, you may find that you have a negative reaction to the idea of rose thorns. After all, while thorns may serve a positive purpose for the rose itself, anyone who has grabbed a rose by its thorns knows that this is a negative experience and will view thorns with caution from then on. The way this sentence is constructed tells you that the word you need to fill in the blank is something that contrasts with the downside of roses - the fact that they have thorns. It is a sentence that contrasts positive with negative: "Even the most (positive thing) has (negative thing)." Therefore, we know we are looking for a word that fits into the sentence that describes a positive aspect of roses. In looking over the list of 5 words, all are negative with the exception of the word "tempting". This makes "tempting," answer option E, the best choice to fill the blank. |
5. | HAND is to Glove as HEAD is to | |
Hair | ||
Hat | ||
Neck | ||
Earring | ||
Hairpin | ||
When looking for two pairs of things that act the same way, the best way to approach the problem is to identify how the complete pair (hand and glove) relates the two items. When considering the relationship of a hand to a glove, you may characterize the relationship as a glove as a garment that covers or surrounds a hand, or that a hand fits into. After identifying this relationship, you can create a simple question to test the relationships of other pairings to see if the same relationship is present. For example, you may construct a simple sentence such as "Does a head fit into a ___?" When testing each of the 5 answer options, you'll find that option B - Hat - is the only one that shares the same relationship as a hand to a glove. |
6. |
| |||||||
When looking for two pairs of things that act the same way, the best way to approach the problem is to identify how the complete pair relates the two items. In this example, the first item in the complete pair is an image of two triangles stacked vertically and the second item is two circles lined up horizontally. The first pair has two items that differ in two notable ways: (1) in their shape (triangle vs. circle), and (2) in their physical orientation (vertical vs. horizontal). The first image is the "opposite" of the second image. When looking for the missing image that completes the second pairing, you should keep in mind what you learned from the first pair (shape and physical orientation). In looking at the first image in the second pair, you'll notice that it contains circles that are stacked vertically. Therefore, you should be looking for the "opposite" of the first pair - triangles that are lined up horizontally. The only answer option that fits this description is D, therefore D is the correct answer. |
7. | John likes 400 but not 300; he likes 100 but not 99; he likes 3600 but not 3700. Which does he like: | |
900 | ||
1000 | ||
1100 | ||
1200 | ||
John likes squares of whole numbers. The consistent distinction between the pairs of numbers that John likes or doesn't like is that the one that John likes is a square of a whole number. Take a look: John likes 400. The square root of 400 is 20. John doesn't like 300. The square root of 300 is approximately 17.32; it is not a whole number squared. John likes 100. The square root of 100 is 10. John doesn't like 99. The square root of 99 is approximately 9.95; it is not a whole number squared. John likes 3600. The square root of 3600 is 60. John doesn't like 3700. The square root of 3700 is approximately 60.83; it is not a whole number squared. To answer the question, look through the list of 4 numbers to see which is a square of a whole number. The only number in the list that is exactly equal to a whole number multiplied by itself is 900. The square root of 900 is 30. Therefore, the answer is "A". |
8. | A fallacious argument is: | |
Disturbing | ||
Valid | ||
False | ||
Necessary | ||
This is a vocabulary question. The definition of fallacious is "based on an incorrect or misleading notion or information." The words "disturbing" and "necessary" are conceptually unrelated to the word fallacious, and the word "valid" is actually one of its antonyms (opposites).Therefore, answer option C, "false," is the closest match to the definition of fallacious |
9. | If you rearrange the letters "ANLDEGN," you would have the name of a(n): | |
Ocean | ||
Country | ||
State | ||
City | ||
Animal | ||
If you unscramble the letters of "ANLDEGN," you get the word "ENGLAND." England is a country, therefore answer option B is correct. |
10. | NASA received three messages in a strange language from a distant planet. The scientists studied the messages and found that "Necor Buldon Slock" means "Danger Rocket Explosion" and "Edwan Mynor Necor" means "Danger Spaceship Fire" and "Buldon Gimilzor Gondor" means "Bad Gas Explosion". What does "Slock" mean? | |
Danger | ||
Explosion | ||
Nothing | ||
Rocket | ||
Gas | ||
To solve this problem, study the three phrases and their translations to figure out the meanings of the foreign words. The phrases "Necor Buldon Slock" and "Buldon Gimilzor Gondor" both contain a word that translates as "explosion"; also, the only word that these two foreign phrases have in common is "buldon." Therefore, "buldon" must mean "explosion". Following this same procedure with "necor," you will find that "necor" means "danger". By looking at the first foreign phrase again - "Necor Buldon Slock" (which translates as "Danger Rocket Explosion") you can deduce that "slock" means "rocket" since you know the meanings for "buldon" and "necor". Translating word for word, the phrase is "Necor (Danger) Buldon (Explosion) Slock (Rocket)". As is generally the case with foreign languages, the sentence syntax differs in translation. Answer option D, or "Rocket," is the correct answer. |
11. | If some Wicks are Slicks, and some Slicks are Snicks, then some Wicks are definitely Snicks. The statement is: | |
True | ||
False | ||
Neither | ||
Because the same Slicks that are also Wicks may not be the same Slicks that are also Snicks, we can draw no firm conclusions from the information given that there is a direct relationship between Snicks and Wicks. It is possible that some Wicks may also be Snicks, but you cannot correctly make the statement "some Wicks are definitely Snicks." Therefore, answer option "B," or False, is the right answer. |
12. | Ann is taller than Jill, and Kelly is shorter than Ann. Which of the following statements would be most accurate? | |
Kelly is taller than Jill | ||
Kelly is shorter than Jill | ||
Kelly is as tall as Jill | ||
It's impossible to tell | ||
The only information supplied in the question is that Ann is taller than both Kelly and Jill. Since there is no information in the question about the difference in height between Kelly and Jill and there is no way to draw conclusions from their shared relationship to Ann, it is impossible to tell how much taller or shorter Kelly is from Jill. Therefore, the correct answer is "D." |
3. | A boy is 4 years old and his sister is three times as old as he is. When the boy is 12 years old, how old will his sister be? | |
16 | ||
20 | ||
24 | ||
28 | ||
32 | ||
To solve this problem, try to relate everything to the age of the boy by naming the boy's age an unknown variable. For example: Boy's age = x Sister's age = x + 8 We know this works because the question has told us that when the boy was 4, his sister was 12 (3 times as old as he was when he was 4) and that is 8 years older than he is. She won't always be 3 times as old as he is, but she will always be 8 years older than he is, so x + 8 is the best representation for the sister's age in relation to the boy's age. As the boy ages to 12 years old, we can replace x with his current age and x + 8 becomes 12 + 8, which equals 20. Therefore the correct answer is "B," or 20. |
14. | Assume that these two statements are true: All brown-haired men have bad tempers. Larry is a brown-haired man. The statement Larry has a bad temper is: | |
True | ||
False | ||
Unable to determine | ||
If all brown-haired men have bad tempers and Larry is a brown-haired man, then Larry has a bad temper. This is true only if both of these statements are true. Since the question tells us that the statements are to be assumed true, then the fact that Larry has a bad temper must also be true. Therefore, the correct answer is "A," or True. |
15. | Two girls caught 25 frogs. Lisa caught four times as many as Jen did. How many frogs did Jen catch? | |
4 | ||
5 | ||
8 | ||
10 | ||
15 | ||
Try setting up an equation to solve this problem, with x=number of frogs that Jen caught. Since Lisa caught four times as many frogs as Jen did, 4x=number of frogs Lisa caught. The total frogs that the two girls caught is 25, so the final equation looks something like this: x + 4x = 25 Solve for x: x + 4x = 25 5x = 25 combine like variables (x + 4x = 5x) x = 5 divide both sides of the equation by 5 (5x /5 = x; 25/5 = 5) The solution to this problem is 5, therefore the answer is "B". |
16. | Inept is the opposite of: | |
Healthy | ||
Deep | ||
Skillful | ||
Sad | ||
Happy | ||
The definition of inept is "generally incompetent and ineffectual." Try reversing the definition of inept to see if it could describe any of the five words given as answer options. Remember, you are looking for the closest match, not necessarily the best possible opposite (which may not be present in the answer options). Since someone who is competent and effectual could be called skillful, "skillful" is the word that is closest to the opposite of "inept." Therefore the answer is "C." |
17. | A car traveled 28 miles in 30 minutes. How many miles per hour was it traveling? | |
28 | ||
36 | ||
56 | ||
58 | ||
62 | ||
A useful thing to know in figuring out this problem is that Time travelled = Distance traveled/Rate of travel, or, T=d/r. To see how this works, plug in some numbers test it. For example, you know that if you are driving 60 miles per hour (rate), you can travel 120 mile (distance) in 2 hours (time). Plug this into the formula T=d/r to see if it's true: 2 = 120/60 - it works out! Now that you have a formula that works, you can solve this problem by plugging in the values that are known. 30 minutes is the time, 28 miles is the distance, and the rate of travel (miles per hour) is unknown. Since you will want to solve this problem in terms of hours, you'll want the time to be expressed in terms of hours; 30 minutes is the same as 0.5 hours, which is the measurement that you'll want to use in your equation. Solve for r: 0.5 = 28/r 0.5r = 28 multiply both sides by r (0.5 x r = 0.5r; 28/r x r = 28) r = 56 divide both sides by 0.5 (0.5r/0.5 = r; 28/0.5 = 56) Since r (the rate of travel) equals 56, the car was going 56 miles per hour and the correct answer to this problem is "C." |
18. | If all Zips are Zoodles, and all Zoodles are Zonkers, then all Zips are definitely Zonkers. The above sentence is logically: | |
True | ||
False | ||
Neither | ||
To solve this problem, it may be helpful to draw a diagram. The question is phrased in such a way that you might be able to see a progression of inclusions, much like Russian nesting dolls (which stack one inside the other) or concentric circles. Try following this series of steps to arrive at your answer:
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19. | Sue is both the 50th best and the 50th worst student at her school. How many students attend her school? | |
50 | ||
75 | ||
99 | ||
100 | ||
101 | ||
If Sue is the 50th best student in her class, that means she is ranked number 50. Since she is ranked 50th worst as well, this means that she must have performed better than 49 of her lower-scoring classmates. Because her position is 50 and there are 49 students who scored lower than her, there must be 50 + 49=99 students total. The correct answer option is "C". |
20. | In a race from point X to point Y and back, Jack averages 30 miles per hour to point Y and 10 miles per hour back to point X. Sandy averages 20 miles per hour in both directions. If Jack and Sandy begin the race at the same time, who will finish first? | |
Jack | ||
Sandy | ||
They tie | ||
Neither | ||
Impossible to tell | ||
To figure out this problem, the first thing you might want to do is choose an arbitrary distance between point X and point Y. In this example, 60 is an easy number to work with so let's say the distance between point X and point Y is 60 miles. If Jack averaged 30 miles per hour from point X to point Y, he would have arrived at point Y in two hours (60 miles/30 mph = 2 hours). If he averaged 10 miles per hour on the return trip, he would have arrived back at point X after 6 hours (60 miles/10 mph = 6 hours). His total travel time would have been 8 hours (two hours to get there, six hours to return). If Sandy averaged 20 miles per hour from point X to point Y, she would have arrived at point Y in three hours (60 miles/20 mph = 3 hours). If she averaged 20 miles per hour on the return trip, she would have arrived back at point X after 3 hours (60 miles/20 mph = 3 hours). Her total travel time would have been 6 hours (three hours to get there, three hours to return). Sandy finished traveling first; the correct answer is "B." |
21. | Ten people can paint 60 houses in 120 days, so five people can paint 30 houses in: | |
15 days | ||
30 days | ||
60 days | ||
120 days | ||
To solve this problem, try simplifying. If the ten people who had the task of painting 60 houses in 120 days decided that they all wanted to work alone, one person painting one house at a time, how many houses would just one person need to paint to have all 60 houses painted by the deadline in 120 days? To figure this out, you would divide 10 people into 60 houses to get 6 houses each. One person would need to paint 6 houses in 120 days to complete the goal. You can check your work by multiplying it back out - if each of 10 people painted 6 houses each in 120 days, how many houses would be painted at the end of the period? 10 multiplied by 6 is 60. Now, how long would it take for 5 people to paint 30 houses? Well, if they decided to divide the work amongst themselves and work alone, each of five people would paint 6 houses. So, the question becomes, how long would it take for one person to paint 6 houses? We already know that it takes one person 120 days to paint 6 houses, so the correct answer is that 5 people can paint 30 houses in 120 days, or answer option "D". |
22. | The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never ________. | |
Complete | ||
Accurate | ||
Complex | ||
Simple | ||
Wise | ||
The pattern of this question is to assert a claim (the truth is pure and simple) then refute it (the truth is rarely pure and simple). The second word in this pattern is missing and the solution to the problem is to see that pattern and supply the missing word (simple). The correct answer is option "D". |
23. | Which number should come next? 64, 16, 4, 1, 1/4? | |
1/16 | ||
1/12 | ||
1/8 | ||
1/2 | ||
1 | ||
The pattern of this number sequence is to divide the last number in sequence to arrive at the next number in sequence. 64 divided by 4 is 16 16 divided by 4 is 4 4 divided by 4 is 1 1 divided by 4 is 1/4 1/4 divided by 4 is 1/16 The correct answer is 1/16, answer option "A". |
24. | What number is one half of one quarter of one tenth of 800? | |
2 | ||
5 | ||
8 | ||
10 | ||
40 | ||
To solve this problem, break it down into a mathematical equation and solve it in stages according to mathematical laws. Here is the equation: (1/2 (1/4 (800/10))) = ? To solve the equation, start from the innermost parentheses and work your way out, doing one operation at a time. In this example, each step is executed, updating the equation each time on the right side of the equals sign: 1/2 (1/4 (800/10)) = 1/2 (1/4 (80)) or it can also be written = 1/2 (80/4) = 1/2 (20) or it can also be written = 20/2 = 10 The correct answer is answer option "D". |
25. | A cynic is one who knows the price of everything and the ________ of nothing. | |
Emotion | ||
Value | ||
Meaning | ||
Color | ||
Quality | ||
This sentence will make the most sense if you search for a word that is similar to the word "price". If you think about price, it pertains to money or the cost of something. By looking through the five words on the list of answer options, you can see that only one of the words on the list also pertains to money or the cost of something - Value. The correct answer is "B" |
26. | Two cars start off at the same point on a straight highway facing opposite directions. Each car drives for 6 miles, takes a left turn, and drives for 8 miles. How far apart are the two cars? | |
2 miles | ||
11 miles | ||
14 miles | ||
20 miles | ||
26 miles | ||
To solve this problem, you may want to get a piece of scratch paper. Draw a point on your paper that indicates the starting location of both cars. From here, draw a line that is 6 units long in opposite directions from the starting point (you decide what a unit is; if you used ? inch as your unit, the distance that on car goes would be 1 ? inches). The line you end up with should be 12 units long and straight. For the purposes of this example, let's say that line runs East-West. From there, each car turns left and drives 8 miles (units). In this case, one of the cars would have driven due north and the other would have driven due south. Your illustration should look kind of like a "Z". Now you know the location of each car. To find out how far apart they are, use the Pythagorean Theorem, which says that the square of the longest side (hypotenuse) of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. In this case, the distance between the two points is the hypotenuse of a right triangle. The distance the cars drove away from each other in the East-West direction was 12 miles, so one side of the right triangle is 12 units long. The distance the cars drove away from each other in the North-South direction was 16 miles, so the other side of the right triangle is 16 units long. Plugging these values into the Pythagorean Theorem, you should get: 12^2 + 16^2 = c^2 144 + 256 = c^2 400 = c^2 SQRT 400 = c 20 = c The cars are 20 miles apart, so answer option "D" is the correct answer. |
27. | Which one of these five things is least like the other four? | |
Plum | ||
Grape | ||
Apricot | ||
Peach | ||
Cherry | ||
Try thinking of which characteristics 4 of the fruits have in common that are not found in the fifth - you need a categorization that excludes one - and only one - fruit from the group. The right answer is that option "B", grape, is least like the other four. The other 4 fruits are in a category called "stone fruits" meaning that they have an outer fleshy part which surrounds a shell (the pit or stone) with a seed inside. In addition, all 4 of the other fruits are temperate fruits, where grapes are Mediterranean fruits. Fruits of temperate climates are almost universally borne on trees or woody shrubs or lianas. They will not grow adequately in the tropics - they need a period of cold (a chilling requirement) each year before they will flower. Whereas Mediterranean fruits are not hardy to extreme cold, as the preceding temperate fruits are, yet tolerate some frost and may have a modest chilling requirement. Finally, all four of the other fruits grow on a tree whereas grapes grow on a vine. |
28. | Wisdom is knowing what to do next; __________ is doing it. | |
Virtue | ||
Luck | ||
Happiness | ||
Sanity | ||
Nostalgia | ||
You know that the word you are looking for to fill the blank "is doing it," but you need to ask yourself what "it" is. The sentence is structured such that "it" refers to "what to do next" or, put another way, "the wise thing or the right thing to do next". In order for this sentence to make sense, the word that fits in the blank must mean "doing the right thing". When reviewing each of the five answer options, the only word that could mean "doing the right thing" is answer option "A", or Virtue. |
29. | It is easier to _______________ than to offer a helping hand. | |
Raise a flag | ||
Be on the ball | ||
Lay down the law | ||
Point the finger | ||
Sing praises | ||
The words "It's easier to... than to..." identify this sentence as one which compares two things that are opposites of one another. With this understanding, you know that the word you are looking for to fill the blank is the opposite of "offer a helping hand". Of the five answer options, the only one that can be considered its opposite - something that is diametrically opposed in concept - is answer option "D", "point the finger," since placing blame is not helpful. |
30. | True knowledge exists in knowing that you know ___________. | |
Everything | ||
Nothing | ||
The truth | ||
The weather | ||
The meaning of life | ||
The more you learn and the more wisdom you amass, the more you come to realize that you really know very little if not nothing. This is more of a philosophical question that measures a type of intellectual maturity. The answer to this question is "B", or "Nothing". |
31. | Which word best completes the analogy: Water is to glass as correspondence is to... | |
stamp | ||
pen | ||
envelope | ||
book | ||
To answer this question, you first need to identify the relationship between "water" and "glass" - water goes inside a glass. In reviewing the answer options, you should be looking for something that correspondence "goes inside". The only answer option that fits this relationship is "D", envelope. |
32. |
| |||||||
To answer this question, you first need to identify the relationship between "hand" and "boxing glove" - hand goes inside a boxing glove. In reviewing the answer options, you should be looking for something that a foot "goes inside". The only answer option that fits this relationship is "D", ice skate. |
33. | Which one of the designs is least like the other four? | |
| ||
Try thinking of which characteristics 4 of the shapes have in common that is not found in the fifth - you need a categorization that excludes one - and only one - shape from the group. The right answer is that the circle, option B, is least like the other three. The circle is the only shape that does not contain a finite number of straight lines around its perimeter. |
34. | For the picture sequence above, find the picture that follows logically from one of the six below. | |
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To solve this problem, use a process of elimination. For each piece of the pattern you identify (a condition), look through the potential answer options to eliminate those that do not fit the pattern. If you do this for each element of the pattern separately, you should end up with a single shape that fits all of the conditions. First, notice that each square in the existing diagram contains a division line that runs diagonally across it, dividing the square into two halves that contain different color patters. The first condition is that the diagonals of the three existing shapes are placed such that they are forming the perimeter of a diamond-type shape in the center of the overall image. The square that fits in the lower-right quadrant of this image must have a diagonal line that crosses from its upper-right corner to its lower-left corner. The answer options that fit this condition are "C", "D" and "F". The rest of the answer options can now be eliminated. There are two more conditions present, both of which only exist in answer option "C": " Compare the inner halves of the squares that lie across the center point diagonally from one another. The color pattern is inverse such that the half circle of one is the color of the remaining portion of the other. If you apply this condition to the relationship between the blank space and the square diagonally opposite from it, you'll find that the square that fits in the lower-right quadrant of this image must have a green triangle-like shape (half square) surrounded by pink in its upper half. " Compare the outer halves of the squares that next to each other horizontally. The color pattern is inverse such that the half circle or square of one is the color of the remaining portion of the other. If you apply this condition to the relationship between the blank space and the square to its left, you'll find that the square that fits in the lower-right quadrant of this image must have a grey triangle-like shape (half square) surrounded by tan in its lower half. |
The correct answer is "C" because it meets all three of these conditions.
35. | For the picture sequence above, find the picture that follows logically from one of the five below. | |
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To answer this question, try tracking the movement of the shades squares. If you'd like to draw it out on scratch paper, try numbering each square from left to right, top to bottom. You would end up with a grid of squares with numbers in each square: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Look at each of the three illustrations that set the pattern and take note of the movement:
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36. | Fill in the empty box above with the correct picture from below | |
All of the information given about this illustration indicate that it is symmetrical. Given that, the only squares you need to examine to find the correct fill for the empty box are the corner squares. Each of the corner squares has a diagonal line across the square forming a visual barrier - if the ends of each line were extended, they would cross at right angles and form a diamond-type shape. Answer option "B" completes this pattern. |
37. | Fill in the white box above with the correct picture from below | |
The first thing you should notice is that there is a box in the pattern which is blocked out. Because it is blocked out, you will need to guess what the image in that space is based on what you know of the pattern. The middle row of this pattern indicates that the larger shapes in any given row are the same, but vary in whether they shaded or not. From this, you can deduce that the large shape in the obscured box is an oval and the large shape in the white box is a circle. This eliminates answer options A and C because neither of them contains a large circle. By looking at the top and middle rows or the left and right columns, you know that each row and column in the pattern contains at least one non-shaded large shape. Because the bottom row currently contains a large shaded circle in two of its boxes, you know that the white box must contain a non-shaded large circle. To further confirm the pattern, look at the small shapes on the diagonal that runs from left to right. You'll notice that the small shapes are exactly the same along this diagonal. Because the box that lies diagonally to the upper left of the white box contains a small plus sign, you know that the white box must also contain a small plus sign. The only image that fits the pattern in the space of the white box is answer option D, which contains a large non-shaded circle and a small plus sign. |
38. |
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The first step in answering this question is to compare the first pair of illustrations. In doing so, note that the squared edges of the first illustration become rounded in the second and that the color combination is inverted from the first illustration to the second. Applying this information to the second pair, you know you are looking for an illustration with rounded edges where the color combination is inverted from the first illustration to the second (light grey oval with dark grey circle). The correct answer is option "A". |
39. |
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The first illustration is a square and the second illustration is a vertical line. The first illustration of the second pair is exactly the same as the first illustration of the first pair, except that the lines that describe the square are dashed instead of solid. This information tells you that you are looking for a vertical line (same as the second illustration of the first pair) drawn with dashes (consistent with the relationship between the first illustrations of each pair). The correct answer is option "B". |
40. | Which design does not belong in this group? | |
Try thinking of which characteristics 4 of the illustrations have in common that is not found in the fifth - you need a categorization that excludes one - and only one - shape from the group. The right answer is that option "C" is least like the other four. Option "C" is the only illustration that does not contain a large shape connected to a small shape. Instead, option "C" illustrates two small, connected shapes. |
= your answer
= correct answer
What is an IQ? The intelligence quotient (IQ) measures the ratio of a person's intellectual age to his/her chronological age. Most adult intelligence tests are designed for people who are at least 16 years old. For this reason, if you are younger than 16, your Tickle IQ score might be slightly lower than your "true" IQ. (Wonder what's my true IQ, considering the fact I'm 14+?)
Well, I really don't know what to conclude other than I'm sleepy and that I haven't prepared anything for debate tomorrow. Blessed it be.
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