Internal Position Oddity - Absolute-Beginner Level: core concept mastery Internal Position Oddity ABSOLUTE BEGINNER

This skill primer 🌟 worksheet focuses on Internal Position Oddity - a key topic in Odd Figure Out. You'll solve 20 absolute-beginner-level problems (Worksheet 1 of 10). The primary focus is on core concept mastery. Master internal position oddity problems, internal position oddity reasoning questions, and internal position oddity practice through systematic practice.

📝 Worksheet 1 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Absolute Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Internal Position Oddity
Worksheet 1 of 10 (0% complete)

Question 1

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 2

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure C has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom right
- One figure (Figure C): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 3

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top right
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 4

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure B has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom right
- One figure (Figure B): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 5

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom right
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 6

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 7

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure D has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top right
- One figure (Figure D): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 8

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top left
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 9

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure D has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top left
- One figure (Figure D): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 10

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure C has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top left
- One figure (Figure C): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 11

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure A has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure A): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 12

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure B has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom right
- One figure (Figure B): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 13

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure B has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top right
- One figure (Figure B): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 14

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure E has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure E): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 15

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure C has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure C): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 16

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure E has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom left
- One figure (Figure E): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 17

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure E has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top left
- One figure (Figure E): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 18

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the bottom right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure C has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in bottom right
- One figure (Figure C): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 19

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top left position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure D has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top left
- One figure (Figure D): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions

Question 20

Find the odd figure out based on internal element position. Figure A: Figure B: Figure C: Figure D: Figure E:
Step-by-step Solution:

Step 1: Analyze internal element positioning
- Each figure contains an outer square and an inner circle
- Examine where the inner circle is positioned within the square

Step 2: Identify the common position
- Four figures have the inner circle in the top right position
- This positioning is consistent across these four figures
- The corner placement establishes the pattern

Step 3: Find the differently positioned figure
- Figure E has the inner circle in the center position
- This is a fundamentally different placement
- The central position breaks the corner-based pattern

Step 4: Verification through spatial analysis
- Divide each square into quadrants or use center reference
- Four figures: Circle in top right
- One figure (Figure E): Circle in center

Positional Analysis Strategy:
- Mentally divide shapes into grid sections
- Use coordinates (top/bottom, left/right, center)
- Compare relative positions systematically
- Look for the position that doesn't match the majority

Common Mistakes:
- Not establishing a clear reference frame
- Confusing approximate positions with exact positions
- Focusing on shape types instead of positions
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