“Leap”, “frisk”, and “trot” are movement terms used for animals (gait/motion). Choose the best description for the trio.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: They are movements of animals

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Verbal reasoning sometimes tests categorical grouping. “Leap,” “frisk,” and “trot” are all verbs/nouns linked to animal movement or gaits. The task is to pick the category label that unites them.


Given Data / Assumptions:
Leap = spring/jump; Frisk = playful jump/skip (often for young animals); Trot = a two-beat gait (notably of horses), faster than a walk and slower than a canter.


Concept / Approach:
Identify the common semantic field—movement/gait. The other options are unrelated categories (offspring, monuments, parks, flags). Therefore, the correct answer is the movement category.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Parse each word’s meaning. 2) Determine shared semantics (animal motion). 3) Choose the category label that captures this.


Verification / Alternative check:
Dictionaries and equestrian terminology confirm “trot” as a gait; “leap”/“frisk” are motion acts.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
They describe categories to which these words do not belong.


Common Pitfalls:
Overthinking “frisk” as a security search; in animal context it means playful movement.


Final Answer:
They are movements of animals

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