Visionary Philosopher, 138 too.
I believe the word is the country, ENGLAND.
Visionary Philosopher, 138 too.
I believe the word is the country, ENGLAND.
131- Visual Mathematician.
What did everyone pick for the one with the colorful blocks/circles? I figured that the bottom left and top right were circles inside of squares with the line going top left-bottom right, and the inside color of the bottom circle matching the inside color of the top square. There was one which these criteria corresponded to the top left so I picked it
I hope someone understood that.
At testcafe.com, my score shot up as well! I like that one better. 
First of all, I thought it was funny that when I went back and took the test a second time, changed two answers, my IQ jumped up forty points. And we’re not talking subjective. I mean the real basic ones which involved reading the question carefully and not getting the little words mixed up.
Second of all, question 31.
“Which word best completes the analogy: Water is to glass as letter is to: mail, stamp, pen, envelope, book?”
A letter can be in the mail (Der Post!), just like it can be paper in an envelope, just like you can have letters in a book (else we’d be reading blank pages), or in a pen (as letters about to come out). I don’t get stamp. Can you have letters in stamps?
This and that damned fruit question, the #33 shape, #44, and that kangaroo question drove me batty. There were reasons for EVERY ANSWER. Good lord. Okay, a banana is a hesperidium. Or a grape is an aggregate fruit. Or apples and pears are pomes. Or I’ve never seen coconut candy in a Starburst/Skittles bag. Then again, I’ve never seen pear either.
About 75% of these questions were not IQ test questions, but aptitude exam questions. There is a difference, yanno. I could find justification for almost all of them subjective answers. Plus, when I was a little kid, they thought I was retarded and took me to get an IQ test from a psychiatrist. My score does not compare at all. I think the psychiatrist was lower ;).
I got a 129 and I’m a precision whatnot.
I meant to say, raised 20 points.
All I know is, there are many Dopers smarter than me.
139 and a Precision Processor
It’s what I am too…

A Facts Curator sounds like some kind of librarian.
My score was 133.
Visionary Philosopher, 140. I doesn’t matter how accurate it is (it’s within 5% of a real one that was done), it was fun.
Word Warrior, 120. Damn those math problems!
.:Nichol:.
visual mathematician, 132.
142
135, Visionary Philosopher
Visionary philosopher—135.
Hey, dudes, figuring out how to give a valid e-mail without attracting spam is part of the intelligence test.
Gotcha there.
(Answer: use a spam trap address: a valid address that you only use for the purpose of filling in this kind of online form.)
If this was timed, I blew it badly because it took me forever to figure out the hypotenuse question. (the cars.) I should have gotten it quickly, except it’s late at night, I’ve been sleep-deprived all week, and my brain is ragged. (I know, excuses, excuses…)
GLENDALE. Not being from California, the only reason I know this is from listening to Frank Zappa’s Billy the Mountain.
Heh, not by choice. . . :rolleyes:
Tripler
Although it did match me up with a few good lookin’ women in the greater North Dakota area.
the same type iq 131…
139 visual mathematician.
I didn’t have to take a test for that. I come from a long line of brillant mathematicians. We can all do math in our heads and have an almost autistic talent for figuring days of the week.
On the other hand, nobody in my family can read a map. You’ve never seen a group of people with less sense of direction. If we ever had a family reunion, nobody would attend cause nobody would be able to find the place.
Outrageous Liar, 186
England?
138 Visionary Philosopher.
England was my guess, FranticMad, you genius, you. .