UwU
Collection
Understanding without the Uncertainty
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12 items
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Updated
Small QwQ, full-finetuned on FineQwQ-142K. Unlike my previous models, this one is a general-purpose reasoning machine!
Oh, and it also passes the strawberry test:
> How many 'r's are in the word strawberry?
Let's see. I have this word: "strawberry." I need to find out how many 'r's are in it. Okay, first, I should probably write down the word and look at each letter one by one.
So, "s-t-r-a-w-b-e-r-r-y."
Now, I need to count the 'r's. Let's go through each letter:
- The first letter is 's', which is not an 'r'.
- The second letter is 't', not an 'r'.
- The third letter is 'r', that's the first 'r'.
- The fourth letter is 'a', not an 'r'.
- The fifth letter is 'w', not an 'r'.
- The sixth letter is 'b', not an 'r'.
- The seventh letter is 'e', not an 'r'.
- The eighth letter is 'r', that's the second 'r'.
- The ninth letter is 'r', that's the third 'r'.
- The tenth letter is 'y', not an 'r'.
So, I have three 'r's in the word "strawberry." But wait, let me double-check. Maybe I missed one.
Let me count again:
1. 's'
2. 't'
3. 'r' (first 'r')
4. 'a'
5. 'w'
6. 'b'
7. 'e'
8. 'r' (second 'r')
9. 'r' (third 'r')
10. 'y'
Yes, that's three 'r's. I think that's correct.
Alternatively, maybe there's a smarter way to count them without listing out each letter. Let's see.
I know that the word "strawberry" has 10 letters, and I can recall that it has three 'r's. But to be sure, maybe I can look for patterns or something.
Another way is to use a tally mark or something similar. Let's try that.
First 'r': | (that's one)
Second 'r': | (that's two)
Third 'r': | (that's three)
Yes, that also gives me three 'r's.
I think I'm confident with that answer now. There are three 'r's in the word "strawberry."
**Final Answer**
\[ \boxed{3} \]