Remove 5 letters from this seq...
[5805] Remove 5 letters from this seq... - Remove 5 letters from this sequence (HEALDDJLINESAC) to reveal a familiar English word. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 41 - The first user who solved this task is Thinh Ddh
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Remove 5 letters from this seq...

Remove 5 letters from this sequence (HEALDDJLINESAC) to reveal a familiar English word.
Correct answers: 41
The first user who solved this task is Thinh Ddh.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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There was a farmer who grew wa...

There was a farmer who grew watermelons. He was doing pretty well, but he was disturbed by some local kids who would sneak into his watermelon patch at night and eat his watermelons.
After some careful thought, he came up with a clever idea that he thought would scare the kids away for sure. He made up a sign and posted it in the field. The next night, the kids showed up and they saw the sign which read, "Warning! One of the watermelons in this field has been injected with cyanide."
The kids ran off, made up their own sign and posted it next to the farmer's sign. When the farmer returned, he surveyed the field. He noticed that no watermelons were missing, but the sign next to his read, "Now there are two!"
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Rudolf Pintner

Born 16 Nov 1884; died 7 Nov 1942 at age 57.English-American psychologist who combined interests in mental measurements and education of people with disabilities. His performance assessment measures supplied half of the items of the World War I Army Beta Test. He directed many surveys in his field and wrote a number of scientific works. A Scale of Performance Tests (1917) by Rudolf Pintner and Donald G. Paterson, introduced the Pintner-Paterson Performance Test, the first test of nonverbal intelligence. It was intended as a "supplemental" test to the 1908 Binet battery (which they criticized as unwarrantably favorable to the verbal aspects of individual intelligence). They insisted that there was more than one aspect of intelligence and more than one way of measuring it.[Image: Picture Completion puzzle, part of the Pintner & Paterson's clinical style performance scale (1917)]
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