This document provides a series of logic puzzles organized into general, math, and lateral thinking sections ranging from 1 to 10 points in difficulty. The answer to each puzzle is provided in the notes section of the corresponding slide. Pictures may help solve some puzzles or lead the reader astray. Participants are asked not to spoil puzzles for others.
This document contains a series of logic puzzles with varying point values. It explains that the answers to most puzzles can be found in the notes section of each slide, while some require scrolling to the next slide. Pictures may help solve some puzzles or mislead on others. The puzzles are organized into three sections: logic/lateral thinking, math, and math investigations. Each puzzle is numbered and earns points for a correct answer.
This document provides 50 brain teasers and lateral thinking puzzles compiled by David Koutsoukis. The puzzles cover a wide range of topics and involve wordplay, logic, and thinking outside the box. Examples include puzzles about homophones, ambiguous wording, unusual perspectives, and paradoxes. The goal is to challenge readers to carefully analyze each clue and think creatively to arrive at the right solution.
The document provides information about a Ukrainian textbook for English language learning in the 5th year of secondary school education. It includes the title, author, publisher, date of publication, and recommendations from the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. The textbook is the second edition, revised according to the current curriculum.
The document provides information about a Ukrainian textbook for English language learning in the 5th year of secondary school education. It includes the title, author, publisher, date of publication, and recommendations from the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. The textbook is the second edition, revised according to the current curriculum.
This document contains 14 logic puzzles or riddles with questions ranging from dividing candy bars among friends to arranging filled and empty glasses. The puzzles test reasoning skills and thinking outside the box to find non-obvious solutions or explanations.
This document appears to be from a Ukrainian English textbook for 9th grade students. It contains four units on different topics for students to learn English vocabulary, grammar, reading, listening, writing and speaking skills. The introduction from the author Oksana Karpyuk welcomes students and encourages them to have an interesting and successful year studying English. The textbook contains lessons, exercises, vocabulary lists and grammar references to aid students' language learning.
This document contains an answer key for a grammar and vocabulary test. It includes answers to questions about parts of speech, tenses, pronouns, prepositions, conditionals and reported speech. The answer key provides the correct answers to multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions testing various grammar concepts.
This document contains an English lesson for non-native English speakers. It includes dialogues, vocabulary words, grammar exercises, and reading passages. The lesson focuses on topics like seasons, family, daily routines, and describing people. It provides models and prompts to help students practice speaking, reading, and writing in English. Exercises include filling in blanks, matching, asking and answering questions, and writing short responses. The goal is to help students learn and practice essential English language skills.
The document is an English lesson for students. It contains various exercises including dialogues, word readings, descriptions of pictures, interviews, and fill-in-the-blank questions. The lesson focuses on topics like seasons, family, daily schedules and activities. Students are asked to practice speaking, reading and writing in English.
What's your name?
Me: My name is Taras.
Assistant: Where are you from?
Me: I'm from Kyiv.
Assistant: Do you have any pets?
Me: No, I don't have any pets.
Assistant: How many friends do you have?
Me: I have two best friends.
Assistant: What are their names?
Me: Their names are Ihor and Dan.
4 Work in pairs. Ask and answer questions about yourself.
5 Work in pairs. Make up a dialogue about a new friend.
My name is...
I'm from...
I have...
I don't have...
My friends are...
Their names are...
What
What's your name?
Me: My name is Taras.
Assistant: Where are you from?
Me: I'm from Kyiv.
Assistant: Do you have any pets?
Me: No, I don't have any pets.
Assistant: How many friends do you have?
Me: I have two best friends.
Assistant: What are their names?
Me: Their names are Ihor and Dan.
4 Work in pairs. Ask and answer questions about each other.
5 Present your partner to the class.
My partner's name is...
He/She is... years old.
He/She is from...
He/She has/hasn't got...
He/
The document is a collection of riddles and puzzles with short explanations or answers provided. Some examples include riddles about a man traveling on Friday, blackbirds on a fence, words that start and end with the same letter, and a group of mountain climbers running out of food sooner than expected due to adding more people to their party. The riddles and puzzles cover a variety of topics and themes with concise responses to each.
This document provides exercises about activities, hobbies, and verb tenses. It begins with matching activities like going to concerts or collecting records with pictures. Later exercises include completing sentences with verbs in different tenses like simple present and present continuous, identifying verb tenses in sentences, and answering questions using the simple past tense. The document contains information and practice with present and past verb tenses.
The document appears to be a test or worksheet for English language learners. It includes sections on grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions. The questions cover topics such as verb tenses, parts of speech, family and daily routines.
This document contains a series of logic puzzles with varying point values. It explains that the answers to most puzzles can be found in the notes section of each slide, while some require scrolling to the next slide. Pictures may help solve some puzzles or mislead on others. The puzzles are organized into three sections: logic/lateral thinking, math, and math investigations. Each puzzle is numbered and earns points for a correct answer.
This document provides 50 brain teasers and lateral thinking puzzles compiled by David Koutsoukis. The puzzles cover a wide range of topics and involve wordplay, logic, and thinking outside the box. Examples include puzzles about homophones, ambiguous wording, unusual perspectives, and paradoxes. The goal is to challenge readers to carefully analyze each clue and think creatively to arrive at the right solution.
The document provides information about a Ukrainian textbook for English language learning in the 5th year of secondary school education. It includes the title, author, publisher, date of publication, and recommendations from the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. The textbook is the second edition, revised according to the current curriculum.
The document provides information about a Ukrainian textbook for English language learning in the 5th year of secondary school education. It includes the title, author, publisher, date of publication, and recommendations from the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. The textbook is the second edition, revised according to the current curriculum.
This document contains 14 logic puzzles or riddles with questions ranging from dividing candy bars among friends to arranging filled and empty glasses. The puzzles test reasoning skills and thinking outside the box to find non-obvious solutions or explanations.
This document appears to be from a Ukrainian English textbook for 9th grade students. It contains four units on different topics for students to learn English vocabulary, grammar, reading, listening, writing and speaking skills. The introduction from the author Oksana Karpyuk welcomes students and encourages them to have an interesting and successful year studying English. The textbook contains lessons, exercises, vocabulary lists and grammar references to aid students' language learning.
This document contains an answer key for a grammar and vocabulary test. It includes answers to questions about parts of speech, tenses, pronouns, prepositions, conditionals and reported speech. The answer key provides the correct answers to multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions testing various grammar concepts.
This document contains an English lesson for non-native English speakers. It includes dialogues, vocabulary words, grammar exercises, and reading passages. The lesson focuses on topics like seasons, family, daily routines, and describing people. It provides models and prompts to help students practice speaking, reading, and writing in English. Exercises include filling in blanks, matching, asking and answering questions, and writing short responses. The goal is to help students learn and practice essential English language skills.
The document is an English lesson for students. It contains various exercises including dialogues, word readings, descriptions of pictures, interviews, and fill-in-the-blank questions. The lesson focuses on topics like seasons, family, daily schedules and activities. Students are asked to practice speaking, reading and writing in English.
What's your name?
Me: My name is Taras.
Assistant: Where are you from?
Me: I'm from Kyiv.
Assistant: Do you have any pets?
Me: No, I don't have any pets.
Assistant: How many friends do you have?
Me: I have two best friends.
Assistant: What are their names?
Me: Their names are Ihor and Dan.
4 Work in pairs. Ask and answer questions about yourself.
5 Work in pairs. Make up a dialogue about a new friend.
My name is...
I'm from...
I have...
I don't have...
My friends are...
Their names are...
What
What's your name?
Me: My name is Taras.
Assistant: Where are you from?
Me: I'm from Kyiv.
Assistant: Do you have any pets?
Me: No, I don't have any pets.
Assistant: How many friends do you have?
Me: I have two best friends.
Assistant: What are their names?
Me: Their names are Ihor and Dan.
4 Work in pairs. Ask and answer questions about each other.
5 Present your partner to the class.
My partner's name is...
He/She is... years old.
He/She is from...
He/She has/hasn't got...
He/
The document is a collection of riddles and puzzles with short explanations or answers provided. Some examples include riddles about a man traveling on Friday, blackbirds on a fence, words that start and end with the same letter, and a group of mountain climbers running out of food sooner than expected due to adding more people to their party. The riddles and puzzles cover a variety of topics and themes with concise responses to each.
This document provides exercises about activities, hobbies, and verb tenses. It begins with matching activities like going to concerts or collecting records with pictures. Later exercises include completing sentences with verbs in different tenses like simple present and present continuous, identifying verb tenses in sentences, and answering questions using the simple past tense. The document contains information and practice with present and past verb tenses.
The document appears to be a test or worksheet for English language learners. It includes sections on grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions. The questions cover topics such as verb tenses, parts of speech, family and daily routines.
1) A traffic report provides information about road conditions in the area of Woodstock Road, Ring Road, and surrounding streets in Oxford. Traffic is slow on Woodstock Road and the London Road is blocked, so alternative routes are suggested.
2) Work is causing delays on the Banbury Road near Summertown and a bicycle accident has blocked Magdalen Bridge.
3) The report concludes by reminding drivers to be careful and wishes everyone a safe journey home.
This document is an introduction to a book of brain teasers and puzzles. It explains that the puzzles are organized from easiest to hardest and provides hints for puzzles that are difficult to solve. The goal is for readers to have fun while training their minds through non-verbal reasoning. The introduction emphasizes that no special knowledge is needed - just applying common sense and logical thinking.
This document provides a summary of relationships vocabulary and grammar structures. It begins with vocabulary relating to feelings in different relationship situations. It then covers a reading passage about the Amish lifestyle and exercises testing comprehension. Grammar structures covered include conditionals and wish clauses. Relationship vocabulary is also defined, such as common interests, sense of humour, and falling in love. Exercises practice using these structures and vocabulary in sentences.
This document contains a test with questions about grammar and vocabulary. It has multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions covering topics like verbs, pronouns, family relationships, sports, hobbies and activities. The test has questions about completing sentences, writing questions and answers, and matching vocabulary words with definitions. It is divided into different sections and keeps track of scores for grammar, vocabulary and total points.
How could modern LA research address data-related ethics issues in informal and situated professional learning? I will identify in this talk three relevant insights based on field studies around workplace LA interventions: Firstly, in informal and situated learning, data isnt just about the learners. Secondly, the affordances of manual and automatic data tracking for learning are very different, with manual tracking allowing a high degree of learner control over data. Thirdly, learning is not necessarily a shared goal in workplaces. These can be translated into seeing a potential for systems endowed with sufficient natural-language-processing capability (now seemingly at our fingertips with LLMs), and socio-technical design and scenario-based data collection analysis as design and research methods.
This PowerPoint gives a brief idea about the identification of herbal drug plants with special reference to organoleptic studies. The study comprises different parameters like physical, chemical, biological, and other features associated with it. It offers an idea about the need for scientifically identifying drug plants to avoid adulteration.
The Sense Organs: Structure and Function of the Eye and Skin | IGCSE BiologyBlessing Ndazie
油
This detailed presentation covers the structure and function of the sense organs, focusing on the eye and skin as part of the Cambridge IGCSE Biology syllabus. Learn about the anatomy of the eye, how vision works, adaptations for focusing, and common eye defects. Explore the role of the skin in temperature regulation, protection, and sensory reception. Perfect for students preparing for exams!
Electrical Quantities and Circuits | IGCSE PhysicsBlessing Ndazie
油
This extensive slide deck provides a detailed exploration of electrical quantities and circuits for IGCSE Physics. It covers key electrical quantities, including charge, current, voltage (potential difference), resistance, power, energy, electromotive force (EMF), and internal resistance. The presentation also explains series and parallel circuits, with in-depth discussions on Ohms Law, Kirchhoffs Laws, electrical components, circuit calculations, and practical applications. Packed with illustrative diagrams, worked examples, and exam-style questions, this resource is ideal for IGCSE students, teachers, and independent learners preparing for exams.
Coordination and Response: The Nervous System | IGCSE BiologyBlessing Ndazie
油
This comprehensive IGCSE Biology presentation explains the nervous system, focusing on how the body coordinates and responds to stimuli. Learn about the central and peripheral nervous systems, reflex actions, neurons, synapses, and the role of neurotransmitters. Understand the differences between voluntary and involuntary responses and how the nervous system interacts with other body systems. Ideal for Cambridge IGCSE students preparing for exams!
PROTEIN DEGRADATION via ubiquitous pathawayKaviya Priya A
油
Protein degradation via ubiquitous pathway In general science, a ubiquitous pathway refers to a biochemical or metabolic pathway that is:
1. *Widely present*: Found in many different organisms, tissues, or cells.
2. *Conserved*: Remains relatively unchanged across different species or contexts.
Examples of ubiquitous pathways include:
1. *Glycolysis*: The process of breaking down glucose for energy, found in nearly all living organisms.
2. *Citric acid cycle (Krebs cycle)*: A key metabolic pathway involved in energy production, present in many cells.
3. *Pentose phosphate pathway*: A metabolic pathway involved in energy production and antioxidant defenses, found in many organisms.
These pathways are essential for life and have been conserved across evolution, highlighting their importance for cellular function and survival.
Hormones and the Endocrine System | IGCSE BiologyBlessing Ndazie
油
This IGCSE Biology presentation explores hormones and the endocrine system, explaining their role in controlling body functions. Learn about the differences between nervous and hormonal control, major endocrine glands, key hormones (such as insulin, adrenaline, and testosterone), and homeostasis. Understand how hormones regulate growth, metabolism, reproduction, and the fight-or-flight response. A perfect resource for Cambridge IGCSE students preparing for exams!
Cell Structure & Function | Cambridge IGCSE BiologyBlessing Ndazie
油
This IGCSE Biology presentation provides a detailed look at cell structure and function, covering the differences between animal and plant cells, the roles of organelles (nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, etc.), specialized cells, and levels of organization. Learn about diffusion, osmosis, and active transport in cells, with clear diagrams and explanations to support exam preparation. A must-have resource for Cambridge IGCSE students!
Overview of basic statistical mechanics of NNsCharles Martin
油
Overview of topics in the paper
A walk in the statistical mechanical formulation of neural networks (2014)
https://arxiv.org/abs/1407.5300
Audio: https://youtu.be/zIxg69Q8UTk
Respiration & Gas Exchange | Cambridge IGCSE BiologyBlessing Ndazie
油
This IGCSE Biology presentation explains respiration and gas exchange, covering the differences between aerobic and anaerobic respiration, the structure of the respiratory system, gas exchange in the lungs, and the role of diffusion. Learn about the effects of exercise on breathing, how smoking affects the lungs, and how respiration provides energy for cells. A perfect study resource for Cambridge IGCSE students preparing for exams!
Detection of ferrihydrite in Martian red dust records ancient cold and wet co...S辿rgio Sacani
油
Iron oxide-hydroxide minerals in Martian dust provide crucial insights into
Mars past climate and habitability. Previous studies attributed Mars red color
to anhydrous hematite formed through recent weathering. Here, we show that
poorly crystalline ferrihydrite (Fe5O8H 揃 nH2O) is the dominant iron oxidebearing phase in Martian dust, based on combined analyses of orbital, in-situ,
and laboratory visible near-infrared spectra. Spectroscopic analyses indicate
that a hyperfine mixture of ferrihydrite, basalt and sulfate best matches Martian dust observations. Through laboratory experiments and kinetic calculations, we demonstrate that ferrihydrite remains stable under present-day
Martian conditions, preserving its poorly crystalline structure. The persistence
of ferrihydrite suggests it formed during a cold, wet period on early Mars
under oxidative conditions, followed by a transition to the current hyper-arid
environment. This finding challenges previous models of continuous dry oxidation and indicates that ancient Mars experienced aqueous alteration before
transitioning to its current desert state.
Detection of ferrihydrite in Martian red dust records ancient cold and wet co...S辿rgio Sacani
油
100_puzzles.ppt
1. The answer for each puzzle is in the notes section of
each slide. You may need to scroll down. Pictures are
include on most slides. Some will help, others will
lead you astray!
*
Each puzzle has a
point rating 1-10
with 10 being the
most difficult.
3. The puzzles are in 3 sections:
general, maths and longer lateral
thinking puzzles.
General
Maths
Lateral thinking
4. A brown house is made with brown bricks, a
white house is made with white bricks.
What is a green house made of?
1 point
5. You go on holiday to Norway. When you arrive at
your cabin, you find that there is no heat or
electricity. However there is wood in the
fireplace, a wood-burning stove, a candle and an
oil lamp. You search through your pack and find
you only have one match. What should you light
first?
2 points
6. What occurs once in a minute, once in a second,
once in a month and once in a century but not at
all in a year, an hour or a week?
1 point
7. Why wont a starving eskimo eat a penguin egg?
2 points
8. Sam is a bus driver. He drove 10 miles to the bus
depot. He then drove 10 miles with an average of
16 passengers before driving 10 miles to the
garage where the bus was serviced. The
mileometer on the bus showed that 20 miles had
been driven that day. Explain.
2 points
9. Mrs Penworthys bungalow is decorated
completely with her favourite colour purple.
She has purple walls, purple furniture and purple
carpets. Why does she not have purple stairs?
1 point
10. Six buckets are placed in a row. The first 3 are full
of water and the other 3 are empty. By moving
only one bucket, how can you get an arrangement
where it goes full, empty, full, empty, full, empty?
1 2 3 4 5 6
2 points
11. What 5 letter word has 1 consonant followed by 4
vowels? If you remove the vowels, the sound is
not altered.
5 points
12. Where can I put my right hand where I cant put
my left hand?
1 point
13. You are driving a bus. At the start of your
journey, there are 6 people on the bus: Fred,
Bert, Sam, Jane, Bertha and Orla. At the first
stop, Fred and Bert get off while Susan and John
get on. At the second stop Bertha gets off and
Callum gets on. At the last stop everyone gets
off. What is the name of the bus driver?
2 points
14. What 5 letter word becomes shorter when you
add 2 letters to it?
3 points
15. The caretaker is raking leaves in the playgrounds.
In the front playground, there are 7 piles of
leaves and in the back playground, there are 3
piles of leaves. How many piles will he have when
he puts them all together?
1 point
16. A village has 2 men who cut hair: Bert who is the
only barber in Hair today, gone tomorrow and
Fred who is the only barber in Hair Peace.
Freds hair is well cut whilst Bert looks like he has
had a fight with a lawnmower. Who would you
choose to cut your hair? Why?
3 points
17. A man flew from London to Chicago on
Tuesday. He stayed for 2 days and then flew
back to London on Tuesday. Explain.
4 points
18. Who played for both England and Germany at
Wembley on the same day?
5 points
19. The first copy of this book was published in 1878
in America. Since then it has been reprinted many
times. American copies of this book are
completely different from British ones. Branches
of WH Smiths will have this book but wont sell it
to you and libraries will have a copy but wont
lend it to you. There is probably a copy in your
home. What is the book?
5 points
20. England are leading Germany 4-1 in an
international football match at Wembley.
88 minutes of the match have been played but
not one man on either side has scored a goal.
4 points
21. A woman has 2 sons born within 5 minutes of
each other. They appear to be identical but they
are not twins.
5 points
22. A man has a fox, a hen and a bag of corn. He
needs to take all 3 across the river. The boat will
take him and one of them. He cannot leave the
fox and the hen together or the hen and corn
together. How does he get all 3 across uneaten?
4 points
23. A plane travelling from England to Germany
crashes mid-way in France. Where would the
survivors be buried?
3 points
25. Mr Smith and Mr Jones are next door neighbours.
Mr Smith has a beautiful peacock. He told Mr
Jones that if the peacock laid an egg in Mr
Jones garden, the egg would still belong to him.
Mr Jones disagreed saying that if it laid an egg in
his garden it would be his. Who is right?
4 points
27. 2 points
Berts father is Professor Maths. He has 4
children. 3 of them are called Add,
Subtract and Divide. What is the fourth
child called?
28. Rearrange the letters of NEW DOOR to make one
word. You are not allowed to leave any letters
out or put in any extra letters.
n
r
o
o
d
w
e
4 points
29. There was a boy who was 12 years old in 2002. In
2012 he was 2 years old. Explain.
7 points
30. Jessica was born on 20th December 2001. She
says that this year her birthday will be in the
summer. Explain.
3 points
31. You are at a junction. One road leads to the
town you want to go to, the other leads to a
marsh. There are no signs. However, there are
two men: one who always tells the truth and the
other who always lies. You are allowed to ask
one of them one question to find the way to go.
You do not know which man is which. What do
you ask?
7 points
32. A family has 2 parents, 3 daughters and each
daughter has 4 brothers. How many in the family?
3 points
33. What 7 letter word do most people pronounce
wrongly.
2 points
34. 5 men are going to church together. It starts
raining. 4 of them get wet. The 5th man, who
does not have an umbrella, and was less than 1m
from the other 4 remained completely dry.
Explain.
6 points
35. Rats can breed very quickly. Joe starts with 2
rats and finds that 6 months he ends up with 40
rats. How many rats would he end up with after
6 months if he started with 1 rat?
3 points
36. Joe has 4 white rabbits, 6 brown rabbits and 5
black rabbits. How many rabbits could say that
they are the same colour as another of Joes
rabbits?
4 points
37. There were two mothers and two daughters in a
train carriage. The train stopped and one of
them got out. Two people remained. Explain.
3 points
38. 2 men played chess for 9 hours. They played 5
games. Each man won the same number of
games. No games were drawn or abandoned.
Explain.
5 points
39. How can you take I away from I9 and get 20?
8 points
40. The Roman numeral for 9 is IX. Add one
character to this to make it an even number.
8 points
41. New Years Day is 7 days after Christmas Day.
You would think that they would be on the same
day of the week. However in 2009, Christmas
Day was on Friday whereas New Years Day was
on Thursday. Explain.
7 points
43. Read this out loud:
11 was a racehorse
12 was 12
111 a race
12112
7 points
44. Fred the postman has a round which takes him
1他 hours. On Friday he takes 105 minutes.
Explain.
2 points
45. You have 9 red balls which appear to be
identical. One ball is slightly lighter than the
others. Using the scales below twice only, how
could identify the lighter ball?
6 points
46. There is a room with 3 light bulbs in it. Each
bulb is controlled by one switch. The switches
are down a corridor away from the room. You
are allowed to go to the switches ONE time and
then to the room with the bulbs to work out
which switch controls which bulb. You are on
your own and have no mirrors!
9 points
51. What is usually filled in the morning and emptied
at night except at Christmas when it is filled at
night and emptied in the morning?
3 points
52. What do you find in the middle of Derby that
you dont find at all in Sheffield or Nottingham?
5 points
53. Alison works at the greengrocers. When she was
born, she weighed 3kg and measured 30cm. She
is now 20 years old and is 150cm tall. What does
she weigh now?
7 points
54. In a drawer there are 5 pairs of pink socks and 4
pairs of blue socks. The socks are loose. What is
the largest number of socks you need to take
out of the drawer in order to be sure of getting
a matching pair?
3 points
55. If you travel 6 miles south, followed by 4 miles
north, what is the furthest distance you can be
from your starting point?
8 points
56. In which sport do all the contestants except one
on each team move backwards?
7 points
57. As I was going to St Ives, I met a man with 7
wives. Each wife had 7 sacks, each sack had 7
cats, each cat had 7 kittens. Kittens, cats, sacks
and wives, how many were there going to St
Ives?
4 points
58. Connor comes into school and tells his teacher
that his mother is the same age as his granny
and that they are both 50 years old today. How
can this be?
5 points
62. Sam was in big trouble with his Dad. He was told
to say something. If what he said was true, he
would have no pocket money for a year. If he
lied, he would be banned from TV for 2 months.
What can he say to avoid any consequences?
9 points
63. Sam is in trouble at school. In front of the class,
Sams teacher Mrs Smegly tells him to pick one
of two pieces of paper from a box. According to
her, one piece has lunchtime detentions for 2
months while the other one has another
chance. However Sam knows that Mrs Smegly
always writes the detention consequence on
both pieces of paper. What can he do to escape
detention?
9 points
64. By moving one match stick only, can you turn
this arrangement into a shop?
Answer on next slide.
10 points
66. A man is dozing during a church service. He is
dreaming about the French revolution and the
guillotine. His wife, seeing that he is nodding off
taps him on the back of the neck. He has a heart
attack and dies instantly. True or false? Give a
reason.
7 points
67. The next 3 puzzles work only if read, not viewed
68. What game has 4 letters, starts with a tee and is
played all over the world?
7 points
69. There are 20 fore heads in a boat 50 miles off
land. The boat sinks and the lifeboat rescues 20
people. Nobody drowns and no other boat
rescues anyone. Explain.
7 points
72. A new hotel has 100 rooms. The decorator needs
to put numbers on all the doors. How many
number 1s does he need to buy?
3 points
73. A certain type of seaweed doubles in length
every year. After 6 years it is 12m long. How long
would it have been after 5 years?
3 points
74. You have a 5 litre bottle and a 7 litre bottle. You
have a tap and a sink. How can you measure 1
litre. You can pour from one bottle to another,
refill and pour away as much as you need to. The
bottles do not have a regular shape.
5l 7l
9 points
75. A man goes into B & Q to buy something for his
house. He is told that 1 costs 80p whereas 5
costs 贈1.20. His total bill is 贈3.20. What does he
buy?
9 points
76. Stephanie runs a clothing shop. She sells shorts
for 贈36, trousers for 贈48 and a hat for 贈18. What
would she charge for boots?
贈36
贈48 贈18
贈?
10 points
77. On average 25 acorns grow on a branch. Here is
a chart showing how many branches trees have
at different ages.
How many acorns would you find on a 40 year
old sycamore tree?
Age Branches
10 5
20 10
30 15
40
50 25
60 30
5 points
78. A snail is at the bottom of a 30m well. Every day
it crawls up 3m before slipping back 2m every
night. How many days will it take it to escape
from the well?
8 points
79. Mr Green is giving out sweets to the Stars of the
Week in Blogly Primary School. He gives 5 sweets
to infants and 6 sweets to juniors. Altogether he
gives out 56 sweets to 10 children. How many
infants and juniors make up the 10?
6 points
80. A 100kg sack of potatoes is 99% water and 1%
potato stuff. It is allowed to dry out until it is
98% water and 2% potato stuff. How heavy is the
sack of potatoes now?
10 points
81. A ship is at anchor in a harbour. At low tide, the
water is 2.6m below the deck. Over the next 6
hours, the tide rises by 1.5m. How far from the
deck will the water be now?
4 points
82. A man has 10 sons. To the first son, he gives
10 oranges, the second son 20, third son 30
etc. His 10th son has 100 oranges. Each son
goes out and sells the oranges to one
customer. They use the same pricing policy
and they each bring back the father 贈2. What
was the pricing policy?
10 points
83. Add one character to make this equation
correct.
I0 I0 I0 = 9.50
9 points
84. Bert and Fred have the same amount of money.
How much does Bert need to give Fred so that
Fred has 贈10 more than Bert?
4 points
85. A bottle of perfume costs 贈20. The whisky is
worth 贈19 more than the bottle. How much is
the bottle worth?
5 points
86. The occupants of Bagley Close live in houses
numbered 1-19. Each occupant has an 8 digit
telephone number starting with 1 which is a
multiple of their house number. What are the
telephone numbers? Use a calculator.
Clue on the
next slide. (Lose
3 points if you
use it!)
10 points
87. You need to find the 8 digit number which starts
with 1 and is divisible by numbers 1-19. By
adding 1, 2, 3, 4 etc onto this number, you will
get the phone numbers.
Think prime numbers.
7 points
88. If Fred gives one marble to Bert, they will have
the same number. If Bert gives one marble to
Fred, Bert will have half the amount of marbles
Fred has. How many marbles do they each have?
4 points
89. A box of chocolates costs 贈2 plus half its price.
How much does it cost?
5 points
90. Two friends are playing cards for 5p a game. At
the end Joe has won 3 games and Ben is 30p up.
How many games did they play altogether?
7 points
91. Bill and Bertha start a romantic meal by lighting
2 candles. They are both the same thickness but
different lengths. One will burn for 7 hours and
the other for 5 hours. At the end of the meal,
they blow out the candles and find that one
candle is twice the length of the other. How long
was the meal?
5 points
92. A builder dug a hole 5m long, 3m wide and 2m
deep. Hoping to improve his daughters Maths
skills, he asked her, How many m続 of soil in the
are the hole?
4 points
93. I have 9 sweets in a bag. I give 3 to Mark, 3 to
Rebekah and 3 to India. At the end, there are
still 3 sweets in the bag. Explain.
4 points
94. 3 workers each get paid depending on how many
hours they have worked. The plumber worked
for 3 times a long as the painter and the painter
worked 5 times as long as the electrician. The
total wage bill was 贈630. How much was each
man paid?
5 points
95. *
*These next few puzzles cannot
usually be solved by a quick
flash of inspiration. Children
need to ask yes/no questions
over a longer period of time to
build up enough information to
enable the Eureka moment!
96. 3 pieces of coal are lying on the grass in a
garden in early Spring. How did they get there?
9 points
97. A man walks into a pub and asks for a glass of
water. The barman pulls a gun on him. They
shake hands and the customer walks out
satisfied.
8 points
98. A man walks into a bar and falls immediately
falls down unconscious.
8 points
99. A man lives on the 16th floor of a block of flats.
Every day he takes the lift from down to the
ground floor and then goes to work. On his way
back from work, he takes the lift to the 5th floor
and then walks the rest of the way. If it is raining
in the morning, on his return, he takes the lift to
the 11th floor before walking the rest of the way.
8 points
100. A father and his son are travelling in a car. The
car crashes and the father is killed. The boy is
taken to hospital and needs an operation. The
surgeon comes into the operating theatre, looks
at the boy and says, I cant operate, hes my
son.
6 points
101. Romeo and Juliet are lying side by side on the
floor. Beside them is some water and broken
glass. The window is open.
9 points
102. A man went into a field with a pack on his back
and died.
9 points
103. A man is hanging 3m from a beam in a barn.
Underneath him is a pool of water. Outside is a
tractor. He is dead.
9 points
104. While the soup simmered, Johnny missed his
train.
10 points
105. A man who is broke, is parked outside a hotel.
9 points
106. A man is lying in a telephone box. He has
injured his hands. The phone is off the hook.
Outside is a fishing rod.
10 points
107. Two men are rescued from a desert island. In
port one of them goes straight into a
restaurant. He orders a bowl of Albatross
Soup. He takes one sip of the soup and then
returns to the boat and shoots the other man
rescued from the desert island.
8 points
Editor's Notes
#3:
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#4:
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#8:
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#9:
Sam drove the 10 miles to the depot in his own car.
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#17:
Bert because he will have cut Freds hair and made a good job of it.
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#23:
Take the hen across first
Return and put either the fox or the corn in the boat.
Take the hen back to the starting point and leave it there.
Take fox or corn over.
Return to get hen and take over again.
#35:
The 4 men were carrying the 5th man in a coffin to church for his funeral.
Eskimos live in the North towards the Arctic whereas penguins live in the South in the Antarctic region.
#42:
The New Years Day of the following year (the new year) is the same day as Christmas always. But New Years Day and Christmas Day in the same year are not on the same day of the week.
#43:
Too wise you are, too wise you be. I see you are too wise for me.
#44:
One One was a racehorse
One Two was one too
One One won a race
One Two won one too.
#45:
There is no difference 105 minutes = 1他 hours
#46:
Split the balls into groups of 3. Put two groups on either side of the scales. If one side goes up, that 3 contains the lighter ball. If they balance, the group of 3 not on the scales has the lighter ball.
Take the group of 3 with the lighter ball and put 2 of the balls on the scales. If one side goes up, that is the lighter ball. If they balance, the ball not on the scales is the lighter ball.
#47:
Turn the first switch on and leave it on. Turn the second switch on for 2 minutes. Dont touch the third switch.
Go to the light bulbs. There should be one that is on that is controlled by the first switch. Feel the other 2 bulbs, the one that is warm is controlled by the second switch (having been on for 2 minutes). The remaining cold bulb is controlled by the third switch.
#64:
Take one piece of paper and eat it. Then suggest that the way to find out what it said is to look at the remaining one which says detention. So Sam says, The one I picked must have said another chance!
#75:
Method 1
Fill 5l
Empty 5l into 7l
Refill 5l
Pour as much as you can from the 5l into the 7l (2l leaving 3l in 5l0
Empty 7l
Pour 3l from 5l to 7l
Refill 5l
Pour as much as you can from the 5l into the 7l (4l)
1l remains in the 5l bottle.
Method 2
Fill 7l
Fill 5l from 7l (leaving 2l in 7l)
Empty 5l
Pour 2l from 7l to 5l
Refill 7l
Pour as much as you can from 7l to 5l (3l leaving 4l in 7l)
Empty 5l
Pour 4 litres from 7l to 5l
Refill 7l
Pour as much as you can from 7l to 5l (1l leaving 6l in 7l bottle)
Empty 5l bottle
Fill up 5l bottle from 7l bottle (5l poured in leaving 1l in 7l bottle.
#76:
Numbers for his house ( 2 x 1.20 + 1 x 0.80 = 3.20) His house number is 155.
#83:
Buy all the oranges its 20p for 11 and then 20p for every single orange not in an 11. eg 60 oranges 5 x 11 = 55 (5 x 20p = 贈1) leaving 5 single oranges at 20p each (5 x 20p = 贈1) (Total = 贈1 + 贈1 = 贈2)
#84:
IO TO IO = 9.50 (Ten to ten = nine fifty) Time
#88:
2 x 3 x 5 X 7 X 11 X 13 X 17 X 19=9699690 This has only 7 digits and does not begin with 1. However if you multiply this by 2, you get 19399380. This is the starting number.
#99:
He walked into an iron bar and was knocked out.
#100:
The man is a midget. He cannot reach the button for the 16th floor. If it is raining, he takes his umbrella and can reach the button for the 11th floor.
#104: Suicide. He used the tractor to pull a block of ice into the barn then used it to climb up and put the noose round his neck. Later the ice melted.
#105:
The soup simmering on the fire prevented Santa from coming down the chimney and delivering Johnnys train.
#106:
In a game of Monopoly a player has landed on a property with a hotel on it and is broke.
#107:
In describing the one that got away the fisherman stretched out his hands and injured them on the side of the phone box.
#108:
While on the island, the man who eventually got shot served up what he said was albatross soup. It wasnt it was human soup. The man who went to the restaurant realised that the taste was different.
In describing the one that got away the fisherman stretched out his hands and injured them on the side of the phone box.