Skip to main content
Intelligence

Verbal Reasoning

A 16-item verbal reasoning assessment from the ICAR battery. Measures your ability to solve verbal problems involving vocabulary, arithmetic, and logical deduction.

Measures 3 cognitive domains

10 min · 16 questions

Instructions

For each question, select the best answer from the options provided. If you do not know the answer, select "I don't know".

Choose Standard ($9.99), Plus ($12.99), or Personalized ($24.99) after completing the test.

Complete the assessment first • Pay only to unlock results

Scientifically Validated

Based on established psychological research

100% Confidential

Your data is secure and private

Detailed Results

Comprehensive insights and recommendations

About the Verbal Reasoning Test

Verbal reasoning is the ability to understand and work through problems posed in words: grasping what terms mean, holding the parts of a statement in mind, and drawing the conclusion the wording supports. It draws heavily on what psychologists call crystallized ability - the store of vocabulary, facts, and verbal skill you build up through education and reading - while still requiring you to reason on the spot rather than simply recall.

This 16-item test is the verbal reasoning module of the International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR), an open, research-grade item bank. The questions span vocabulary, short verbal arithmetic, and logical deduction, and the test takes about 10 minutes. Each item has a correct answer, so this is a maximum-performance ability test, not a self-report. Your score is placed against population norms so you can see how your verbal reasoning compares with other adults rather than reading a bare number of questions right.

Items
16
Duration
~10 min
Format
Multiple-choice ability questions with one correct answer (plus an I-do-not-know option)
Free result
Your result band shown on the bell curve, free after completion
Full report
A detailed report interpreting your score, what it does and does not mean, and how verbal reasoning relates to your other abilities ($9.99)

What it measures

Unlike personality questionnaires, an ability test has right and wrong answers and asks for your best effort under light time pressure. This module samples three kinds of verbally framed problems so that the score reflects general verbal reasoning rather than a single narrow skill. Vocabulary items tap the breadth of your verbal knowledge; deduction and verbal arithmetic items tap your ability to apply that knowledge to reach a sound conclusion.

Because the questions are presented in language, performance is sensitive to your familiarity with the test language. Reasoning ability and language background are not the same thing, and a strong reasoner working in a second or third language can be underestimated by any verbal test. The report is explicit about this, and pairing your verbal result with a non-verbal or figural reasoning test gives a fuller picture of underlying ability.

  • VocabularyThe breadth and precision of your word knowledge - recognizing meanings, distinctions, and relationships between terms.
  • Verbal arithmeticTranslating a problem stated in words into the quantitative relationships it implies and working through to the answer.
  • Logical deductionFollowing the structure of a verbal statement to the conclusion it does - and does not - support.

The science and validity

Verbal reasoning sits within the broadly replicated structure of human cognitive abilities mapped by John Carroll, whose three-stratum model places specific skills like verbal comprehension under a general factor of intelligence. The vocabulary-heavy side of verbal reasoning is a classic marker of crystallized ability in the fluid-crystallized distinction Raymond Cattell drew - abilities that grow with knowledge and tend to hold up well across adulthood, in contrast to fluid reasoning, which peaks earlier.

The items here come from the ICAR project, a public, peer-reviewed item bank designed for online ability assessment whose subtests show good reliability and the expected strong correlations with established intelligence measures. As Ian Deary and others have documented, scores on well-built reasoning tests are among the most stable and predictive measures in psychology, relating to educational and occupational outcomes. Two honest limits apply: a 16-item test gives a useful estimate, not the precision of a full supervised IQ battery, and as a verbal test it is influenced by language familiarity. This is an educational self-assessment, not a clinical or diagnostic instrument.

References

  1. Carroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press.
  2. Cattell, R. B. (1963). Theory of fluid and crystallized intelligence: A critical experiment. Journal of Educational Psychology, 54(1), 1-22.
  3. Condon, D. M., & Revelle, W. (2014). The International Cognitive Ability Resource: Development and initial validation of a public-domain measure. Intelligence, 43, 52-64.
  4. Deary, I. J. (2012). Intelligence. Annual Review of Psychology, 63, 453-482.

Read more about our standards: How our tests are built and validated.

Sample items

  • "Reticent most nearly means: (a) talkative (b) reserved (c) careless (d) certain."Illustrative vocabulary-style item (not a scored item).
  • "A team finishes a task in 6 hours working together. Working alone, one member would take 9 hours. How long would the other take alone?"Illustrative verbal-arithmetic-style item.
  • "All editors read closely. Some who read closely are slow. Which conclusion must be true?"Illustrative logical-deduction-style item.

Frequently asked questions

Is this verbal reasoning test free?

Yes. Taking the 16-item test is free, with no account required to start, and your free result shows your result band on the population curve. The optional paid report adds the exact score and population percentile, plus an in-depth interpretation of what your score means and how verbal reasoning fits alongside your other cognitive abilities.

How long does the test take?

About 10 minutes for 16 questions. The items are presented in words and increase in difficulty. Work carefully but do not dwell too long on any single question - if you are unsure, an I-do-not-know option is there so you are not forced to guess.

Is verbal reasoning the same as IQ?

Not quite. Verbal reasoning is one major component of general intelligence, not the whole of it. A full IQ estimate combines verbal reasoning with non-verbal and figural reasoning, working memory, and other abilities. A strong verbal score is meaningful on its own, but it is most informative when read alongside a broader cognitive profile.

Does my first language affect my score?

Yes, and the report says so plainly. Because every question is posed in language, familiarity with the test language influences performance. Someone reasoning fluently in a second or third language may be underestimated by a verbal test. If your language background is a factor, a non-verbal reasoning test gives a complementary, language-light estimate of the same underlying ability.

What is the difference between crystallized and fluid reasoning?

Crystallized ability is knowledge-based - vocabulary, facts, and verbal skill accumulated through education and experience - and it tends to hold up or even grow across adulthood. Fluid reasoning is the on-the-spot problem solving you apply to novel material, and it peaks earlier in life. Verbal reasoning leans crystallized, which is one reason it stays comparatively stable with age.

Who built this test?

The items are drawn from the open, peer-reviewed International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR); the scoring, norms, and report were built and reviewed by Dr. Milos Kankaras, PhD psychometrician, whose background includes large-scale cognitive and skills assessment for the OECD, the EU, and UNESCO.

Related tests

Created and reviewed to professional scientific standards. See how our tests are built and validated.