(c) "If a playmate hits you without meaning to do it?"

Questions may be repeated once or twice, but form must not be changed.

Credit if two of three responses are correct. (See The Measurement of Intelligence, p. 216.)

4. Finding Likenesses: Two Things

Say, "I am going to name two things which are alike in some way, and I want you to tell me how they are alike."

(a) "Wood and coal: in what way are they alike?" If difference is given, say, "No, I want you to tell me how they are alike. In what way are wood and coal alike?"

(b) "In what way are an apple and a peach alike?"

(c) "In what way are iron and silver alike?"

(d) "In what way are a ship and an automobile alike?"

Credit if any real likeness is given for two of the four pairs. (See The Measurement of Intelligence, pp. 219-20.)