| 模型 | 模型答案 | 正确答案 |
|---|---|---|
| 金声玉亮2.0 | **leverage, exploit, milk, use, done, over, through, up** The first group consists of verbs that can imply taking advantage of something or utilizing resources (leverage, exploit, milk, use). The second group consists of verbs or verb phrases that often denote completion, direction, or change in state (done, over, through, up). |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| deepseek-r1 | **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, done, over** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| gpto1 | **use, exploit, leverage, milk, done, through, over, up** | exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| gpt-4o-2024-08-06 | To solve this puzzle, we need to find two groups of four items that share something in common. Let's examine the words and see if we can identify any patterns or commonalities. 1. **use**: This can be a verb meaning to employ something for a purpose. 2. **leverage**: This can be a verb meaning to use something to maximum advantage. 3. **through**: This is a preposition or adverb indicating movement from one side to another. 4. **up**: This is a preposition or adverb indicating a higher position or movement. 5. **exploit**: This can be a verb meaning to make full use of and derive benefit from a resource. 6. **done**: This is an adjective meaning completed or finished. 7. **over**: This is a preposition or adverb indicating movement or position above something. 8. **milk**: This can be a verb meaning to exploit or extract benefit from something. Now, let's try to group these words: - **use, leverage, exploit, milk**: All of these can be verbs that mean to utilize or take advantage of something. They share the common theme of using or exploiting resources. - **through, up, done, over**: These words can be related to completion or direction. "Through" and "over" can indicate movement or completion, "up" can indicate direction or completion (as in "time's up"), and "done" indicates completion. Thus, the two groups are: 1. **use, leverage, exploit, milk**: Verbs related to utilizing or exploiting. 2. **through, up, done, over**: Words related to direction or completion. Therefore, the answer is **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, done, over**. |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| DeepSeek-Coder-V2-Lite-Instruct | **use, leverage, through, up, exploit, done, over, milk** | exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| Meta-Llama-3.1-405B-Instruct-Turbo | After analyzing the given words/phrases, I found two groups of four items that share something in common. The first group consists of words that can be used as verbs meaning "to take advantage of something" or "to utilize something for a particular purpose". The second group consists of words that can be used as phrases or idioms when combined with the word "with". Here is the solution: **exploit, leverage, milk, use, done with, over with, through with, up with** In the first group, "exploit", "leverage", "milk", and "use" can all be used as verbs to convey the idea of taking advantage of something or utilizing it for a particular purpose. In the second group, the phrases "done with", "over with", "through with", and "up with" are all idiomatic expressions that convey a sense of completion, termination, or being finished with something. |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| Meta-Llama-3.1-70B-Instruct-Turbo | After analyzing the given words/phrases, I've found two groups of four items that share something in common. Here's my solution: **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, over, up, done** The two groups are: 1. **use, leverage, exploit, milk**: These four words are all verbs that can mean "to take advantage of something" or "to utilize something for one's benefit". 2. **through, over, up, done**: These four words are all prepositions or adverbs that can indicate completion or finality, such as "through" (completed), "over" (finished), "up" (completed or finished), and "done" (completed or finished). Please let me know if this is the correct solution! |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| Qwen2-72B-Instruct | **leverage, exploit, milk, use, done, over, through, up** The first group consists of verbs that can imply taking advantage of something (leverage, exploit, milk, use). The second group consists of prepositions or preposition-like verbs (done, over, through, up) that often denote position, direction, or completion. |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| baichuan4 | **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, done, over** | exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| doubao | **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, over, done** | exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| gpto1 | **use, exploit, leverage, milk, done, through, over, up** | exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| kimi | To find the two groups of four items that share something in common, let's analyze each word/phrase: 1. use 2. leverage 3. through 4. up 5. exploit 6. done 7. over 8. milk First, let's look for any common themes or patterns among the words: - "use" and "exploit" both involve utilizing something. - "leverage" and "milk" both involve extracting value or advantage from something. - "through" and "over" both indicate a direction or movement. - "up" and "done" both indicate a state or completion. Now, let's try to form two groups based on these observations: Group 1: use, leverage, exploit, milk (all four involve utilizing or extracting value from something) Group 2: through, up, over, done (all four involve direction, movement, or completion) So, the answer is: **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, over, done** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| minimax | To solve this, we need to identify a common characteristic shared by four of the words and another common characteristic shared by the remaining four words. Let's analyze the words: 1. use 2. leverage 3. through 4. up 5. exploit 6. done 7. over 8. milk One approach is to look for patterns in the words, such as parts of speech, syllable count, or shared letters. Another approach is to consider idiomatic expressions or phrases in which the words are commonly used. After examining the words, we can notice that four of them are prepositions or can be used as prepositions: 1. **through** 2. **up** 3. **over** 4. **up** The remaining four words are verbs: 1. **use** 2. **leverage** 3. **exploit** 4. **milk** So, the two groups based on this characteristic are: **through, up, over, up** (prepositions) **use, leverage, exploit, milk** (verbs) The final answer is: **through, up, over, up, use, leverage, exploit, milk** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| wenxinyiyan | To solve this problem, we need to identify two distinct categories that each contain four of the given words/phrases. Let's analyze the words/phrases provided: 1. **use** - a verb meaning to utilize or employ something. 2. **leverage** - this seems to be a spelling error; the correct word is likely "leverage," which means using something to gain advantage, or it could be a typo for "lever" or "leverage" might be intended as a creative or nonce word. Assuming it's a typo, we'll consider "lever" - a simple machine that helps lift heavy objects. 3. **through** - a preposition or adverb indicating movement from one end to another of something. 4. **up** - an adverb or preposition indicating direction toward a higher position. 5. **exploit** - a verb meaning to make use of something, often to gain an advantage or benefit. 6. **done** - an adjective indicating completion or finish. 7. **over** - an adverb, preposition, or adjective with various meanings, including above, across, or finished. 8. **milk** - a noun referring to the liquid produced by mammary glands, especially of cows. Now, let's look for patterns or commonalities: * Four words that relate to completion or finality: **done**, **through**, **over**, **use** (in the sense of having used up or expended). * Four words that can be associated with action or process: **use**, **leverage** (assuming it's a typo for "lever" and considering its function), **exploit** (as an action to utilize something), **milk** (as an action to extract milk). If we categorize based on these two groups, we get: * Group 1 (Completion/Finality): **done, through, over, use** * Group 2 (Action/Process): **use, leverage, exploit, milk** However, there's a problem: the word "use" appears in both groups, breaking the rule that each item should only appear in one group. We need to reconsider. Upon closer inspection, "leverage" seems out of place as a standalone word. If we assume it's a typo for "lever," it doesn't quite fit in Group 2 as an action in the same way as "use," "exploit," and "milk." Instead, if we think of "lever" as a tool, it might fit better in a category of objects. Let's try a different approach, focusing on the words' function or form: * Four words that are primarily actions: **use, exploit, milk, done** (as in "the task is done"). * Four words that describe positions, states, or can be nouns: **through, up, over, lever** (considering "lever" as a noun). This gives us two distinct groups: * Group 1 (Actions): **use, exploit, milk, done** * Group 2 (Positions/States/Nouns): **through, up, over, lever** Since "leverage" was likely a typo, and "lever" makes more sense in the context of the given words, we'll use "lever" in our final answer. Therefore, the solution is: **use, exploit, milk, done, through, up, over, lever** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| zhipu | To solve this puzzle, we need to identify two groups of four items each that share a specific common characteristic. Let's analyze the given words/phrases step-by-step: 1. **use** 2. **leverage** 3. **through** 4. **up** 5. **exploit** 6. **done** 7. **over** 8. **milk** ### Step-by-Step Analysis: 1. **Word Length and Structure:** - **use**: 3 letters - **leverage**: 8 letters - **through**: 7 letters - **up**: 2 letters - **exploit**: 7 letters - **done**: 4 letters - **over**: 4 letters - **milk**: 4 letters No clear grouping based on word length or structure. 2. **Parts of Speech:** - **use**: verb - **leverage**: noun/verb - **through**: preposition - **up**: preposition/adverb - **exploit**: noun/verb - **done**: adjective - **over**: preposition/adverb - **milk**: noun/verb No clear grouping based on parts of speech. 3. **Common Themes or Concepts:** - **use**, **leverage**, **exploit**, **milk** can all be related to the concept of utilizing or taking advantage of something. - **through**, **up**, **done**, **over** can all be related to positions or states of completion. ### Forming Groups: **Group 1 (Utilization/Advantage):** - **use**: to employ for a purpose - **leverage**: to use (something) to maximum advantage - **exploit**: to make full use of and derive benefit from (a resource) - **milk**: to extract or obtain something from **Group 2 (Position/Completion):** - **through**: indicating movement from one side of an area to the other - **up**: indicating a higher position or state - **done**: indicating completion - **over**: indicating a position above or beyond ### Final Answer: **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, done, over** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |
| deepseek-v3 | Alright, I'm trying to solve this word grouping problem. I have the following eight words/phrases: - use - leverage - through - up - exploit - done - over - milk My goal is to divide them into two groups of four, where each group shares a common characteristic. Let's break this down step-by-step. ### Step 1: Understanding the Words First, I'll list out the words to get a clear view: 1. **use** 2. **leverage** 3. **through** 4. **up** 5. **exploit** 6. **done** 7. **over** 8. **milk** ### Step 2: Identifying Common Themes or Categories I need to find two distinct categories that can each accommodate four of these words. I'll start by considering possible categories: - **Synonyms or Related Words:** Words that have similar meanings. - **Parts of Speech:** Nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc. - **Homonyms or Homophones:** Words that sound alike but have different meanings. - **Phrasal Verbs:** Verbs combined with prepositions or adverbs. - **Common Phrases or Idioms:** Words that are part of well-known expressions. ### Step 3: Exploring Synonyms or Related Words Let's see if some of these words are synonyms or related in meaning: - **use** and **leverage** both relate to utilizing something. - **exploit** can also mean to utilize, but it has a more negative connotation. - **milk** can mean to extract something fully or to take advantage of. So, **use**, **leverage**, **exploit**, and **milk** could potentially be in the same group related to utilizing or taking advantage of something. ### Step 4: Exploring Prepositions and Adverbs Next, let's look at the remaining words: - **through**: preposition indicating movement from one side to another. - **up**: adverb or preposition indicating direction. - **done**: adjective indicating completion. - **over**: preposition or adverb indicating position or completion. These words seem to be prepositions or adverbs indicating direction, position, or completion. ### Step 5: Forming the Groups Based on the above analysis, I can tentatively group the words as follows: **Group 1 (Related to Utilizing or Taking Advantage):** - use - leverage - exploit - milk **Group 2 (Prepositions/Adverbs Indicating Direction or Position):** - through - up - over - done ### Step 6: Verifying the Groups Let's ensure that each group makes sense: - **Group 1:** All four words relate to using or taking advantage of something. - **use**: to employ for a purpose. - **leverage**: to use something to maximum advantage. - **exploit**: to utilize, often unfairly. - **milk**: to extract fully or take advantage of. - **Group 2:** All four words are prepositions or adverbs indicating direction, position, or completion. - **through**: from one side to the other. - **up**: towards a higher place. - **over**: above or across. - **done**: finished or completed. Both groups seem to have a clear and distinct commonality. ### Step 7: Finalizing the Answer After careful consideration, the two groups are: 1. **use, leverage, exploit, milk** 2. **through, up, over, done** **use, leverage, exploit, milk, through, up, over, done** |
exploit, leverage, milk, use, done, over, through, up |