room temperature IQ

English

Noun

room temperature IQ (plural room temperature IQs)

  1. Alternative form of room-temperature IQ
    • 1987, John Leland, "Spins", Spin, July 1987:
      Lurking at the bottom, driving the whole godforsaken thing, is the possibility that the room temperature IQ that informs every groove of Neurotica may very well be the real thing.
    • 1993, W. E. B. Griffin, The Assassin, Jove Books (1993), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
      “There used to be a Sergeant Henkels in Central Cell Room,” Pekach volunteered. “If it's the same guy, he has a room temperature IQ.”
    • 2001, Robert Lichello, How to Make $1,000,000 in the Stock Market Automatically, Signet (2001), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
      Anyone with a room temperature IQ and a computer could buy and sell stocks in a frenzy of greed, buy a stock and sell it a few minutes later, buy it again and sell it again as the stock gained a point or lost a point.
    • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:room temperature IQ.
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