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The IQ Workout Series
THE COMPLETE
BOOK OF
INTELLIGENCE
TESTS
Philip Carter
K:/Books/1387jw/0470017732/fmatter/text_s/
K:/Books/1387jw/0470017732/fmatter/text_s/
The IQ Workout Series
THE COMPLETE
BOOK OF
INTELLIGENCE
TESTS
Philip Carter
K:/Books/1387jw/0470017732/fmatter/text_s/
Copyright # 2005 by Philip Carter
Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex
PO19 8SQ, England
Telephone: (þ44) 1243 779777
Email (for orders and customer service enquiries): cs-books@wiley.co.uk
Visit our Home Page on www.wileyeurope.com or www.wiley.com
Philip Carter has asserted his rights under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be
identified as the author of this work.
All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval
system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording, scanning or otherwise, except under the terms of the Copyright, Designs and
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John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex PO19 8SQ,
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This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 0-470-01773-2 (PB) 978-0-470-01773-9
Typeset in 11=14 pt Garamond by MCS Publishing Services Ltd, Salisbury, Wiltshire.
Printed and bound in Great Britain by T.J. International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall.
This book is printed on acid-free paper responsibly manufactured from sustainable forestry, in
which at least two trees are planted for each one used for paper production.
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Contents
1 Introduction 1
Aspects of intelligence 3
Intelligence quotient (IQ) 7
Test 1.1 IQ test 11
2 Specific aptitude tests 25
Section I ^ Verbal aptitude 28
Test 2.1 Synonym test A 28
Test 2.2 Synonym test B 30
Test 2.3 Antonym test A 31
Test 2.4 Antonym test B 33
Test 2.5 Analogy test A 34
Test 2.6 Analogy test B 36
Test 2.7 Classification test 38
Test 2.8 Comprehension 40
Test 2.9 Advanced verbal test A ^ multi-discipline 41
Test 2.10 Advanced verbal test B ^ anagrams 46
Section II ^ Numerical aptitude 49
Test 2.11 Numerical sequence test 49
Test 2.12 Mental arithmetic 51
Test 2.13 Working with numbers 53
Test 2.14 Advanced numerical aptitude test 56
Section III ^ Technical aptitude 60
Test 2.15 Technical aptitude test 60
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3 Logical reasoning 67
Test 3.1 Pure logic 67
Test 3.2 Progressive matrices test 70
Test 3.3 Advanced logic test 79
4 Creativity 84
Test 4.0 Creativity personality test 88
Section I ^ Imagination 91
Test 4.1 Imaginative shapes 93
Test 4.2 Wild imagination 94
Test 4.3 Creative logic 95
Test 4.4 The bucket test 101
Section II ^ Lateral thinking 102
Test 4.5 Lateral thinking test 102
Test 4.6 Lateral thinking exercises 105
Section III ^ Problem solving 108
Test 4.7 Problem-solving exercises 110
5 Emotional intelligence 114
Test 5.1 Anxious or relaxed 116
Test 5.2 Extrovert or introvert 120
Test 5.3 Optimist or pessimist 127
Test 5.4 Self-confidence 131
Test 5.5 Tough or tender 138
6 Memory 144
Test 6.1 Pattern recognition A 145
Test 6.2 Word association 145
Test 6.3 Verbal dexterity and memory test ^
anagrams 146
Test 6.4 Number=shape recognition 147
Test 6.5 Pattern recognition B 147
Test 6.6 Instructions 148
Test 6.7 Pattern recognition C 148
Test 6.8 Shopping list 148
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Test 6.9 Attention to detail 149
Test 6.10 Memorising an address 149
7 Answers, explanations and assessments 150
8 Hints 205
Contents
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1 Introduction
Intelligence may be narrowly defined as the capacity to acquire
knowledge and understanding, and use it in different novel situations.
It is this ability, or capacity, which enables the individual to deal with
real situations and profit intellectually from sensory experience.
A test of intelligence is designed to formally study, under test
conditions, the success of an individual in adapting to a specific
situation.
There are a number of different methods which purport to measure
intelligence, the most famous of which is the IQ, or intelligence
quotient test. In the formation of such tests many psychologists treat
intelligence as a general ability operating as a common factor in a wide
variety of aptitudes.
Whilst many IQ tests measure a variety of different types of ability
such as verbal, mathematical, spatial and reasoning skills, there is now
a second school of thought in which it is believed that the earlier
definitions of intelligence may be too simplistic.
It is now becoming increasingly recognised that there are many
different types of intelligence and that a high measured IQ, although
desirable, is not the only key to success in life. Other characteristics,
such as outstanding artistic, creative or practical prowess, especially
if combined with personal characteristics such as ambition, good
temperament and compassion, could result in an outstanding level of
success despite a low measured IQ. It is because of this that in recent
years CQ (creative quotient) and EQ (emotional quotient), to name
just two examples, have come to be regarded as equally important as,
or even more important than, IQ measurement.
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It should also be pointed out that having a high IQ does not mean
that one has a good memory. A good memory is yet another type of
intelligence, and could result in high academic success despite a low
measured IQ test score.
The object of this book is to identify different types of intelligence
and bring together tests for different aspects of intelligence into one
book, and provide an objective assessment of abilities in a number of
different disciplines.
This will, therefore, give readers the opportunity to identify their
own strengths and weaknesses and thus enable readers to build on
their strengths and work at improving their performance in areas of
weakness.
As well as the identifying of such strengths and weaknesses, the
tests and exercises in this book perform another important function,
that of using and exercising the brain.
Despite the enormous capacity of the brain, we only use on average
2% of our potential brainpower. There is, therefore, the potential for
each of us to expand our brainpower considerably.
It is important that we continually use our brain, for example, the
more we practise at tests of verbal aptitude, the more we increase our
ability to understand the meaning of words and use them effectively;
the more we practise at mathematics, the more confident we become
when working with numbers; and the more we practise our ability to
move our fingers and manipulate small objects, the more dextrous we
become at operations involving this type of aptitude.
Our brain is undoubtedly our greatest asset, yet, for most of us, it
is the part of the body we most take for granted.
Our brain needs exercise and care in the same way as other parts
of the body. We eat the right foods to keep our heart healthy, we
moisturise our skin to keep it from drying out and, just as gymnasts
strive to increase their performance at whatever level they are
competing, by means of punishing training schedules and refinement
of technique, there are exercises, or mental gymnastics, we can do
to increase the performance of our brain and enhance quickness of
thought.
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Many people still have the outdated belief that there is little they
can do to improve the brain they are born with and that brain cells
continually degenerate with age, but in fact our brain cells continually
develop new and stronger connections and adult brains can grow new
cells, irrespective of age.
We should all be aware that we have the capacity to put our brain
to even more use and unleash many hitherto untapped creative talents
by continually exploring new avenues, experiences and learning
adventures. By continually exploiting our enormous brain potential,
we all have the ability to make more and stronger connections
between our nerve cells, with the result that not only our mental but
also our physical long-term well-being will improve.
Whilst the aim of the tests and exercises is therefore two-fold,
that of identifying individual strengths and weaknesses and that of
exercising the brain, they are at the same time, and equally importantly,
designed to provide fun and entertainment to those who take them.
Aspects of intelligence
Although it is difficult to define intelligence, indeed it appears to have
no formal definition, there is, nevertheless, at least one particularly
apposite definition: the capacity to learn and understand.
Scores from standardised intelligence tests (IQ scores) are often
used to define one’s intelligence level. It is, however, becoming
increasingly accepted that they do not reveal the complete picture and
only provide a snapshot of a person’s ability in the area under
examination, so that, for example, someone who has scored highly on
a verbal test can only be said to have a high verbal IQ and someone
who has scored highly on a mathematical test can only be said to have
a high numerical IQ. Obviously, therefore, the more different types
of disciplines that are tested and examined, the more accurately the
intelligence level of the individual can be assessed.
Whilst IQ testing is broadly based on the principle of a measurable
and genetically inherited intelligence that is cast in stone for every
individual and does not increase throughout adulthood, there is
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now another school of thought which believes there are many more
different types of intelligences, some of which could be as a result of
our upbringing and development and some of which could be the
result of a natural talent with which we are born.
The concept of general intelligence, or g, was devised in the early
twentieth century by the English psychologist Charles Spearman, who
established g as a measure of performance in a variety of tests.
Spearman’s research led him to the conclusion that the same people
who performed well in a variety of mental tasks tended to use a part of
the brain that he termed g. The g factor, therefore, laid the foundation
for the concept of a single intelligence, and the belief that this single,
and measurable, intelligence enables us to perform tasks of mental
ability.
Recent studies have to a certain extent reinforced Spearman’s theory,
and research has found that the lateral prefrontal cortex is the only area
of the brain where an increase in blood flow takes place when volunteers
tackle complicated puzzles.
Despite this, Spearman’s concept remains highly controversial and
is becoming increasingly challenged by those who claim that the concept
of a single overall intelligence is too simplistic.
At the same time, there is a body of research whose findings suggest
that our mental ability is not determined by biological inheritance, but
as the result of social factors such as education and upbringing.
Whilst IQ tests are, and will remain, helpful in predicting future
performance or potential in many areas, they do not provide us
with other information, such as the ability to connect with other
people emotionally or perform creative tasks that involve the use of
imagination.
Although most IQ testing only assesses what is termed ‘general
ability’ in three categories of intelligence, numerical, verbal and spatial
(abstract) reasoning, there are several other equally important and
valuable intelligences that need to be recognised and developed.
The theory of multiple intelligence (MI) advocates that the traditional
view of a single general intelligence, g, is too narrow and that humans
have multiple intelligences. By expanding our definition of intelligence
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to include multiple intelligences, we can identify, appreciate and
nurture more of our strengths.
This is important, as it would be as rare for any one individual to
be endowed in all the different intelligences as it would for any one
individual not to possess some kind of talent. We all tend to be aware
of some of our abilities and limitations, for instance, some of us may
be great musicians but completely hopeless when it comes to fixing a
problem with our car; others may be championship-class chess players
but would never be able to smash a tennis ball into the opposing
player’s court; and others may possess great linguistic and mathematical
skills but feel completely at a loss trying to make small talk at social
gatherings. The fact is that no-one is talented in every domain and noone is completely incapable in every domain.
The originator of the theory of multiple intelligences, Howard
Gardner, a professor of education at Harvard University, defines
intelligence as the potential ability to process a certain sort of information. The different types of intelligence are for the most part
independent of one another, and no type is more important than the
other.
In all, Gardner identifies seven different types of intelligence.
These can be summarized as follows:
1. Verbal=linguistic, e.g. lexical skills, formal speech, verbal debate,
creative writing.
2. Body=kinesthetic (movement), e.g. body language, physical gestures,
creative dance, physical exercise, drama.
3. Musical=rhythmic, e.g. music performance, singing, musical
composition, rhythmic patterns.
4. Logic=mathematic, e.g. numerical aptitude, problem solving,
deciphering codes, abstract symbols and formulae.
5. Visual=spatial, e.g. patterns and designs, painting, drawing, active
imagination, sculpture, colour schemes.
6. Interpersonal (relationships with others), e.g. person-to-person
communication, empathy practices, group projects, collaboration
skills, receiving and giving feedback.
Introduction
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7. Intrapersonal (self-understanding and insight), e.g. thinking strategies,
emotional processing, knowing yourself, higher order reasoning,
focusing=concentration.
Although aspects of it are included in several of the above categories;
in addition to the above seven basic types of intelligence can be
added creativity, which has sometimes been referred to as ‘the eighth
intelligence’.
Additionally, if creativity is the eighth intelligence, then memory
must be the ninth, and both creativity and memory are explored and
tested in detail in Chapters 4 and 6, respectively.
Whilst Spearman concluded that people who performed well at
varying tasks tended to use the same part of the brain, g, Gardner
asserts that each of the above intelligences is located in one or more
particular areas of the brain. Some of the evidence for this belief is
provided by the study of people who have suffered brain damage,
either from strokes or other causes, and who may, for example, still be
able to sing words despite having lost the ability to use expressive
speech.
Although the jury may still be out on the debate as to whether the
g factor, as gauged by IQ tests, is just one single general intelligence,
or whether there are, as Gardner and others suggest, a set of
independent mental domains, it would appear to be coming increasingly
apparent that, as we learn more about the human brain and how
different parts of the brain appear to generate different intelligences,
the more compelling Gardner’s theory becomes.
The main lesson to be learned from this is that people can be
intelligent in many different ways. It is completely wrong to write off
or even put down someone who has scored badly in an IQ test which,
after all, has only provided us with one type of information about that
individual. All of us have the potential for achievement in some kind
of intelligence and we also possess the potential for improvement in
many other areas.
Although there are types of intelligence that cannot be tested in a
book, for example, aptitude at performing physical tasks or playing a
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musical instrument, in the chapters that follow as many different
types of intelligence will be tested and explored as is feasible to do.
Intelligence quotient (IQ)
Intelligence quotient (IQ) is an age-related measure of intelligence
level and is described as 100 times the mental age. The word ‘quotient’
means the result of dividing one quantity by another, and a definition
of intelligence is mental ability or quickness of mind.
Such tests are based on the belief that every person possesses a single
general ability of mind. It is this which determines how efficiently each
of us deals with situations as they arise, and how we profit intellectually
from our experiences. This ability of mind varies in amount from person
to person, and is what intelligence (IQ tests) attempt to measure.
Generally such tests consist of a graded series of tasks, each of
which has been standardised with a large representative population of
individuals. Such a procedure establishes the average IQ as 100.
IQ tests are part of what is generally referred to as ‘psychometric
testing’. Such test content may be addressed to almost any aspect of
our intellectual or emotional make-up, including personality, attitude
and intelligence.
Psychometric tests are basically tools used for measuring the mind;
the word ‘metric’ means measure and the word ‘psycho’ means mind.
There are two types of psychometric test, which are usually used in
tandem. These are aptitude tests, which assess your abilities, and personality
questionnaires, which assess your character and personality.
In contrast to specific proficiencies, intelligence tests are standard
examinations devised to measure human intelligence as distinct from
attainments. There are several different types of intelligence test, for
example, Cattell, Stanford^Binet and Wechsler, each having its own
different scale of intelligence.
The Stanford^Binet is heavily weighted with questions involving
verbal abilities and is widely used in the United States of America, and
the Weschler scales consist of two separate verbal and performance
sub-scales, each with its own IQ rating.
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It is generally agreed by advocates of IQ testing that an
individual’s IQ rating is mainly hereditary and remains constant in
development to about the age of 13, after which it is shown to slow
down, and beyond the age of 18 little or no improvement is found. It
is further agreed that the most marked increase in a person’s IQ takes
place in early childhood, and theories are continually put forward
about different contributory factors, for example, it has been claimed
recently, following research in Japan, that the playing of computer
games by children, which involve a high degree of skill and agility of
mind, have resulted in higher IQ measurement.
IQ Tests are standardised after being given to many thousands of
people and an average IQ (100) established, a score above or below
this norm being used to establish the subject’s actual IQ rating.
IQ score
% of population
0 100 170
25
Because beyond the age of 18 little or no improvement in a person’s
IQ rating is found, the method of calculating the IQ of a child is
different to the method used for an adult.
When measuring the IQ of a child, the subject will attempt an IQ
test which has been standardized with an average score recorded for
each age group. Thus, a child aged 10 years who scored the results
expected of a child of 12 would have an IQ of 120, calculated as
follows:
mental age (12)
chronological age (10)
100 ¼ 120 IQ
However, adults have to be judged on an IQ test whose average
score is 100 and their results graded above and below this norm
according to known scores. A properly validated test would have to
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be given to some 20,000 people and the results correlated before it
would reveal an accurate measurement of a person’s IQ.
Like most distributions found in nature, the distribution of IQ
takes the form of a fairly regular bell-curve (see diagram above). On
the Stanford^Binet scale, half the population fall between 90 and 110
IQ, half of them above 100 and half of them below; 25% score above
110; 11% above 120; 3% above 130 and 0.6% above 140. At the other
end of the scale the same kind of proportion occurs.
The earliest known attempts to rank people in terms of intelligence
date back to the Chinese Mandarin system, circa 500 B.C., when studying
the works of Confucius enabled successful candidates to enter the public
service. The top 1% of candidates were successful in progressing to the
next stage, where they would again be run off against each other, and
the procedure repeated yet again through a final layer of selection.
Thus, the chosen candidates were in the top 1% of the top 1% of the
top 1%.
The first attempt to measure scientifically the difference between
the mental abilities of individuals was made by Sir Francis Galton in
the nineteenth century, when he tried to show that the human mind
could be systematically mapped into different dimensions.
The first modern intelligence test was devised in 1905 by the
French psychologists Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon after they
were commissioned by the French government to construct tests that
would ensure no child be denied admittance to the Paris school system
without formal examination. The pair developed a 30-item test, which
included a wide range of different types of problems.
In 1916, the American psychologist Lewis Terman revised the
Binet^Simon scale to provide comparison standards for Americans
from age 3 to adulthood and the concept of the ratio of the mental age
to chronological age, multiplied by 100, was added. Terman devised the
term ‘intelligence quotient’ and developed the Stanford^Binet intelligence
test to measure IQ after joining the faculty of Stanford University as
professor of education. The Stanford^Binet test was further revised in
1937 and 1960 and remains today one of the most widely used of all
intelligence tests.
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In the mid-nineteenth century psychologists used informationloaded tests to assess the intelligence of their clients. Later, psychologists
introduced the concept of mental speed when assessing performance.
Around 1930, Furneaux demonstrated that a relationship did exist
between power, meaning the absolute difficulty of a problem, and
speed, meaning the time a person required to solve it. By increasing
the difficulty by 30%, you double the time required to solve it, but a
60% increase will lengthen the time five-fold.
The first IQ testing on a mass scale was carried out by the US
army during the First World War. Personality tests or character tests
soon followed, but in the 1920s and 1930s studies began to define
more closely the general concept of intelligence. What emerged was
recognition of fluid and crystallised intelligence. Fluid intelligence was
measured by references to spatial items, such as diagrams, drawings or
pegs, and crystallised intelligence was measured through language and
number.
There are many different types of intelligence tests; however, a
typical IQ test might consist of three sections, each testing a different
ability, usually comprising verbal reasoning, numerical ability and
diagrammatic, or spatial, reasoning. In order to assess your overall
general ability, the questions in the test that follows are multi-discipline
and include a mix of verbal, numerical and diagrammatic questions,
as well as additional questions involving logical thought processes
together with a degree of lateral thinking.
While it is accepted that IQ is hereditary and remains constant
throughout life and, therefore, it is not possible to improve your
actual IQ, one weakness of this type of testing is that it is possible
to improve your performance on IQ tests by practising the many
different types of question, and learning to recognise the recurring
themes.
In subsequent chapters of this book, readers will have ample
opportunity to test themselves in different areas of brain activity and
to identify their strengths and weakness in specific areas of intelligence.
It must be emphasised that a person who is good at IQ tests is not
necessarily capable of excelling at academic tests, regardless of how
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logical and quick-witted he=she is. Often motivation and dedication
are more important than a high measured IQ rating. To score highly
on an academic test requires the ability to concentrate on a single
subject, obtain an understanding of it, and revise solidly in order to
memorise facts prior to an examination. Often it is difficult for
someone with a high IQ to do this because of an overactive and
enquiring mind, which cannot direct itself on one subject for very
long and forever wishes to diversify. Such a person would have to
apply a high level of self-discipline in order to succeed at academic
tests but, if able to apply this self-discipline, would be likely to obtain
a high pass mark.
Because the test that follows has been newly compiled for this
book, it has not been standardised, so an actual IQ assessment cannot
be given. Nevertheless, a guide to assessing your performance is
provided in the Answers section.
A time limit of 90 minutes is allowed for completing all 40
questions. The correct answers are given at the end of the test, and
you should award yourself one point for each completely correct
answer. You should not exceed the time limit, otherwise your score
will be invalidated.
Where preferred, the use of a calculator is permitted on numerical
questions, except where indicated.
Test 1.1 IQ test
1 The white dot moves two places anti-clockwise at each stage and
the black dot moves one place clockwise at each stage. After how
many stages will they be together in the same corner?
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2 72496 is to 1315
and 62134 is to 97
and 85316 is to 167
therefore 28439 is to ?
3 Put the following words into alphabetical order:
arthropod, artificer, arteriole, artichoke, arthritis, articular,
artillery, arthritic
4 Which two words are most opposite in meaning?
imaginary, realistic, illegible, impracticable, radical, embellished
5 What numbers should replace the question marks?
2 6 3 5
6 3 6 2
3 6 3 6
7 3 6 3
? ? ? ?
6 Which group of letters is the odd one out?
CEFH LNOQ UWXZ
HJKN PRSU DFGI
7 Identify two words (one from each set of brackets) that form a
connection (analogy) when paired with the words in capitals.
RESTRAIN (suppress, deny, conceal)
WITHHOLD (curb, reserve, conceal)
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8
?
Which figure should replace the question mark?
A B C D
9 Spell out a 12-letter word by moving from letter to adjacent
letter, horizontally and vertically (but not diagonally). You must
find the starting point and provide the missing letters.
C N
C L E
A O
I D E
10 What numbers should replace the question marks?
100, 95, ?, 79, 68, ?, 40, 23
11 Associate is to colleague as accomplice is to:
consort, friend, accessory, comrade, follower
12 Which is the odd one out?
famous, illustrious, acclaimed, fabulous, noteworthy
13 What number should replace the question mark?
9
7 3 2
6 4
5 2 1
6 19
13
? 5
11
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14 Which is the odd one out?
A B C
D E
15 GAINED VOTE is an anagram of which two words that are
similar in meaning?
16 What number should replace the question mark?
49 615 62
85 177 29
53 ? 74
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17 Which word in brackets is most opposite in meaning to the word
in capitals?
MITIGATE (augment, palliate, appreciate, trust, destroy)
18
Which shape below is identical to the shape above?
A B
C D E
19 Which two words are closest in meaning?
educated, clear, literal, enervated, wordy, verbatim
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20 What number should replace the question mark?
19 9 17
23 12 25
13 ? 31
21 is to as
is to
A C B
D F E
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22 What letter is three to the right of the letter immediately to the
left of the letter which is four to the left of the letter G?
A B C D E F G H
23 Which word in brackets is closest in meaning to the word in
capitals?
HABITUATED (constant, accustomed, colonized,
commonplace, energetic)
24
Which is the missing tile?
A B C D E F
25 When full, a barrel of water contains 85 litres. How many litres
remain after 40% has been used? (the use of a calculator is not
permitted in this question).
26 DECISIVE LARK is an anagram of which two words that are
opposite in meaning?
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27 is to
as
is to
A B C
D E
28 What number should replace the question mark?
0, 19, 38, 57, ?, 95
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29
What comes next?
A B C D E F
30 What number should replace the question mark?
1
6 9
2 3
4 4
5
8
1 7
8 7
9 3
7
2
7
5
2
4
6
1
?
Introduction
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31 Switch A turns lights 1 and 2 on=off or off=on.
Switch B turns lights 2 and 4 on=off or off=on.
Switch C turns lights 1 and 3 on=off or off=on.
ON
OFF
Switches A, C and B are thrown in turn, with the result that
Figure 1 turns into Figure 2. Which of the switches A, B or C
must, therefore, be faulty?
1 2 3 4
1 2 3 4
Fig. 1 Fig. 2
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32 Which is the odd one out?
A
C
D
E
B
33 What number should replace the question mark?
3.5 7.5
4.5 2
5 11
7.5 8.5
1.5 3.5
3 ?
Introduction
21
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34
Which is the missing tile?
A B C
D E F
35 Start at one of the four corner letters and spiral clockwise round
the perimeter, finishing at the centre letter to spell out a
nine-letter word. You must provide the missing letters.
A T
N R
N O C
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36 What number should replace the question mark?
10, 21, 33, 46, 60, 75, ?
37
When the above is folded to form a cube, which is the only one
of the following that can be produced?
A B
D E
C
38 Joe has one and a half times as many as Mo, and Mo has one and
a half times as many as Flo. Altogether they have 76. How many
has each?
Introduction
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39 Which one of the following sentences is correct?
* The Gardener’s Association debated whether to hold it’s
bi-annual flower show at the beginning of April and
September, or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardeners’ Association debated whether to hold its
biennial flower show at the beginning of April and September,
or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardeners’ Association debated whether to hold it’s
bi-annual flower show at the beginning of April and
September, or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardeners’ Association debated whether to hold its
bi-annual flower show at the beginning of April and
September, or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardener’s Association debated whether to hold its
biennial flower show at the beginning of April and September,
or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardeners’ Association debated whether to hold it’s
bi-annual flower show at the beginning of April and
September, or at the end of April and September each year.
* The Gardener’s Association debated whether to hold it’s
biennial flower show at the beginning of April and September,
or at the end of April and September each year.
40 What number should replace the question mark?
1 4 9
16
3 6
11
18
7
10
15
22
13
16
21
?
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2 Specific aptitude
tests
In the somewhat complex area of psychometric testing, the
terminology and procedures involved are sometimes misunderstood
or misinterpreted.
The word ‘aptitude’ is often misused to mean ability or achievement,
and in the context of psychometric testing aptitude may be regarded
as just another way of referring to specific ability. There is, however,
a subtle technical difference between the three words ‘achievement’,
‘ability’ and ‘aptitude’, which can be distinguished as follows:
Achievement ^ what you have accomplished in the past.
Ability ^ what you are able to demonstrate in the present.
Aptitude ^ how quickly or easily you will be able to learn in the
future.
Psychometric tests can be broadly divided into two main categories:
1. Tests of maximum performance, such as ability or aptitude.
2. Tests of typical performance, such as personality or interest.
An ability test is designed to measure maximum performance and
potential in a number of areas. These abilities can be measured
separately, or combined to give an assessment of overall general
ability. Often tests are constructed so that they relate to a specific
job or skill and assess things such as perceptual speed or mechanical
reasoning.
Examples of ability tests are; general intelligence tests (IQ tests),
knowledge-based attainment tests and aptitude tests, which test the
ability to use knowledge.
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Ability is a very general term which can be applied to many
different types of specific ability. There are, in fact, over 50 different
human abilities, although these fall within the following four main
categories:
1. Cognitive reasoning ^ verbal, numerical, abstract, perceptual, spatial,
mechanical. A very broad and general definition of the word
‘cognition’ is: knowing, perceiving and thinking. It is studied by
psychologists because it reveals the extent of a person’s ability to
think.
2. Psychomotor ^ eye and hand coordination.
3. Sensory ^ hearing, touch, sense, smell, sight.
4. Physical ^ stamina and strength.
There are nine different types of aptitude, which may be summarised
as follows:
1. General learning ^ learn and understand, reason and make judgements,
e.g. how well we achieve at school.
2. Verbal aptitude ^ general lexical skills; understanding words and
using them effectively.
3. Numerical aptitude ^ general mathematical skills; working with
numbers quickly and accurately.
4. Spatial aptitude ^ understanding geometric forms; the understanding
and identification of patterns and their meaning, e.g. understanding
how to construct a flat-pack piece of furniture from a set of
instructions.
5. Form perception ^ studying and perceiving details in objects and=or
graphic material. Making visual comparisons between shapes, e.g.
inspecting an object under a microscope in a laboratory; quality
inspection of goods in a factory.
6. Clerical perception ^ reading, analysing and obtaining details from
written data or tabulated material, e.g. proof reading, analysing
reports.
7. Motor coordination ^ eye and hand coordination. Making rapid
movement response quickly and accurately, e.g. actually being
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able to assemble the flat pack piece of furniture once you have
understood how it should be done; being able to operate a
keyboard quickly and accurately; sporting skills.
8. Finger dexterity ^ manipulating small objects quickly and accurately,
e.g. playing a piano, sewing.
9. Manual dexterity ^ the skill of being able to work with your hands,
e.g. painting and decorating, building things, operating machinery.
In the case of most aptitude tests there is usually a set time limit
which must be strictly adhered to in order for the test to be valid, and
there is usually an average score which has been standardised in
comparison with a group of people who have taken the same test.
When taken under these conditions there may be up to five levels
of test performance expressed in percentage terms in comparison with
the average score established:
1. Top 10% of population ^ extremely high degree of aptitude.
2. Top one-third (excluding top 10%) ^ high degree of aptitude.
3. A score obtained by one-third of the population ^ average degree of
aptitude.
4. Lowest one-third ^ below average.
5. Lowest 10% ^ minimal aptitude.
The tests that follow are divided into three main sections: verbal
aptitude, numerical aptitude and technical aptitude. Several spatial
aptitude tests are included in subsequent chapters, specifically Chapter 3
(Logical reasoning) and Chapter 4 (Creativity).
Because they have been newly compiled for this book, the tests
have not been standardised in comparison to scores obtained by other
groups. Nevertheless there is a guide to assessing your performance at
the end of each test, and because the tests relate to specific aptitudes,
the results will give you the opportunity to identify your own particular
strengths and weaknesses.
Unless stated otherwise, you should award yourself one point for
each completely correct answer.
Specific aptitude tests
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Section I ^ Verbal aptitude
Mastery of words is seen by many as having in one’s possession the
ability to produce order out of chaos and because of this it is argued
that command of vocabulary is seen as a true measure of intelligence,
with the result that verbal tests are widely used in IQ testing.
Verbal reasoning tests are designed to measure basic verbal ability
(the ability to understand and use words), and typically include
spelling, grammar, word meanings, completing sentences, synonyms
and antonyms.
The exercises that follow test basic verbal aptitude in a number of
separate areas including synonyms, antonyms, analogy, odd one out
and verbal comprehension. There are also two advanced tests, one of
which is multi-discipline and one which is anagram-based.
For each test a performance assessment is provided. There is also a
time limit specified for completing each test, which should not be
exceeded otherwise your score will be invalidated.
Test 2.1 Synonym test A
A synonym is a word having the same, or very similar, meaning to
another of the same language. Examples of synonyms are: select and
choose, easy and elementary, inquire and probe.
Test A is a series of 20 questions designed to test your knowledge
of language and your ability to quickly identify words that have the
same or very similar meanings. In each case choose just one word from
the five words inside the brackets that is closest in meaning to the
word in capitals.
You have 20 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 GLUTINOUS (churlish, adhesive, hungry, bright, desolate)
2 ILLUMINATING (real, authentic, informative, rational,
coherent)
3 ESPOUSAL (avoidance, outburst, care, adoption, crux)
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4 SIGNIFY (connote, outline, depict, welcome, influence)
5 ERUDITE (ancient, scholarly, distinguished, careful, itinerant)
6 IRRATIONAL (intransigent, irredeemable, unsafe, lost,
nonsensical)
7 MODERATION (reticence, equanimity, humility, care, delicacy)
8 PANORAMIC (extensive, picturesque, distant, ceremonial,
equidistant)
9 WEB (erode, create, clothe, lattice, skirl)
10 SATIATE (follow, censure, undermine, veto, overfill)
11 THOROUGHLY (attentively, assiduously, long-winded, eagerly,
prodigal)
12 COGENCY (grace, competence, prestige, force, speed)
13 DESIROUS (eager, eligible, worthy, fulsome, true)
14 SOJOURN (relief, holiday, breach, retirement, rest)
15 PETRIFY (bedevil, calcify, agitate, decline, coerce)
16 ENCAPSULATE (facilitate, imitate, captivate, epitomize,
impede)
17 ADMONITORY (scolding, juvenile, acceptable, praiseworthy,
flexible)
18 PRETENCE (premises, precept, diversion, charade,
preponderance)
Specific aptitude tests
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19 FULMINATION (business, tirade, scripture, casket, channel)
20 WONT (awe, tribulation, perception, custom, desire)
Test 2.2 Synonym test B
Synonym test B is a series of 20 questions designed to test your
knowledge of language and your ability to quickly identify words that
have the same or very similar meanings. In each case choose just the
two words from the six words provided that are closest in meaning.
You have 20 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 chop, gnaw, grate, sever, chew, destroy
2 inimitable, corresponding, matchless, surpassed, mature, imposing
3 delegate, advise, identify, recruit, adjust, mobilise
4 boorish, unchaste, stable, impure, unjust, bizarre
5 workaday, prosaic, feasible, easy, special, effective
6 unassailable, kind, inveterate, entrenched, contrary, convoluted
7 truncate, abandon, misuse, relinquish, rectify, denounce
8 snappish, ordinary, cursory, shrewd, sardonic, hurried
9 severe, opinionated, crude, dogmatic, unprincipled, vocal
10 progress, orbit, travel, run, encircle, align
11 orchestrate, display, employ, defeat, sustain, score
12 conspicuous, virulent, wild, profane, noxious, rancorous
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13 just, somewhat, yet, once, now, moreover
14 elegant, serene, sophistic, shameful, sincere, fallacious
15 alter, assist, educate, facilitate, dream, cultivate
16 horizontal, unconscious, encompassed, submissive, supine, feral
17 farm, fare, style, food, firm, variety
18 guide, shepherd, farmer, shelter, carry, relocate
19 retreat, conclude, alight, circulate, call, getaway
20 intellect, symbol, rank, savour, genre, type
Test 2.3 Antonym test A
An antonym is a word with the opposite meaning to another of the
same language. Examples of antonyms are big and small, true and false,
happy and sad.
Test A is a series of 20 questions designed to test your knowledge
of language and your ability to quickly identify words that have opposite
meanings. In each case choose just one word from the five words inside
the brackets that is most opposite in meaning to the word in capitals.
You have 20 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 CHECK (stay, accelerate, monitor, foil, win)
2 INVARIABLE (valueless, viable, genuine, flexible, simple)
3 RIBALD (genteel, attractive, serious, ethical, austere)
4 TOUCHY (obedient, fortunate, genial, sympathetic, durable)
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5 TOTALITARIAN (democratic, fair, political, partial,
conservative)
6 UNACCOUNTABLE (desirable, honest, potent, comprehensible,
absolute)
7 WIDEN (prevent, compress, encase, hinder, terminate)
8 WORKABLE (atypical, amateurish, unfair, inconceivable,
garrulous)
9 BRUTAL (civil, humane, patient, varying, happy)
10 PRODIGIOUS (tiny, tight, unproductive, inept, preposterous)
11 REMOTE (abstract, vital, related, astute, adjacent)
12 HYPOTHETICAL (academic, cagey, proven, punative,
impressive)
13 IMMATURE (old, mundane, wise, mellow, respected)
14 EARTHLY (ethereal, temporal, seasoned, sensual, natural)
15 DENIGRATE (acknowledge, welcome, enhance, eulogise, master)
16 PUSILLANIMOUS (bold, cold, pure, sweet, dry)
17 COMPOSED (divided, nervous, specific, problematic, unhappy)
18 ASSET (acquisition, tragedy, misfortune, burden, mistake)
19 INTRINSIC (elemental, useless, obscure, unnecessary, appended)
20 MUSICAL (discordant, loud, lyrical, verbal, euphonious)
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Test 2.4 Antonym test B
Antonym test B is a series of 20 questions designed to test your
knowledge of language and your ability to quickly identify words that
have opposite meanings. In each case, choose just the two words from
the six words provided that are most opposite in meaning.
You have 20 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 wet, murky, cheerful, bright, still, happy
2 scarce, unwise, profuse, moral, ample, absent
3 contradict, continue, promote, intensify, quell, substantiate
4 fatuous, irrelevant, similar, therapeutic, contrary, rash
5 rigid, fluent, baroque, faltering, bare, effective
6 saturation, remuneration, tradition, reflection, salvation, perdition
7 eerie, hazardous, secure, active, restrained, sad
8 wise, foolproof, enlarged, wasteful, frugal, weak
9 candid, lucid, ignorant, angry, subtle, strong
10 sparse, gregarious, unsociable, graceful, weak, confused
11 litigate, allow, proffer, spread, proscribe, disagree
12 bob, rear, train, sail, bow, genuflect
13 important, rich, free, elevated, petty, perverse
14 neglected, brief, diplomatic, palpable, rude, devious
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15 capture, absolve, captivate, diminish, hide, convict
16 climax, liking, zest, flavour, apathy, reluctance
17 trouble, turmoil, drivel, joy, passion, calm
18 elastic, severed, taut, level, slack, pliant
19 popinjay, neophyte, instructor, gambler, prize-fighter, aviator
20 humane, phlegmatic, erudite, solid, animated, healthy
Test 2.5 Analogy test A
An analogy is a similitude of relations where it is necessary to reason
the answer from a parallel case. Questions may take the form ‘A is to B
as C is to?’, as in the following example:
HELMET is to protection as TIARA is to:
adornment, queen, hair, royalty, head
Answer: adornment; both a helmet and a tiara are worn on the head,
however, a helmet is worn for the purpose of protection and a tiara is
worn for adornment.
You have 30 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 digital is to numbers as analogue is to:
symbols, hands, time, register, chronometer
2 concept is to notion as fixation is to:
obsession, idea, intuition, apprehension, proposition
3 confound is to bewilder as astound is to:
surprise, confuse, startle, astonish, horrify
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4 corolla is to petals as pedicel is to:
flower, stalk, root, leaves, anther
5 limerick is to five as sonnet is to:
four, eight, twelve, fourteen, sixteen
6 laser is to beams as strobe is to:
intensity, flashes, signals, X-rays, lamps
7 venerable is to august as lofty is to:
imposing, December, magisterial, rarefied, grand
8 haematite is to iron as galena is to:
enamel, copper, tin, zinc, lead
9 trireme is to ship as triptych is to:
spear, stand, pattern, panel, play
10 east is to orient as west is to:
aoristic, occident, orison, ottoman, ocean
11 artist is to brush as scribe is to:
paper, pen, book, words, page
12 squander is to waste as employ is to:
exploit, obtain, benefit, consume, use
13 stopcock is to pipe as throttle is to:
valve, engine, flow, machine, regulate
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14 Aries is to ram as Cygnus is to:
goat, fish, swan, eagle, charioteer
15 continue is to resume as continuous is to:
perseverance, unbroken, everlasting, repetition, persist
16 jade is to green as sapphire is to:
blue, red, black, brown, yellow
17 tangent is to touch as secant is to:
meet, divide, coincide, intersect, join
18 cleaver is to cut as auger is to:
drill, chop, hammer, shape, saw
19 competent is to skilful as adept is to:
capable, expert, able, clever, knowledgeable
20 aspiration is to ambition as fruition is to:
realisation, success, victory, recognition, desire
Test 2.6 Analogy test B
In each of the following, identify two words (one from each set of
brackets) that form a connection (analogy) when paired with the words
in capitals, e.g:
CHAPTER (book, verse, read)
ACT (stage, audience, play)
Answer: book and play; a chapter is a division of a book and an act is
a division of a play.
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You have 30 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 PLUM (eat, grow, fruit)
WILLOW (leaves, tree, crop)
2 RIFLE (bullet, gun, fire)
CATAPULT (project, fling, weapon)
3 FOX (tail, hunt, fur)
PEACOCK (fly, plumage, breed)
4 EVENING (morning, night, day)
AUTUMN (day, winter, season)
5 STELLATE (sword, star, triangle)
TOROID (funnel, ring, crescent)
6 TASTE (food, swallow, tongue)
WALK (run, legs, move)
7 CHEMISTRY (laboratory, reaction, substances)
FAUNA (plants, animals, countryside)
8 TRAVEL (journey, map, list)
ATTEND (meeting, programme, boardroom)
9 FOREWORD (read, progress, book)
OVERTURE (music, opera, composer)
10 RESIGN (politician, leave, parliament)
ABDICATE (rule, king, realm)
11 CASTOR (sugar, furniture, wheel)
ROWEL (bicycle, hub, spur)
Specific aptitude tests
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12 MOBSTER (gangster, criminal, prohibition)
BRIGAND (fugitive, bandit, desperado)
13 CLAVIER (piano, compose, instrument)
TAMBOUR (music, beat, drum)
14 QUADRUPED (four, year, animal)
QUATRAIN (verse, eight, ship)
15 LARGO (loud, solemn, slow)
PIANO (lively, soft, fast)
16 GLUTTONY (food, weight, sin)
CHARITY (philanthropy, kindness, virtue)
17 VESTRY (church, hospital, refuge)
DISPENSARY (monastery, laboratory, hospital)
18 MODIFY (correct, regulate, change)
REDRESS (adjust, align, rectify)
19 MOAT (ditch, portcullis, crater)
TURRET (rampart, watchtower, defence)
20 SAVANNAH (inlet, highland, grass)
SIERRA (ravine, mountain, rock)
Test 2.7 Classification test
In this test you are given a list of five words and are required to choose
which of the five words is the odd one out. This may be for a variety
of reasons, as in the following examples:
(a) calm, quiet, relaxed, serene, unruffled
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Answer: ‘quiet’ is the odd one out, as the rest mean the same thing.
However, your being quiet does not necessarily mean that you are
calm, relaxed serene or unruffled. You could be extremely upset and
agitated but still remain quiet.
(b) abode, dwelling, house, residence, street
Answer: ‘street’ is the odd one out, as the rest are specific places in
which we live. ‘Street’ is a general term which may contain many houses,
gardens, trees, road surfaces, etc.
You have 30 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 erect, upright, perpendicular, level, vertical
2 unequalled, paramount, exceptional, unsurpassed, finest
3 case, coffer, crate, chest, covering
4 cajole, deceive, beguile, inveigle, persuade
5 visit, summon, invite, assemble, convene
6 synagogue, mosque, pagoda, steeple, cathedral
7 hogwash, buffoonery, gibberish, gobbledegook, mumbo-jumbo
8 satisfactory, perfect, acceptable, fine, suitable
9 quadrangular, cubic, rectangular, spheroid, square
10 discontinue, forgo, relinquish, surrender, abandon
11 parched, desiccated, scorched, barren, dehydrated
12 pamphlet, certificate, catalogue, brochure, leaflet
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13 burrow, till, cultivate, furrow, harrow
14 simian, ape, feline, monkey, primate
15 design, hew, chisel, sculpt, fashion
16 imaginary, strange, visionary, illusory, unreal
17 fete, holiday, gala, jamboree, carnival
18 obliquely, laterally, sideways, crabwise, orbicular
19 submit, distribute, tender, proffer, offer
20 sporadic, periodic, erratic, occasional, recurrent
Test 2.8 Comprehension
Each of the three passages below has had 15 words removed which
have been listed at random below each passage. In order to test your
verbal skills and comprehension ability, you must restore the 15 words
correctly into each passage.
You have 30 minutes in which to reconstruct the three passages.
1 Just as the __________________ (1) __________________ (2) was half-way through __________________ (3) his
most __________________ (4) and difficult __________________ (5), the __________________ (6) thing that could
have happened did, and all hell was let loose as Ben __________________ (7) a cat
through the dining room __________________ (8). Apart from almost barking
the house down and __________________ (9) drowning out the second half of the
question, Ben __________________ (10) across the dining room in a __________________ (11)
blur before throwing __________________ (12) against the __________________ (13) door with a
__________________ (14) __________________ (15).
window question himself sickening hapless
involved worst saw shot crash
asking interviewer totally brown kitchen
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2 We all have the potential to be __________________ (1), however, because of the
__________________ (2) of modern __________________(3) and the need for __________________ (4), many of
us never have the __________________(5) or opportunity, or indeed are given
the __________________(6), to __________________(7) our __________________ (8) talents, even though most
of us have __________________(9) __________________(10) to __________________(11) this __________________(12) in the
form of __________________(13) which has been fed into, collated and __________________(14)
by the __________________(15) over many years.
sufficient pressures brain realise encouragement
ammunition data living latent time
processed creative potential specialization explore
3 __________________ (1) is the __________________(2) of new __________________ (3), and __________________(4) is the
__________________(5) of this knowledge. The __________________(6) of learning and memory,
therefore, is the __________________(7) of all our knowledge and __________________ (8) and is
what __________________(9) us to __________________(10) the __________________ (11), __________________(12) in the
__________________ (13) and __________________ (14) for the __________________(15).
abilities plan acquisition basis consider
learning retention combination past memory
future enables knowledge present exist
Test 2.9 Advanced verbal test A ^ multi-discipline
This test is a miscellaneous selection of 25 verbal questions designed
to measure language use or comprehension and your ability to adapt
to different types of question.
You have 60 minutes in which to solve the 25 questions.
You should read the instructions to each question carefully.
1 The school __________________ tried to persuade the police not to __________________ the
boys for what had been a __________________ lapse in their good behaviour.
Insert three of the following words into the passage in order for it
to read correctly:
momentous, prosecute, principle, persecute, principal, momentary
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2
I S
C T
E R I
Start at one of the four corner letters and spiral clockwise
round the perimeter, finishing at the centre letter to spell out a
nine-letter word. You must provide the missing letters.
3
E R
I S U
A N
L E C
Work from letter to letter horizontally and vertically (but not
diagonally) to spell out a 12-letter word. You must find the
starting point and provide the missing letters.
4
I S
A L M
H I
Start at one of the four corner letters and spiral clockwise
round the perimeter, finishing at the centre letter to spell out a
nine-letter word. You must provide the missing letters.
5
R P
E C A
T I
A I E
Work from letter to letter horizontally and vertically (but not
diagonally) to spell out a 12-letter word. You must find the
starting point and provide the missing letters.
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6
N O
R
E C
N
I
A D
C S
I
Find two eight-letter words, one in each circle, and both reading
clockwise, that are synonyms. You must provide the missing
letters.
7
O R
A
S
C I
D
E
R
T
E
N
U
Find two eight-letter words, one in each circle, and both reading
clockwise, that are antonyms. You must provide the missing
letters.
8 Change one letter only in each of the words below to produce a
familiar phrase:
ACE TIE CART ON
9 Which word in brackets means the same as the word in capitals?
RAPACITY (avarice, affinity, envy, speed, euphoria)
10 Change the position of six words in the sentence below in order
for it to make sense:
There is no considerable success of another, as what is
considered to be success by one definition may differ single for
individual.
Specific aptitude tests
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11 Change the position of four words in the sentence below in order
for it to make sense:
When placed in marks, the question mark is used inside the
quotation dialogue, and replaces the full stop.
12 Change the position of four words in the sentence below in order
for it to make sense:
The candidate was able to sustain his level to demonstrate a
high ability of work activity.
13
L Y I
L T I
B I A E I
D N N
H C R
Each square contains the scrambled letters of a nine-letter word.
Find the two words which are synonyms.
14 Place a word in the brackets that means the same as the
definitions either side of the brackets:
lean over to one side (__________________) catalogue
15 Which two words that sound alike, but are spelled differently,
mean:
mode=estate
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16
M A U
S N Y
N O O T N
I O G
N I C
Each square contains the scrambled letters of a nine-letter word.
Find the two words which are synonyms.
17 clever is to ingenious as wise is to:
perspicuous, intelligent, astute, sagacious, resourceful
18 Identify two words (one from each set of brackets) that form a
connection (analogy) when paired with the words in capitals:
EARTH (perigee, zenith, aphelion)
SUN (nadir, perihelion, conjunction)
19 Which two words are most opposite in meaning?
literal, zealous, risible, feral, fanciful, pervasive
20
D R E
A T
E S
Start at one of the four corner letters and spiral clockwise
round the perimeter, finishing at the centre letter to spell out a
nine-letter word. You must provide the missing letters.
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21
S I
O C A
N I
Start at one of the four corner letters and spiral clockwise
round the perimeter, finishing at the centre letter to spell out a
nine-letter word. You must provide the missing letters.
22 Which word in brackets is most opposite in meaning to the word
in capitals?
QUERULOUS (undemanding, believable, orthodox,
synthetic, dry)
23 Place a word in the brackets that means the same as the
definitions either side of the brackets:
fall back on (__________________) retreat
24 Below are seven synonyms of the keyword RIGID. Take one
letter in turn from the seven synonyms to spell out a further
synonym of the keyword RIGID:
harsh, rigorous, stern, stringent, severe, strict, set
25 Which two words are most opposite in meaning?
thrift, presage, introspection, profligacy, horde, parsimony
Test 2.10 Advanced verbal test B ^ anagrams
An anagram is a description of any of several types of word puzzle based
upon the rearranging of letters in words. There are many variations on
the basic theme, several of which are included in this test.
This test is designed to test your verbal dexterity and your
knowledge of words, and the ability to spot different word patterns. It
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also requires you to think quickly and adapt your mind to each different
style of question.
For example: SOFT LAWS is an anagram of which two words (4, 4)
which are opposite in meaning? Answer: fast, slow
You have 75 minutes in which to solve the 20 questions.
1 SUP LIME is an anagram of which seven-letter word?
2 TAXI FEE PLOT is an anagram of which two words (4, 7) that
mean the same?
3 STOUT APE is an anagram of which three-word phrase (3, 2, 3)?
(Hint: page 205)
4 Only one of the groups of five letters below can be rearranged to
spell out a five-letter English word. Find the word:
PCEOL GRILN NBDRA BILPO
5 Only one of the groups of five letters below can be rearranged to
spell out a five-letter English word. Find the word:
HURPA ATHOC NFEOT ECILP
6 Which of the following is not an anagram of an animal?
OK DENY HOG REP SHE ELK GARBED
7 Which of the following is not an anagram of a tree?
RAP LOP PC USER HER CRY STOREY
8 Only one of the groups of five letters below can be rearranged to
spell out a five-letter English word. Find the word:
JEABY LIROW CANTU PEOTM
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9 DUCK SLICER is an anagram of which two words (5, 5) that are
opposite in meaning?
10 NEAT GLUT is an anagram of which eight-letter word?
11 Solve the anagram in brackets (eight-letter word) to complete a
quotation by Louis Pasteur:
‘Chance favours the (RED PAPER) mind.’
12 Solve the anagram in brackets (nine-letter word) to complete a
quotation by Alexander Cannon:
‘A small mind is (IS NOT BEAT). A great mind can lead and
be led.’
13 ELITE LAVA is an anagram of which nine-letter word?
14 AUNT SAL is an anagram of which seven-letter word?
15 Use each letter of the phrase RAN KEENER FACTORY once
each only to spell out three kinds of boat or ship.
16 Use each letter of the phrase ENABLE PITCHFORK once each
only to spell out three kinds of professions.
17 SHOE COIN is an anagram of which eight-letter word?
18 GOOD CLARA is an anagram of which two words that are
similar in meaning?
19 BEE STOOL is an anagram of which eight-letter word?
20 POLICE RAID is an anagram of which 10-letter word?
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Section II ^ Numerical aptitude
We all require some numerical skills in our lives, whether it is to
calculate our weekly shopping bill or to budget how to use our monthly
income.
Numerical ability tests are designed to assess how well a person can
reason with numbers. Questions within these tests may involve either
straightforward mathematical calculation, or problems that require the
application of logical thought processes.
In the case of numerical problem solving, the actual mathematical
process involved may be quite basic; however, you are being assessed
on your ability to apply your basic mathematical knowledge in order
to correctly solve the problem as quickly as possible, and your ability
to deal with problems in a structured and analytical way.
Numerical questions are widely used in IQ testing and, as numbers
are international, numerical tests are regarded as being culture-fair or
culture-free, so that they are free of any particular cultural bias and no
advantage is derived by individuals of one culture relative to those of
another.
Individual tests include mental arithmetic, number sequences and
logical reasoning, all designed to test a person’s aptitude=ability at
mathematical calculation, identifying number patterns and the ability
to reason with numbers.
Test 2.11 Number sequence test
In a numerical sequence test it is necessary to identify a pattern that
is occurring in the sequence. The numbers in the sequence may be
progressing, or they may be decreasing, and in some cases they may be
both progressing and decreasing within the sequence. It is up to you
to determine why this is occurring and to either continue the sequence
or to provide a missing number within the sequence.
Fill in the missing number(s) indicated by the question mark(s) in
each question.
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A time limit of 20 minutes is allowed.
The use of calculators is not permitted in this test.
1 0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, ?
2 9, 18, 27, ?, 45, ?, 63
3 100, 96.75, 93.5, 90.25, 87, ?
4 0, 100, 6, 94, 12, 88, 18, 82, ?, ?
5 17, 34, 51, 68, ?
6 1, 1, 2, ?, 24, 120, 720
7 100, 98, 94, 88, 80, 70, ?
8 1.5, 3, 5.5, 9, 13.5, ?
9 100, 50, 200, 25, 400, ?
10 2, 5.75, ?, 13.25, 17, 20.75
11 100, 1, 97.5, 3.5, 92.5, 8.5, 85, 16, ?, ?
12 110, ?, 99, 81, 7