id stringlengths 15 15 | question stringlengths 59 700 | answer stringlengths 2 146 | difficulty int64 1 5 | explanation stringlengths 10 1.95k ⌀ | other_answers stringlengths 2 183 ⌀ | knowledge_domains listlengths 1 6 | creative_domains listlengths 1 4 | cultures listlengths 1 8 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
chgk_83a712ed75 | In a wartime novel, the hero looks at the sky, where contrails of airplanes and bursts of anti-aircraft shells form an unpleasant, in his opinion, picture. What word did we replace with "picture"? | Melody. | 3 | Contrails are the lines of a musical staff, and the bursts are the symbols of notes. | Music, score, cacophony. | [
"Visual Arts",
"Literature",
"Music",
"Military"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_e66ed999fd | Addressing one of his friends before his death, he used a word that means not only "farewell" but also "with God." In his native language, this word and the friend's nickname start with the same letter. Name both the word and the nickname. | Adieu, Aramis. | 3 | D'Artagnan said before his death: "Athos, Porthos, au revoir. Aramis, à jamais, adieu!" The word "Adieu" etymologically traces back to the word "dieu" (God). Since Aramis held a religious rank, "with God" is quite fitting for him. | Adieu, Aramis. With a reasonable amount of deviation in spelling. | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"french"
] |
chgk_056f339e0d | In the English text of the Bible, HE is mentioned more than six thousand times. Strangely enough, Elizabeth II is also HE. Name the surname of the little HIM who appeared in 1885. | Fauntleroy. | 3 | HE is a lord. In the English text of the Bible, the expression Lord God is used repeatedly. Among the titles of English monarchs is also Lord of Mann, i.e., the owner of the Isle of Man. "Little Lord Fauntleroy" is a children's novel by the Anglo-American writer Frances Hodgson Burnett. | With slight deviations. According to the decision of AJ: Pontelroy is the transcription in Hebrew. | [
"Political Science",
"History",
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"english",
"hebrew"
] |
chgk_80bd6ac6dd | A character in a story lost all his real estate and is forced to give his last money to the person sitting opposite. At the very end of the story, SHE is unexpectedly mentioned. Name HER with a word of Greek origin. | Monopoly. | 3 | At the end of the story, the reader learns that the character was actually playing "Monopoly." | null | [
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Literature"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"english",
"greek"
] |
chgk_6f621a9739 | In an old English engraving, a scene of selling HER at a cattle market is depicted. At the same time, one of the cows is standing right behind the seller. We are not asking you to name HER. Name the reason for HER sale. | Adultery. | 3 | In England, there was a tradition of selling unfaithful wives. The cow in the engraving is as if putting horns on the husband. | Adultery, infidelity, and other synonyms. | [
"Visual Arts",
"History",
"Art History & Visual Culture",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"pun"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_77436c12f1 | Encountering the X, the hero of Joanne Harris described it like this: "As if a mollusk shell was nailed to the ground with a metal peg." After this, the hero spent a long time removing his shoe. Name the X. | Trap. | 3 | The hero got caught in a trap, and his foot swelled up significantly. The trap, judging by the description, was quite primitive. | null | [
"Biology",
"Literature",
"Physics"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_cad58d3dbc | It's not hard to guess which book Auguste Piccard loved as a child. Answer, in which African city did he test the world's first bathyscaphe? | Dakar. | 3 | As a child, Auguste was engrossed in the novel about Captain Nemo, who is also Prince Dakkar. Coincidentally, the bathyscaphe tests took place in Dakar. | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"french",
"english"
] |
chgk_7c8f940af1 | Heinrich Heine compares a fly to HIM. However, despite the number of HIS limbs and the fly's feeding organ, the resemblance is greatly exaggerated. Name HIS name. | Ganesha. | 3 | The fly's feeding organ is a proboscis. The god Ganesha is often depicted with two legs and four arms. | null | [
"Biology",
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"hyperbole"
] | [
"german",
"hindu"
] |
chgk_3b9ee6049b | After suppressing the uprising in the Netherlands, Duke Alba gave an order, for the execution of which a cannon was used. Recall the first few words of a work from 1836 and answer as precisely as possible what became the result of executing this order. | A monument to Duke Alba. | 3 | "I have erected a monument to myself...". Incidentally, a few years later, the monument was melted back into a cannon. | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Military"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"dutch",
"spanish",
"russian"
] |
chgk_6a9ca21d6d | In the language of the Australian aborigines Dyirbal, there are four genders: masculine, feminine, neuter, and SUCH. There are printers that print with SUCH ink on SUCH paper, for example, reed paper. What word did we replace with "SUCH"? | Edible. | 3 | null | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"abstraction",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"dyirbal",
"english"
] |
chgk_654bf3e10c | Alexander Gromov in his novel writes that "the wind broke the mast with such ease, as if it were HER." Guess which part of the land the ship was heading to, and name HER. | Chopstick. | 3 | The ship is going to Japan. | Hashi, as well as the mention of a stick and tableware or Asia. | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature",
"Anthropology",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"japanese"
] |
chgk_86ad697da3 | Maria Hengstberger developed a special necklace for residents of low-income countries, made of beads painted in different colors: red, blue, yellow. A small ring is placed on the necklace, which should be moved to the next bead each day. Answer with a word of Latin origin, what is the purpose of such a necklace. | Contraception. | 3 | The number of beads corresponds to the average duration of cycles for the wearer of the necklace. The first 3-5 beads are painted red and indicate menstruation. In the middle of the necklace are blue beads (associated with water, fertility), indicating days when one should abstain from sex. All other beads are painted ... | null | [
"Design & Architecture",
"Anthropology",
"Medicine & Health Sciences"
] | [
"analogy",
"abstraction"
] | [
"latin"
] |
chgk_b6b4a0ed97 | We are currently in IT. Daniil Granin compared evening Sydney, seen from an airplane, to IT. In a song with lyrics by Kokhanovsky, IT calls to the road. Name IT with two words. | Milky Way. | 3 | null | null | [
"Astronomy & Space Science",
"Music",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"analogy",
"simile"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_0cc7e6a985 | The character of the TV show says that in America, mortality in emergency departments increases by 6% at the beginning of August because of the SOLDIERS. What did we replace with the word "SOLDIERS"? | Interns. | 3 | They start working after graduation. :-) One series was replaced by another. | null | [
"Education",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Medicine & Health Sciences"
] | [
"joke",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_9e926f1521 | Finish the aphorism with two words: "A gate without a fence is foolishness, a large gate without a fence is a..." | Triumphal arch. | 3 | null | null | [
"Design & Architecture",
"Languages & Linguistics"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_4fa2d0072e | The character of Orhan Pamuk, an artist who was forced to work in a manner he disliked, used a needle from a turban for a certain purpose. Name the one who much earlier used a shoulder clasp for the same purpose. | Oedipus. | 3 | The artist blinded himself, thus radically solving the issue. Oedipus tore the clasp from the clothing of the hanged Jocasta. | null | [
"Literature",
"Religious Studies",
"Psychology"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"turkish",
"greek"
] |
chgk_fab09a46c6 | Alexander Rastorguev writes about Ilya Mikhailovich Frank, saying that he was a non-confrontational person, never offended anyone, and passed through the institute's history like HIM. Name HIM. | Neutrino. | 3 | Elementary particle capable of passing through matter, practically without interacting with it. Frank was a famous physicist, Nobel Prize laureate in physics. | Not accepted: Neutron. | [
"Literature",
"Physics"
] | [
"analogy"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_b742898b0e | The hero of Ray Bradbury calls THEM a fragile barrier with which he tried to protect himself for a moment. If you answer this question correctly, then probably someone from your team will fulfill a well-known request. Name THEM. | Eyelids. | 3 | If you answered correctly, then one player from your team probably "raised" their "eyelids." | null | [
"Biology",
"Literature"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_de48af58aa | In one film, the wife of an American tourist expresses a desire to DO THIS. However, her husband objects: "But we are Democrats." Another foreign tourist known to us DID THIS with criminal intent. What did he do? | Bought an elephant. | 3 | The symbols of political parties in the USA: the Republicans have an elephant, and the Democrats have a donkey. In the cartoon "The Investigation is Led by Kolobki," the foreigner Karbofos buys a souvenir elephant and thus obtains a certificate for exporting a stolen live elephant abroad. | Bought a toy elephant, bought a figurine [depicting] an elephant. | [
"Biology",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Law & Criminology",
"Political Science"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"american",
"russian"
] |
chgk_f6861461e5 | In a Soviet cartoon released in 1979, a mustachioed man picks up an object from the ground that had lain forgotten for many centuries. Name the surname of this man. | Coubertin. | 3 | The cartoon was made before the 1980 Olympics. Pierre de Coubertin symbolically picks up the torch and revives the Olympic movement. | null | [
"Physical Education & Sports",
"History",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"russian",
"french"
] |
chgk_e1921583b6 | According to the book "Culture of Iceland," a ferskeytla can be the first toy of an Icelander, and over time becomes his deadly weapon. Name the graduate of the Moscow Institute of Railway Engineers who not only became famous for his own kind of ferskeytlas but also gave them his name. | [Igor] Guberman. | 3 | Iceland is called the land of poets, and the passion for versification is a national trait of Icelanders. In particular, on any occasion, a humorous or satirical quatrain is composed, the so-called ferskeytla (in the name, one can find a root related to the English "four" or the German "vier"). Igor Guberman is the aut... | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"neologism",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"icelandic",
"russian"
] |
chgk_6ee13665c3 | The villain from a 1990 Pakistani film subjects the heroes to a special torture — forcing them to listen to an audio recording of his works. Name the surname of this villain. | Rushdie. | 3 | The film was made shortly after Ahmed Salman Rushdie was cursed by Ayatollah Khomeini. Naturally, the film's character is simply a fiend. We hope that reading the questions in this set will not become a torture for you. | null | [
"Film & Media Studies",
"Literature",
"Political Science"
] | [
"sarcasm",
"commonsense reasoning"
] | [
"pakistani",
"english"
] |
chgk_e10edab92d | The character in the novel "Prince Serebryany" claims that tsars came from HIS head, princes and boyars from HIS relics, and women from HIS knees. Name HIM. | Adam. | 3 | null | null | [
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian",
"biblical"
] |
chgk_a058a2bc68 | IT is mentioned in an article that describes a circular route connecting the attractions of Penang Island in Malaysia. In one play, a doctor gives his secret beloved IT in a pillbox. Name IT with two words. | Pearl necklace. | 3 | Pearls are harvested in Malaysia. Pearls resemble pills in appearance, and the route depicted on the map resembles a necklace. | Pearl collar. | [
"Visual Arts",
"Literature",
"Biology",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"malay"
] |
chgk_84e6be1efb | IXES carried aromatic herbs and spices in their beak. This made some sense, but it did not protect against fleas. In one medieval engraving, IX holds an hourglass as a symbol of the transience of life. Name IX in two words. | Plague doctor. | 3 | According to one version, in the Middle Ages, it was believed that birds spread the plague, so the plague doctor wore a mask resembling a bird's beak for mystical reasons. Additionally, herbs, spices, and other aromatic substances were supposed to protect the doctor from the contagious, as it was thought, stench. Howev... | Plague healer; plague doctor; plague physician; doctor of the plague; healer of the plague; "beaked doctor"; beak doctor. | [
"Visual Arts",
"History",
"Religious Studies",
"Medicine & Health Sciences"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"european",
"medieval european"
] |
chgk_c4ad1238c3 | In 1973, a year before their triumph, THEY announced a contest to choose a name. One of the proposed options sounded like the name of the main character in a fairy tale. Reproduce this name. | Ali Baba. | 3 | THEY are the musicians of the future group "ABBA"; the mentioned option was Alibaba, other options included "Baba", "FABB"; in the spring of 1974, the group won the Eurovision contest. | Ali Baba. | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Music",
"Sociology"
] | [
"pun",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"swedish",
"arabic"
] |
chgk_aa986980b2 | In African tribes, it was customary to give a person, in addition to the usual human name, a second name — for the language of the XES. This name was communicated to all neighboring villages to avoid confusion. What word did we replace with "XES"? | Drum. | 3 | In addition to the main name, a "drum" name is given — a combination of sounds that designates this person when transmitting information from village to village. | Drum. | [
"Music",
"Anthropology",
"Communication"
] | [
"abstraction",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"african"
] |
chgk_f711dd73a1 | Despite the inconvenience, in the early 19th century, some for economy DID THIS both lengthwise and crosswise. It is said that in one African country, a conference was held dedicated to how to DO THIS with the greatest profit. What did we replace with the words "DO THIS"? | Write letters. | 3 | Paper was expensive, and the cost of delivery depended on the number of sheets. If the text did not fit on one sheet, it was turned 90 degrees and written crosswise, sometimes in a different color. Nigerian letters are a common form of fraud. | null | [
"History",
"Economics",
"Anthropology",
"Communication"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"english",
"nigerian"
] |
chgk_54f28a5f1e | The noble family of Reinecke gave the world many high-ranking officers. One of the Reineckes is mentioned in the title of a work dedicated to a famous military leader. Name this military leader. | [Erwin] Rommel. | 3 | In this case, it is not about a member of the Reinecke family, but about Reinecke the Fox — a hero of German folk tales and a character by Goethe. Erwin Rommel, as is known, was nicknamed the "Desert Fox." | null | [
"History",
"Literature"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"german"
] |
chgk_13c69c1244 | Yes, one more question! Despite everything, in his youth, HE was involved in sports, and during one of the baseball games, when the umpire missed a violation, HE handed the umpire his X. Amusingly, the character embodied by HIM, with such a surname, suffers from seasickness. Name this character. | Columbo. | 3 | Peter Falk lost an eye in early childhood. When the umpire missed a violation, Peter took out his glass eye (X in the question text) and handed it to the umpire — maybe it would help. Columbo, Colon, and Columbus are essentially different forms of the same surname. "Yes, sir/ma'am, just one more question" is one of Lie... | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Performing Arts",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"joke",
"pun",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"american",
"italian"
] |
chgk_e027a6632f | One of the surveys in the virtual club of enthusiasts of THIS suggests the following answer options: a) Left to right, b) Right to left, c) In a chaotic order, d) I can't answer, my hands are busy! The device that imitates THIS is a large plate with buttons. Name THIS as precisely as possible. | Bubble wrap. | 3 | The survey "How do you pop the bubbles?". | Air bubble film, bubble packaging, air bubble wrap, etc. | [
"Engineering & Technology",
"Economics",
"Psychology",
"Design & Architecture"
] | [
"joke",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_cbb72a28d3 | According to one version, THEY appeared in 1875 at the initiative of the publisher of the cheap newspaper "Chicago Daily News." Thanks to an agreement he made with a number of trading companies, the newspaper became easier to buy. Write the symbol with which THEY most often end. | 9. | 3 | THEY are psychological prices. The newspaper cost 1 cent, but many potential readers did not have small change in their pockets. Therefore, the publisher agreed with advertisers to reduce the round prices of their goods by one cent. With small change available, people started buying the newspaper much more willingly. S... | null | [
"History",
"Economics",
"Business Studies",
"Psychology"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"american"
] |
chgk_2d453655a7 | At the end of 2011, in a CBC broadcast, it was noted that democracy, economy, and catastrophe are THEM; we add: unlike, for example, "kimono." What three words did we replace with "THEM"? | Words of Greek origin. | 3 | Democracy threatened to turn into an economic catastrophe in Greece. | null | [
"History",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Political Science",
"Economics"
] | [
"abstraction",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"greek",
"japanese"
] |
chgk_f769568a39 | Avoiding the word "toilet," the hero of the film "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" asks his wife to show the guest the place where the arctic fox, pancake, and horseradish are kept. What word of Greek origin did we replace with "arctic fox, pancake, and horseradish"? | Euphemisms. | 3 | "Arctic fox, pancake, and horseradish" are also euphemisms. Players can also go look for euphemisms. :-) | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"idiom"
] | [
"english",
"greek"
] |
chgk_6e07864d1f | In the Ukrainian cartoon based on Kotlyarevsky's poem "Aeneid," Jupiter in one of the episodes looks up and DOES THIS. What word did we replace with DOES THIS? | Crosses himself. | 3 | In the cartoon, the characters of the "Aeneid" are even more Ukrainianized than in Kotlyarevsky's work. Thus, Jupiter turns out to be a Christian. | null | [
"Literature",
"Anthropology",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"poem",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"ukrainian"
] |
chgk_0f473e4683 | The series of men's perfumes released by a Cape Town strip club includes the scents of gasoline and machine oil, ink and cigarettes, ocean freshness, and ropes. Write the Latin-derived word that became the name of this series. | Alibi. | 3 | This series is created for men who have been out and want to create a convincing story for their wives. Cape Town is a port city, so the scent of ocean freshness and ropes is also suitable as an alibi. | Alibi, Alibis, Алибис. | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Business Studies",
"Psychology",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"divergent thinking"
] | [
"latin",
"english"
] |
chgk_e6f51ecfe9 | At the end of the Harvard Bridge, connecting Boston and its suburb Cambridge, there is an inscription mentioning an ear. It refers to the ear of Oliver Smoot, and the inscription records the result of a certain procedure that took place in 1958, when Smoot was still a student. From a Soviet source in 1976, we know the ... | A wing. | 3 | Students measured the length of the bridge in "smoots." It was 364.4 smoots and one ear. And in the cartoon "38 Parrots," the boa was measured in parrots, the length was 38 parrots and one parrot wing. | Wing; parrot wing (wing); parrot's wing (wing). | [
"Engineering & Technology",
"Education",
"Physics",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"russian"
] |
chgk_8b608888ac | Power-Hungry and Proud met HIM coldly, but Warm-Hearted sheltered him. This is how philologist Elena Gorshenina interprets the famous plot. Name HIM. | King Lear. | 3 | Gorshenina believes that the names of the king's daughters: Regan — "powerful," Goneril — "proud," and Cordelia — "warm-hearted" — are not chosen by chance. The etymology, we note, is debatable. | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature"
] | [
"abstraction",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_892fa6cde4 | Doctor of Science Nikolai Oleinik, a specialist in organic chemistry, is referred to by a phrase formed by adding an adjective to the title of a cult British novel. Write this adjective. | Benzene. | 3 | The Lord of the Benzene Rings. | Benzene, benzene. | [
"Chemistry",
"Literature"
] | [
"pun",
"analogy"
] | [
"english",
"russian"
] |
chgk_fc4c54c788 | It is said that the inhabitants of Vanuatu hold Prince Philip of Edinburgh in high regard. In 2007, an official delegation from Vanuatu arrived on a state visit to England and fervently prayed for 40 minutes... Where exactly? | At "Madame Tussauds Museum." | 3 | They prayed near his figure. | null | [
"History",
"Anthropology",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"vanuatu"
] |
chgk_5c893e84be | The protagonist of Murray Bail's novel, traveling abroad, asks a hotel employee to bring him another couple of beers. At this moment, the author compares the protagonist to a person born in 1874. Name this person. | [Winston] Churchill. | 3 | The protagonist made a gesture reminiscent of Churchill's famous "V". | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Home Economics & Daily Life"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_0155e0430f | The largest tennis tournaments are the four Grand Slam tournaments, nine Masters series tournaments, and the ATP World Championship final. A journalist compared a victory in one of these tournaments to another high achievement, in the description of which a much larger, round number appears. What is it? | 8000. | 3 | He compared a victory in one of these 14 tournaments to conquering one of the 14 eight-thousanders (mountains over 8,000 meters high). | null | [
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"analogy",
"metaphor"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_2106300e42 | During Anna Chapman's visit to St. Petersburg State University, who was deported from the USA, students asked about how discussions of honor and faith align with explicit photo sessions in men's magazines. Later in the article about this visit, who is mentioned? | Mata Hari. | 3 | The famous spy Mata Hari was also known as a performer of exotic, often explicit, dances and as a courtesan. | Margaretha Geertruida Zelle. | [
"History",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Political Science",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"dutch"
] |
chgk_68a6ab8116 | In the National Basketball Association, the inability to jump is humorously called "X's Disease". Answer, WHAT X appears in the title of a Nobel laureate's work. | Burden. | 3 | This refers to Rudyard Kipling's poem "The White Man's Burden". | The White Man's Burden. | [
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Literature",
"Performing Arts"
] | [
"joke",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_efb6b0c3c2 | In 2010, in a southern Russian city, a monument was unveiled to commemorate an anniversary. A full-height statue of a person, installed without a pedestal near a gymnasium building, is designed by the sculptor to blend seamlessly into the flow of people hurrying about their business. Who does this monument depict? | A man in a case. | 3 | The monument was unveiled for the 150th anniversary of Anton Pavlovich Chekhov in Taganrog, the writer's hometown. The 500-kilogram bronze full-height statue is installed near the gymnasium building where the young Chekhov studied. A characteristic detail is that the monument is installed without a pedestal. According ... | Belikov. | [
"Visual Arts",
"History",
"Literature"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_073165c46c | The same thing happened to a well-known Taiwanese company as to a vehicle. However, the reason was not a curious incident, but the management's desire to be higher. What is this company, if it was named after a winged animal? | Asus. | 3 | Taiwan is primarily known for electronics. The name of the computer manufacturer "Asus" is derived from the word "Pegasus," but the desire to be higher in alphabetical lists removed the first letters from the name, like the yacht "Victory." | Asus, Eysus. | [
"Engineering & Technology",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Business Studies",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"chinese",
"greek"
] |
chgk_cc2c8ec4e1 | In the town of Wichita Falls (Texas), there was a plan to build a business center that would house the offices of all the oil companies in the state. However, due to an error in the documentation, this plan could not be realized. Answer using an oxymoron: what nickname did this building receive? | The world's shortest skyscraper. | 3 | After reviewing the contracts, investors discovered that the documents were actually signed for the construction of only a 480-inch (12 meters) building instead of a 480-foot building. | By the keyword "skyscraper" and synonymous epithets "short," "small," "smallest," "minimal," etc. | [
"Design & Architecture",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Business Studies"
] | [
"joke",
"pun",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_b2b3b47638 | Once, a group of journalists from "Pravda" was mistakenly detained by Chinese partisans. Vsevolod Ovchinnikov recounted that he was frightened because he saw his documents UNDER the feet of the partisan leader. In this question, we replaced one word. In your answer, specify the original word. | Up. | 3 | The Chinese man could not read and was holding the journalists' documents upside down, which is why Ovchinnikov feared they would be killed before they figured out who they were. | null | [
"History",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Psychology",
"Languages & Linguistics"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"chinese"
] |
chgk_2bc7272415 | Making their way through the nettle thickets, the authors of the package cursed with a Shakespearean expression. Which one exactly? | A plague on both your houses. | 3 | Nettle is a dioecious plant. | A plague on both your houses. | [
"Biology",
"Literature"
] | [
"idiom",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_a6b9c40cbc | Journalist Pyotr Smirnov notes that Lamarck and Darwin never managed to explain how in the process of evolution IT was able to move from one side to the other. On one website, IT is compared to a periscope. Name IT in two words. | Flounder eye. | 3 | The flounder has both eyes located on one side of its body. From an evolutionary standpoint, the gradual shifting of the eye does not provide competitive advantages. The flounder lies buried in the sand, rotating its eyes. | null | [
"Biology"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"russian"
] |
chgk_513f53d162 | The fourth symphony of Alexander Zhurbin is dedicated to the trials sent to people by God. The composer named this symphony after a poem, the action of which takes place in London in 1666. In his opinion, although this poem has not been published for a long time, we are well acquainted with a small part of it. Thanks t... | [Alexander Sergeyevich] Pushkin. | 3 | In 1666, there was the famous London plague. The poem dedicated to it by John Wilson (1785-1854) was called "City of the Plague." Zhurbin also named his symphony, dedicated to the curses and trials sent to people by God, in the same way. In Pushkin studies, there is an opinion that "A Feast in Time of Plague" is a rete... | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Music"
] | [
"poem",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_02e2ddf2dc | After a long search for a plot, the choice fell on Maurice Maeterlinck's drama "Pelléas et Mélisande." And in 1902, at the Paris theater "Comic Opera," the SEASON OF CEZANNE took place. Which three words did we replace with "SEASON OF CEZANNE"? | Debut of Debussy. | 3 | The French composer Claude Debussy worked throughout the 1890s on his only completed opera "Pelléas et Mélisande," which premiered on April 30, 1902. The replacement with Cezanne is not accidental — Debussy composed in a style often called impressionism, although Debussy himself never liked this term. | null | [
"Art History & Visual Culture",
"Literature",
"Music",
"Performing Arts"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"french"
] |
chgk_718a0d8ed1 | Yuri Davydov compares Pyotr Petrovich, born in 1827, with Suvorov and Kutuzov, but could also compare him with Rumyantsev, Dibich, and Paskevich. Name the surname of Pyotr Petrovich. | Semyonov-Tyan-Shansky. | 3 | The second surname reflects achievements and is also geographical. | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"analogy",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_596415a117 | Among the ancient Berbers, the names of the Xs included a baby antelope and a baby gazelle. In a Grimm Brothers' fairy tale, X was hung on a tall oak. What word did we replace with "X"? | Month. | 3 | Baby antelopes and gazelles are born at different times. The months when they are born were named accordingly — "baby antelope" and "baby gazelle." In the fairy tale, the month was hung on the oak for illumination. | null | [
"Biology",
"Literature",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"berber",
"german"
] |
chgk_65c5f51852 | We are not asking you to name the two animals mentioned in this proverb. Name one of them. | Hare. | 3 | The Japanese proverb, like the Russian one, states: "Chase two hares, catch none." Therefore, we asked you to name only one of the hares. The first characters in each line mean "two" and "one," respectively. | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"proverb",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"japanese"
] |
chgk_cb58395a5d | In ancient times, styli for writing were sometimes made from reed stems. Such a stylus, recording various wisdoms, is called by Yuri Davydov as the X. Name X with two words. | Thinking reed. | 3 | The pen itself supposedly begins to think. The expression "thinking reed" belongs to Blaise Pascal. | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Philosophy"
] | [
"metaphor",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian",
"french"
] |
chgk_7d1ec6258b | Can you hear my voice well? Which person, canonized in 1920, is the patron saint of radio in France? | Joan of Arc. | 3 | Apparently, this is connected to the fact that Joan heard "certain voices." | null | [
"History",
"Religious Studies",
"Communication"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"commonsense reasoning"
] | [
"french"
] |
chgk_5a835bba47 | In 1898, in Italy, a peaceful demonstration was shot by order of King Umberto. Two years later, the king was shot by the anarchist Gaetano Bresci. According to Boris Akunin, at the trial, Bresci stated that his target was not a man named Umberto, but HIM. If Bresci had indeed killed six-year-old HIM, perhaps all of his... | Princip. | 3 | If we believe Akunin, Bresci said: "I was not shooting at a man named Umberto, but at the principle." In 1914, Gavrilo Princip killed Archduke Ferdinand. | Can be lowercase. | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Political Science",
"Languages & Linguistics"
] | [
"pun",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"italian",
"serbian",
"russian"
] |
chgk_3ce2897305 | The hero of Márquez, having lost HIM, is afraid to look in the mirror. Who lost HIM in April 2010? | [Jarosław] Kaczyński. | 3 | The hero lost a twin and fears not seeing his reflection in the mirror. | null | [
"Literature",
"Political Science",
"Psychology"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"spanish",
"polish"
] |
chgk_9f5110a07c | Pyotr Vail paradoxically noted that the goal of wandering is THIS. In an article about "THIS," Andrei mentions, in particular, "Lion," "Aries," and "Eagle." Name THIS. | Return. | 3 | Andrei Zvyagintsev's film "The Return" was awarded the cinematographic prizes "Golden Lion," "Golden Aries," and "Golden Eagle." | null | [
"Literature",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"divergent thinking"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_0c79ff99b4 | In 1852, this person admitted that he could not bring himself to gather and leave Russia for a long time. Name this person. | [Ivan] Goncharov. | 3 | "It seems I am destined to be the laziest and to infect everything that comes into contact with me with laziness." Goncharov, like his character Oblomov, was very lazy. | null | [
"Literature"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_7d7ee1ccae | There is a version that the model for Venus by Reynolds was a famous personality. Moreover, the artist may have left a noticeable hint at another famous personality. Name the supposed model. | [Lady Emma] Hamilton. | 3 | It is visible to the naked eye that Venus is closing one eye — perhaps this is a hint at Admiral Nelson. :-) | null | [
"Visual Arts",
"History"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_29664b49a8 | Imagine a pump that needs to pump liquid to a height of 6 meters. It is clear that it will have a significant mass — 12 kg, and a length — 60 cm. The object, of which this "pump" is a part, was given a poetic epithet at the beginning of the last century. Write this epithet. | Exquisite. | 3 | The mentioned pump is the heart of a giraffe, which Nikolai Gumilev called exquisite in his poem. | null | [
"Biology",
"Literature"
] | [
"poem",
"metaphor"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_235df5258f | In the film "Spider," the result of this action transparently hints at the film's recurring image. English criminals used treacle and wrapping paper to perform this action. Name the result of this action in two words. | Broken glass. | 3 | Glass broken in the center resembles a web. "Transparently" is a hint. English burglars would stick a piece of paper on intact glass so that the shards wouldn't jingle. | Broken window. | [
"Visual Arts",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Law & Criminology"
] | [
"pun",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_4da1455868 | The famous hero had two of THEM, but only one became proverbial. And F. Scott Fitzgerald among THEM calls his character an illusion of the predominance of good in a person. Name THEM. | Achilles' heels. | 3 | null | Achilles' heel, Achilles' heels. Not accepted: Heels. | [
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"proverb",
"analogy"
] | [
"greek",
"english"
] |
chgk_5f2069af67 | In the 19th century in the USA, to illegally improve the result, specially hired people stopped shaving a few weeks before THIS, and then shaved during THIS. During what? | Elections. | 3 | In the 19th century, almost no one had photo IDs. And fraudulent voters, wanting to "push through" their candidate, voted twice: first with a beard, then after shaving it off. | null | [
"History",
"Sociology",
"Political Science"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"american"
] |
chgk_c78753edf9 | In the novel "Brave New World," the World Controller Mustapha Mond claims that the class system of society, where the ruling Alphas are a minority compared to other, lower castes, is modeled after an ITEM. Moreover, when speaking of the lower castes, he mentions the proportion 8/9. Name the ITEM. | Iceberg. | 3 | In natural icebergs, up to 90% of their volume is underwater. | null | [
"Literature",
"Sociology",
"Science"
] | [
"analogy",
"abstraction"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_dd3ea58ac2 | Renata Mukha's work, dedicated to the influence of Western European children's literature on Russian, is called "THE FIRST visiting THE SECOND." It can be said that THE FIRST and THE SECOND belong to the same class but different orders. Name THE FIRST and THE SECOND. | Mother Goose, Hen Ryaba (in any order). | 3 | Mother Goose is a well-known character in French and Anglo-American children's literature. | Goose, Hen; Goose, Ryaba. | [
"Biology",
"Literature"
] | [
"analogy",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian",
"french",
"english"
] |
chgk_263940ae9f | In his essay, Leonard Read writes that society needs pencils, so graphite miners, lumberjacks, drivers, and directors of pencil factories coordinate their efforts. Thus, the pencil is firmly held in IT. Name IT. | Invisible hand [of the market]. | 3 | This essay was written by Read on behalf of an ordinary pencil and vividly demonstrated the concept of the "invisible hand of the market" introduced by Adam Smith. | null | [
"Economics",
"Literature"
] | [
"analogy",
"abstraction"
] | [
"english",
"scottish"
] |
chgk_dc07ad463a | The hero of the folk epic Siyavush fell in love with the khan's daughter. The khan did not want to give her to the hero and declared that he must build a palace for his wife. At the same time, the khan gave HIM HER. Siyavush spent the whole night doing with HER the same thing that was done in another similar legend, an... | Ox hide. | 3 | The khan ordered Siyavush to build a palace for the bride on the territory covered by an ox hide. Like Dido when founding Carthage, Siyavush spent the whole night cutting the hide into thin strips, and in the end, he managed to cover a significant area with the ox hide. | Bull hide, steer hide, bovine hide. | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"persian",
"phoenician"
] |
chgk_e0d330017c | The Soviet medal "Veteran of Labor" is a circle with the inscription on the back "For long-term conscientious work." It was often awarded to people who had reached retirement age but continued to work. This medal was jokingly called ALPHA. There are two known veterans who became disabled in the same battle; one of them... | The Black Spot. | 3 | The medal was awarded with the hint that it was time for the person to retire and make way for the younger generation. Pew gave the spot to Billy Bones, Silver received the spot from the crew. Silver recounted: "I lost my leg in the same action in which old Pew lost his sight" (in a more accurate translation by L. Skry... | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"joke",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_ad63c26c5a | During a tour of Stary Oskol, at one location, the guide asks the participants if they like devils, and depending on the answer, arranges them into two columns. In the previous sentence, we replaced two words. Write these words. | Old Trafford. | 3 | During a tour of the "Manchester United" stadium, visitors, divided into two teams of fans and non-fans of the "Red Devils" (the nickname for "MU"), thus exit from the under-stand area onto the field. | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"analogy"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_f097b41ea1 | According to a well-known source, the man loved ALPHA, which is not surprising, and ALPHA loved X, which caused certain concerns. They want to oblige X to charters. Name ALPHA and X in the correct order. | Her, flying at night. | 3 | "He loved her, she loved flying at night." | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"None"
] |
chgk_cae831f76f | A teenager from Umberto Eco's book, after reading a war story, keeps seeing thick green pillars. According to a source recently declared an anthem, similar pillars are often seen by... Whom? | Astronauts. | 3 | In this war story, a character dies, and before death, "the hero's eye, almost at ground level, sees two or three blades of grass, thick as pillars." The story shook the teenager. The source is the song "Grass by the Home," recently declared the anthem of astronauts, according to which astronauts dream of "green, green... | null | [
"Astronomy & Space Science",
"Literature",
"Music"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"italian",
"russian"
] |
chgk_275753b08d | According to chess commentator Yuri Vasiliev, in one of the matches, Rustam Kasimdzhanov lost his head. Name the first and last name of his opponent. | Judit Polgar. | 3 | Judit is a variant of the name "Judith." In the confrontation with Judith, Holofernes also lost his head. | null | [
"History",
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Literature"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"hungarian",
"biblical"
] |
chgk_cab20c9278 | The cryptomeria tree in Japan is considered a symbol of longevity, but ALPHAS made from it, according to a proverb, are a symbol of transience. The traditional making of ALPHAS in Portuguese Coimbra dates back to local nuns who cooked chewy candies. What word is replaced by ALPHA? | Toothpick. | 3 | Although a toothpick is made from cryptomeria, its lifespan is short. | null | [
"Biology",
"History",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"proverb",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"japanese",
"portuguese"
] |
chgk_620315887f | IT gave the name to a salad decorated with cornflakes. In the third chapter, IT went past the corn. Name IT. | Yellow brick road. | 3 | The cornflakes on the salad symbolize the yellow brick. The Scarecrow from the Land of Oz was hanging in a cornfield, past which the yellow brick road went. | Yellow brick road, and similar. | [
"Literature",
"Home Economics & Daily Life",
"Film & Media Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_c1021396e0 | In the operetta "Arshin Mal Alan," there are eight characters. Its finale could be named the same as a popular British film, if not for the absence of... What? | Funerals. | 3 | Like most operettas, the plot of "Arshin Mal Alan" revolves around romantic entanglements, and the operetta ends with four weddings of all eight characters; the mentioned melodrama is "Four Weddings and a Funeral." | Just funerals. | [
"Film & Media Studies",
"Literature",
"Performing Arts",
"Anthropology"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"azerbaijani",
"english"
] |
chgk_007a9607e4 | In the first chapter of this book, old religions are called petals. What is the name of this book? | "The Rose of the World." | 3 | "If old religions are petals, then the Rose of the World is the flower." | null | [
"Literature",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"metaphor",
"abstraction"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_1d444b409c | The character in the film "Immortals: War of the Gods" uses a cut on his leg instead of HER. Name HER with two words. | Ariadne's thread. | 3 | The film is full of allusions to Greek mythology; in particular, Theseus, preparing to enter the labyrinth, makes a cut on his leg so that he can follow the bloody trail to find his way back. | null | [
"Film & Media Studies",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"greek"
] |
chgk_2cc557344a | When at the end of October 1938 the power plant of the town of Concrete in Washington state went out of order, its residents thought it was the fault of... Whom? | Martians. | 3 | The power plant went out of order during the famous radio broadcast of "The War of the Worlds". | null | [
"History",
"Film & Media Studies",
"Literature",
"Psychology"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"commonsense reasoning"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_81711eaf57 | In solving classical construction problems, it is allowed to draw lines and arcs. Fumiaki Huzita developed a theory of problems where one more operation is allowed. In the title of Robert Lang's article dedicated to this theory, IT is mentioned. Name IT. | Origami. | 3 | If, in addition to a compass and straightedge, the operation of folding a sheet of paper is used, more complex problems can be solved, such as trisecting an angle. It is not surprising that Japanese people were involved in developing the theory of such problems. | null | [
"Home Economics & Daily Life",
"Anthropology",
"Mathematics"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"japanese"
] |
chgk_808d35389b | The bird Garuda from Hindu mythology would lift a giant naga serpent into the air and carry it until it died of exhaustion. Over time, the nagas figured out how to DO THIS. One day, by mistake, a mythological character DID THIS. Answer in three words: DID WHAT? | Swallowed a stone. | 3 | Cronus swallowed a swaddled stone instead of the newborn Zeus. A naga with a huge stone inside cannot be carried for long. Garuda's next evolutionary move was to lift the naga by the tail, forcing it to regurgitate the stone. | Ate a stone, etc. | [
"Biology",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"hindu",
"greek"
] |
chgk_9fb668bfac | After the bombing of a city occupied by the Germans by the Allies, the fascists released a poster. It depicted flames and the inscription "Murderers always return to the scene of the crime." Name this city. | Rouen. | 3 | The English once burned Joan of Arc here, and in April 1944, they bombed the city. | null | [
"History",
"Military",
"Psychology"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"historical reference"
] | [
"english",
"french"
] |
chgk_2ed3aeb571 | According to the Acts, the Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles in the form of flames, and they went to preach in different countries. The title of a painting on this subject includes the words "Napoleon's Troops." Which two words, not included in this question, did we replace with "Napoleon's Troops"? | Twelve tongues. | 3 | The ability to preach in different languages descended upon them in the form of tongues of flame. Napoleon's army was called "Twelve tongues." | 12 tongues, twelve tongues. | [
"Visual Arts",
"History",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"french"
] |
chgk_3c85ce4190 | One of the characters in Sergey Lysenko's play complains: "It's as if we've ended up in a Dostoevsky novel." And when another character takes a certain object in hand, he is mistaken for a bartender who will serve whiskey. Name this object. | Ice pick. | 3 | Exupery points to the ice pick: "Are you getting ice for the whiskey?" Mercader: "No, it's for Trotsky." | The jury accepted the answer "Ice axe." | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Performing Arts"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"joke"
] | [
"russian",
"english"
] |
chgk_2fff3f8091 | In a story about visiting Hamburg, it is mentioned how in a local café tourists were brought significantly more wine than they ordered. What word was the cause of this? | Dry. | 3 | They asked for dry wine, and instead of one glass, they were brought three. | Drei, dry. | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Anthropology",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"pun"
] | [
"german",
"english"
] |
chgk_110d906eea | Sculptor Henry Moore equated women with nature, so DEFINITIONS in his works could symbolize ravines or depressions eroded by the forces of wind and water. What two words did we replace with the word "DEFINITIONS"? | Curvy lines. | 3 | Moore was a supporter of his colleague Willem de Kooning, for whom the female figure resembled a "natural landscape with arms like paths and a body of hills and fields." Therefore, Moore's female sculptures almost entirely lack angles. In syntax analysis, a definition is traditionally emphasized with a wavy line. | null | [
"Visual Arts",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Earth & Environmental Science"
] | [
"metaphor",
"analogy"
] | [
"english"
] |
chgk_58e8ba40a0 | In one of the articles about Königsberg-Kaliningrad, it is stated that by summing the digits of the number 1255 — the year Königsberg was founded — the result is the number 13. According to the author of this article, the same result is obtained for only two other major European cities. Name these cities. | Berlin and Moscow. | 3 | The author of the article suggests that this fatal arithmetic (Moscow — 1147, Berlin — 1237) has determined the eternal dispute between the two cities for the right to possess Königsberg-Kaliningrad. | In any order. | [
"History",
"Human Geography",
"Mathematics"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"abstraction"
] | [
"german",
"russian"
] |
chgk_1ee9f67c66 | In a Taimyr fairy tale, the moose boasts: "The old X has died, now I am the biggest, the strongest." Whom did we replace with "X"? | Mammoth. | 3 | Indeed, mammoths went extinct. | null | [
"Literature",
"Earth & Environmental Science"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"indigenous Siberian"
] |
chgk_423b1ac98a | Humorist Richard Jeni came up with a slogan for the United States of America. Finish it with three words: "Twenty million illegal immigrants...". | "... can't be wrong". | 3 | An allusion to the ironic phrase "Millions of lemmings can't be wrong". | null | [
"Political Science",
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Performing Arts"
] | [
"joke",
"sarcasm",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"american"
] |
chgk_9bbcb30368 | Don Aminado ironically notes that the problems of Russian emigrants cannot be solved by a person who is constantly traveling. Name the surname of this person. | [Fridtjof] Nansen. | 3 | Nansen developed a document issued to stateless refugees, which became known as the Nansen passport. | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Political Science",
"Human Geography"
] | [
"sarcasm",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"norwegian"
] |
chgk_662a373410 | In one hypothesis, the Mid-Ocean Ridge encircling the Earth along the ocean floors and the emissions of poisonous gases from its faults are mentioned. Name the one in connection with whom this hypothesis is put forward. | Jormungandr. | 3 | This hypothesis suggests that the serpent Jormungandr from Scandinavian myths is a metaphorical image of the real Mid-Ocean Ridge encircling the planet along the ocean floors. The fault emits poisonous gases, which also reminds one of the serpent. | With minor grammatical errors. | [
"Earth & Environmental Science",
"Religious Studies"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"scandinavian"
] |
chgk_dac983afd8 | The Finnish newspaper recommended that THEY take a laptop with them to refer to an online guide in controversial cases. And Alexander Filatov advises THEM not to fear circles, but to rejoice in circles. Name THEM. | Mushroom pickers. | 3 | Controversial cases refer to whether a mushroom is edible. Filatov's advice concerns so-called "fairy rings" — circles of growing mushrooms. | null | [
"Biology",
"Engineering & Technology",
"Literature"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"commonsense reasoning"
] | [
"finnish",
"russian"
] |
chgk_784fa98d86 | The eminent scientist Ostrogradsky respectfully called those students who deeply understood his subject "geometers." Those who did not grasp the essence, he contemptuously called Xs. An X was a character in a German-language novel. What word was replaced by "X"? | Land surveyor. | 3 | The novel "The Castle." | null | [
"Languages & Linguistics",
"Literature",
"Mathematics"
] | [
"analogy",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian",
"german"
] |
chgk_2da213521b | Chesterton writes that in countries where oligarchy reigns, faces are important, not laws, SHE, not the ballot. On the website milliony.ru [millions dot ru], paper money is called HER of the state. Name HER. | Business card. | 3 | Origin, title, and reputation matter more than the will of the people. With this question, the editorial team consisting of Yuri Vymenets and Alexander Korobeynikov, one might say, presents their business card. | null | [
"Literature",
"Political Science",
"Economics"
] | [
"metaphor",
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"english",
"russian"
] |
chgk_c9aa27925f | In the miniature by Georgy Bykov, God chooses one of two parts of Adam's body from which he will create a woman. Name as precisely as possible the event that occurs during this choice. | The coin lands on its edge. | 3 | God, tossing a coin, decides whether to create a woman from a finger or a tooth. The coin lands on its edge. | In terms of meaning. | [
"Visual Arts",
"Religious Studies",
"Mathematics"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_e79d8f29db | Urfin Jus, before conquering the Marrans, sent his servant Eot Ling to them. It can be said that Urfin saw the land of the Marrans [BLANK]. "[BLANK]" is the title of a novel published in 1963. Name the author of this novel. | [Heinrich] Böll. | 3 | Eot Ling was a wooden clown, so Urfin saw the world "through the eyes of a clown." | null | [
"History",
"Literature",
"Sociology"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"pun"
] | [
"german",
"russian"
] |
chgk_46552ad07c | In a lecture dedicated to the Great Patriotic War and the battles with the fascists on the Black Sea coast, the phrase was uttered: "In those days, SUCH communication was established between the coastal villages. Our troops received everything they needed: weapons, ammunition, and food." To the puzzled listeners, the l... | Submarine. | 3 | With the help of submarines... | null | [
"History",
"Engineering & Technology",
"Military"
] | [
"lateral thinking"
] | [
"russian"
] |
chgk_fce75dbb0e | Every year since 1996, a competition is held in the Finnish city of Oulu for playing IT, with quite substantial prizes. However, "Maxim" magazine recommends that grown-up boys stop playing IT. Name IT in two words. | Air guitar. | 3 | null | Invisible guitar. | [
"Physical Education & Sports",
"Music",
"Sociology",
"Performing Arts"
] | [
"lateral thinking",
"joke"
] | [
"finnish",
"english"
] |
CresOWLve: Benchmarking Creative Problem-Solving Over Real-World Knowledge
Dataset Description
This is a bilingual benchmark for creative problem-solving grounded in real-world knowledge and solvable by human experts. CresOWLve spans a diverse range of knowledge and creative domains, varies in difficulty, requires multiple creative thinking strategies, and is manually validated to ensure quality. It contains ~2K open-ended questions with answers and explanations.
Dataset Sources
- Repository: https://github.com/mismayil/cresowlve
- Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.03374
Dataset Structure
Each sample has the following fields:
id: Unique sample ID.question: Open-ended question in text.answer: Original answer to the question in text.difficulty: Difficulty level of the question (1-5)explanation: Explanation for the reference answer if available.other_answers: Other acceptable answers if any.knowledge_domains: List of knowledge domains (subjects, topics) involved in answering the question.creative_domains: List of creative domains/thinking strategies involved in answering the question.cultures: List of cultures/demographics involved in answering the question.
Knowledge Domains
The benchmark questions involve knowledge about at least one of the following:
Literature, History, Film & Media Studies, Languages & Linguistics, Human Geography, Religious Studies, Anthropology, Physical Education & Sports, Biology, Engineering & Technology, Visual Arts, Music, Political Science, Home Economics & Daily Life, Performing Arts, Psychology, Sociology, Earth & Environmental Science, Military, Physics, Astronomy & Space Science, Business Studies, Philosophy, Design & Architecture, Medicine & Health Sciences, Economics, Mathematics, Chemistry, Law & Criminology, Other Sciences, Art History & Visual Culture, Education, Communication, Archaeology
Creative Language & Thinking
The benchmark questions involve several creative language domains and skills:
lateral thinking, analogy, abstraction, joke, pun, metaphor, commonsense reasoning, poem, idiom, neologism, sarcasm, proverb, divergent thinking, compositionality, simile
Cultures & Demographics
The benchmark questions require knowledge about entities and people from diverse cultures:
English, Russian, French, German, Italian, Greek, Latin, American, Spanish, Japanese, Polish, Arabic, Dutch, Swedish, Chinese, Hebrew, Ukrainian, Roman, Indian, Norwegian, Danish, Scottish, Portuguese, Turkish, Czech, Swiss, Egyptian, Georgian, Irish, Persian, Brazilian, European, Armenian and many others.
Source Data
The benchmark questions are sourced from the well-known Russian intellectual game What?Where?When?. To ensure accessibility and relevance, we design a multi-stage benchmark construction pipeline that filters unsuitable and non-creative questions and translates the remaining puzzles into English with manual validation. The resulting dataset provides a diverse and high-quality benchmark for evaluating creative problem-solving grounded in real-world knowledge. See the paper for more details on the benchmark construction.
Citation
@misc{ismayilzada2026cresowlvebenchmarkingcreativeproblemsolving,
title={CresOWLve: Benchmarking Creative Problem-Solving Over Real-World Knowledge},
author={Mete Ismayilzada and Renqing Cuomao and Daniil Yurshevich and Anna Sotnikova and Lonneke van der Plas and Antoine Bosselut},
year={2026},
eprint={2604.03374},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.03374},
}
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