The Titan Test

Captain Kremmen

All aboard, me Hearties!
Valued Senior Member
See how many questions you can get right from the verbal part of the Titan Test for geniuses.
No answers given, but that shouldn't be a problem for sciforum genii.
Say whether you had to use reference/google to help.

VERBAL ANALOGIES

Write the word or prefix that best completes each analogy. For example, in the analogy MAN : WOMAN :: ANDRO- : ?, the best answer would be GYNO-.

1. STRIP : MÖBIUS :: BOTTLE : ?
2. THOUGHT : ACTION :: OBSESSIVE : ?
3. LACKING MONEY : PENURIOUS :: DOTING ON ONE'S WIFE : ?
4. MICE : MEN :: CABBAGES : ?
5. TIRE : RETREAD :: PARCHMENT : ?
6. ALL IS ONE : MONISM :: ALL IS SELF : ?
7. SWORD : DAMOCLES :: BED : ?
8. THING : DANGEROUS :: SPRING : ?
9. HOLLOW VICTORY : PYRRHIC :: HOLLOW VILLAGE : ?
10. PILLAR : OBELISK :: MONSTER : ?
11. 4 : HAND :: 9 : ?
12. GOLD : MALLEABLE :: CHALK : ?
13. EASY JOB : SINECURE :: GUIDING LIGHT : ?
14. LEG : AMBULATE :: ARM : ?
15. MOSQUITO : MALARIA :: CANNIBALISM : ?
16. HEAR : SEE :: TEMPORAL : ?
17. ASTRONOMY AND PHYSICS : ASTROPHYSICS :: HISTORY AND STATISTICS : ?
18. JEKYLL : HYDE :: ELOI : ?
19. UNIVERSE : COSMO- :: UNIVERSAL LAWS : ?
20. SET OF SETS NOT MEMBERS OF THEMSELVES : RUSSELL :: DARKNESS OF THE NIGHT SKY IN AN INFINITE UNIVERSE : ?
21. TEACHING : UPLIFTING :: PEDAGOGIC : ?
22. LANGUAGE GAMES : LUDWIG :: PIANO CONCERTI FOR THE LEFT HAND : ?
23. IDOLS : TWILIGHT :: MORALS : ?
24. SWEETNESS : SUFFIX :: BOATSWAIN : ?

From http://www.eskimo.com/~miyaguch/titan.html
 
You're right about #1, but it's usually spelled
Klein's bottle.
I don't feel like searching for any of these (I charge for research. ;)), but I will double-check my own answers. So far, only one:

3.
Uxorious. From Latin uxor, wife.
 
They are more to do with General Knowledge than IQ.
A good quizzer would get most of them.

For 1. It is the name of the mathematician, not the object you need.
For 3. Yes I thought the same.

Number 11 is a measurement. 4 inches to a hand, 9 inches to a ..............?
I thought it might be an Ell, but that turns out to be roughly the length of the arm, 45 inches.
I won't look it up. See if someone else knows it.

Number 23 is a puzzle.
I was thinking "Twilight of the Gods", .................. but can't get any further.

For 12.
12. GOLD : MALLEABLE :: CHALK : ?
FRIABLE
 
They are more to do with General Knowledge than IQ.
Still, just knowing how to approach the question requires a good intellect.

For 1. It is the name of the mathematician, not the object you need.
Not clear from the statement of the problem. It works either way.

For 3. Yes I thought the same.
Good for you. Not a word in common use in the 20th century, much less the 21st!

Number 11 is a measurement. 4 inches to a hand, 9 inches to a ..............? I thought it might be an Ell, but that turns out to be roughly the length of the arm, 45 inches. I won't look it up. See if someone else knows it.
People were smaller in the past. My foot is 11 inches long, but in the 16th century they may have been much shorter.
 
I think that a foot has always been 12 inches.
How big are rods and perches? Could be a rod.

3. A person utterly devoted to his wife. (or her wife)

5. Not sure of spelling, but
PALIMPSEST
 
I think that a foot has always been 12 inches.
Yes, that seems to be correct, varying between 11 and 13 in ancient Greece. The Romans initially divided it into 16 units, but eventually invented the uncia, which is the source of both "inch" and "ounce."

How big are rods and perches? Could be a rod.
A rod = 5.5 yards, more than 2 meters. A perch is a 3-dimensional measurement for stones = 16.5ft x 1.5ft x 1ft.

3. A person utterly devoted to his wife. (or her wife)
It's an adjective, not a noun. And I'm sure that people who toss around the word
uxorious
are too old to have absorbed gay marriage into their worldview, even if they're decent enough not to object to it. ;)

5. Not sure of spelling, but
PALIMPSEST
As a linguist I'm expected to know that word and I do. But the connection didn't spring to mind.
 
13. Must be some word meaning lighthouse, beacon ending in -ure.
Could be
CYNOSURE

Never used outside of the odd crossword puzzle.
That's a tough one.
 
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1.
Klein
2.
Complusive?
4.
kings
7.
Procrustes
9.
potemkin
12.
friable
15.
Kuru
16.
spatial
18.
Morlock
20
Olber
 
1.Agreed
2.
COMPULSION rather than COMPULSIVE
4. Agreed
7. Agreed
9. That's a good answer.
I was thinking "DESERTED", but POTEMKIN fits better
12
Could be FRANGIBLE, FRIABLE is more like good soil, whereas chalk breaks into fragments
15. Is that a disease caused by cannibalism?
I was thinking CJD, but KURU is a single word, so fits better
16.
Answer is the part of the brain that deals with vision. Is there one word which means VISUAL CORTEX? Could be CORTEX
18. From "The Time Machine", agreed.
20. Is a Paradox. Is Olber the Astronomer who thought of it?
 
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1.Agreed
2.
COMPULSION rather than COMPULSIVE

but is is Obsessive, not obsession. Ergo, you have a obsessive thought and a compulsive action.

16.
Answer is the part of the brain that deals with vision. Is there one word which means VISUAL CORTEX? Could be CORTEX

Temporal can also mean related to time. hear and see are both sensual in nature, and time is dimensional, as is space. besides, the temporal lobe also processes some visual information.
 
@Randwolf
Yes, I think you have it. Fits exactly.
Both are lobes.

The questions are quite clever I think.

@Janus
Re 2. I get your point.
There is a case for both.
 
14. Is a Latin rooted word for moving using your ams ending in -ATE
I've had to look this one up. It's BRACHIATE

6. That's quite an easy one. The philosophical belief that everything is self.
8. Is based on a famous quotation by Alexander Pope.
17. Could be Historico plus a Greek word meaning statistics.
I came up with Historicometrics, but there's no such word.
 
Try "brachiate". I don't think it has to mean walking on your hands.

Apes brachiate by swinging from their hands, so I think the connection is just "movement", rather than "orientation".

What might 6 be?
 
We crossed over there. Yes, that's right.

6. Is
SOLECISM
8. Is
PIERIAN, from
"A little learning is a dang'rous thing;
Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring:
There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
And drinking largely sobers us again."

I wouldn't have spelled it properly

17. Maybe something simple.
ECONOMICS

10 is
BASILISK
 
17. Is
cliometrics
n
(Economics) (functioning as singular) the study of economic history using statistics and computer analysis
 
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