Match the fruit to the correct basket in this fun educational activity for kids.
A children's educational worksheet featuring a grid with fruits and baskets, where the task is to match each fruit to its corresponding basket. The top row shows individual fruits (apple, orange, purple fruit, mango), and the bottom row displays various basket arrangements with fruits inside.
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Step-by-step solution for: Premium Vector | Logic game worksheet for kids
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Premium Vector | Logic game worksheet for kids
Let’s solve this step by step.
We have a grid at the top with 5 fruits in the first row:
Apple, Orange, Purple fruit (like a plum or berry), Mangosteen (purple with green top), Mango.
Below that, we have two rows of empty boxes — one next to a basket icon, and one next to a crate icon. That means we need to sort each fruit into either “basket” or “crate” based on some rule.
Now look at the bottom part — it shows 10 examples of how fruits are packed:
Top row (left to right):
1. Green apple in basket → so green apple goes in basket
2. Red apple in crate → red apple goes in crate
3. Purple fruit in crate → purple fruit goes in crate
4. Red apple in basket → wait, this contradicts #2? Hmm… maybe not all red apples go same place? Let’s check more.
Wait — actually, looking again:
Actually, let’s list ALL 10 examples clearly:
Row 1:
- Basket: green apple
- Crate: red apple
- Crate: purple fruit
- Basket: red apple ← oh! So red apple can be in BOTH? That doesn’t make sense for sorting. Maybe I’m misreading.
Wait — perhaps the key is NOT the fruit type alone, but something else?
Look again at the bottom images — they show combinations of fruit + container. But notice: some containers are baskets, some are crates. And each image has exactly one fruit inside one container.
But here’s the trick: maybe the rule is about WHICH fruit goes in which container, and we need to match the top row fruits to the correct container based on the examples below.
Let’s list what we see in the bottom 10 images:
Image 1: Basket + Green Apple → Green Apple → Basket
Image 2: Crate + Red Apple → Red Apple → Crate
Image 3: Crate + Purple Fruit → Purple Fruit → Crate
Image 4: Basket + Red Apple → Red Apple → Basket ← contradiction? Unless... maybe it's not about the fruit, but about the position? Or maybe I misidentified.
Wait — let’s label the top row fruits as positions 1 to 5:
Position 1: Red Apple
Position 2: Orange
Position 3: Purple Fruit (spiky top)
Position 4: Mangosteen (round, purple with green cap)
Position 5: Green Mango
Now look at bottom images — there are 10 images, arranged in 2 rows of 5.
Bottom Row 1 (images 1–5):
1. Basket with green apple → not matching any top fruit directly? Top has red apple, not green.
Wait — maybe the green apple is meant to represent the mango? No, mango is separate.
Perhaps the bottom images are showing us the correct pairing for each fruit type, regardless of color variation? But red apple appears in both basket and crate — that can’t be.
Unless... the rule is not about the fruit, but about the CONTAINER TYPE assigned per COLUMN?
Wait — another idea: maybe the top grid is to be filled by matching each fruit to the container shown in the corresponding column of the bottom examples?
Let’s try this:
The bottom has 10 images — 2 rows × 5 columns.
Each column in the bottom corresponds to a column in the top grid.
So Column 1 of bottom:
- Top image: basket with green apple
- Bottom image: basket with mangosteen
Column 2:
- Top: crate with red apple
- Bottom: crate with orange
Column 3:
- Top: crate with purple fruit
- Bottom: basket with yellow fruit (looks like lemon or orange)
This is getting messy.
Alternative approach: Perhaps the bottom images are telling us which container each fruit belongs to, and we ignore duplicates or contradictions by taking majority or first occurrence?
Let’s list each unique fruit from top row and see where it appears in bottom:
Top fruits:
1. Red Apple — appears in bottom:
- Image 2: crate
- Image 4: basket
→ conflict
2. Orange — appears in bottom:
- Image 8: crate (empty crate? no, image 8 is crate with nothing? Wait no — let’s re-express all 10 bottom images properly.
I think I made a mistake in reading the bottom images. Let me describe them accurately:
Bottom section has 10 cells, 2 rows × 5 columns.
Row A (top row of bottom section):
Col1: Basket containing a green apple
Col2: Crate containing a red apple
Col3: Crate containing a purple spiky fruit
Col4: Basket containing a red apple
Col5: Crate containing a mangosteen (purple with green top)
Row B (bottom row of bottom section):
Col1: Basket containing a mangosteen
Col2: Empty crate (just the crate, no fruit)
Col3: Basket containing an orange/yellow fruit
Col4: Crate containing a green mango
Col5: Basket containing a purple spiky fruit
Ah! Now I see — the empty crate in Row B Col2 might be a clue. Also, note that some fruits appear multiple times in different containers.
But perhaps the rule is: for each fruit type, if it appears in a basket in ANY example, then it goes in basket; if only in crate, then crate? But red apple appears in both.
Another idea: maybe the container is determined by the POSITION, not the fruit. For example, column 1 always uses basket, column 2 always uses crate, etc.
Let’s test that.
In bottom section, for each column, what container is used?
Column 1:
- Row A: basket
- Row B: basket
→ both basket → so column 1 = basket
Column 2:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: crate (empty, but still crate)
→ both crate → column 2 = crate
Column 3:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: basket
→ mixed! Not consistent.
Column 4:
- Row A: basket
- Row B: crate
→ mixed
Column 5:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: basket
→ mixed
Only columns 1 and 2 are consistent.
Not helpful.
Back to fruit-based sorting.
Let’s list every fruit-container pair from bottom 10 images:
1. Green Apple → Basket
2. Red Apple → Crate
3. Purple Spiky Fruit → Crate
4. Red Apple → Basket
5. Mangosteen → Crate
6. Mangosteen → Basket
7. [Empty Crate] → no fruit
8. Orange/Yellow Fruit → Basket
9. Green Mango → Crate
10. Purple Spiky Fruit → Basket
Now, group by fruit:
- Red Apple: appears in Crate (img2) and Basket (img4) → conflict
- Purple Spiky Fruit: Crate (img3) and Basket (img10) → conflict
- Mangosteen: Crate (img5) and Basket (img6) → conflict
- Green Apple: Basket (img1) — only once
- Orange: Basket (img8) — only once
- Green Mango: Crate (img9) — only once
The conflicts suggest that maybe the container is not determined solely by fruit type.
Perhaps the task is to copy the container type from the bottom images for each corresponding fruit in the top row, using the first occurrence or something.
But the top row has specific fruits: let's map them to the bottom examples.
Notice that the bottom has 10 images, but the top has only 5 fruits to assign. Maybe we need to find for each top fruit, which container it should go in, based on the majority or the most recent example.
But that seems arbitrary.
Another thought: perhaps the bottom images are showing us the answer for each cell in the top grid. The top grid has 2 rows of 5 empty cells, and the bottom has 2 rows of 5 images, each image showing a fruit in a container. So maybe we just copy the container type from the bottom to the top, ignoring the fruit in the bottom image, and use the fruit from the top row.
For example, for top row position 1 (Red Apple), look at bottom row 1 col 1: it shows a basket, so put Red Apple in basket.
Similarly, top row position 2 (Orange), bottom row 1 col 2: crate, so Orange in crate.
Top row position 3 (Purple fruit), bottom row 1 col 3: crate, so in crate.
Top row position 4 (Mangosteen), bottom row 1 col 4: basket, so in basket.
Top row position 5 (Mango), bottom row 1 col 5: crate, so in crate.
Then for the second row of top grid (next to crate icon), we use bottom row 2:
Top row 2 pos 1: bottom row 2 col 1: basket → but the left icon is crate, so maybe we put the fruit in crate? This is confusing.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the container type for that row. So the first row of empty cells (next to basket icon) should all be filled with baskets, and the second row (next to crate icon) with crates. But that would mean all fruits go in both, which doesn't make sense.
I think I found the correct interpretation.
Look at the bottom 10 images: they are examples of how to pack the fruits. Each image shows a fruit in a container. The task is to determine, for each fruit in the top row, whether it belongs in a basket or a crate, based on the examples.
To resolve conflicts, perhaps we take the first occurrence or the most common.
But let's count for each fruit:
- Red Apple: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Purple Spiky Fruit: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Mangosteen: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Green Apple: 1 in basket
- Orange: 1 in basket
- Green Mango: 1 in crate
Since the top row has Red Apple, Orange, Purple Spiky, Mangosteen, Green Mango.
For Orange: only seen in basket → so basket
For Green Mango: only seen in crate → so crate
For Red Apple: tie — but in the bottom, when it's with other fruits, perhaps we can see a pattern.
Notice that in the bottom, the empty crate in row B col 2 might indicate that for that position, no fruit is needed, but that doesn't help.
Another idea: perhaps the container is determined by the color or shape, but that seems unlikely.
Let's look at the bottom images again and see if there's a pattern in the arrangement.
Perhaps the bottom 10 images are to be matched to the top 5 fruits by type, and we use the container from the first time the fruit appears.
For Red Apple: first appears in img2 (crate) → so crate
For Orange: first appears in img8 (basket) → basket
For Purple Spiky: first appears in img3 (crate) → crate
For Mangosteen: first appears in img5 (crate) → crate
For Green Mango: first appears in img9 (crate) → crate
But then for the second row, we have another set.
The top grid has two rows of empty cells, so perhaps we need to fill both rows with the appropriate container for each fruit.
But the left side has basket for first row, crate for second row, so maybe for each fruit, we put it in basket in the first row and crate in the second row? But that would be redundant.
I recall that in such puzzles, often the bottom images show the correct assignment for each column.
Let me try this: the top grid has 5 columns. For each column, the fruit is given in row 1. Then, for that column, the bottom images show what container to use for that fruit in the two rows.
For column 1:
- Top fruit: Red Apple
- Bottom row 1 col 1: basket with green apple — but green apple is not red, so perhaps ignore the fruit in bottom, and take the container: basket
- Bottom row 2 col 1: basket with mangosteen — container: basket
So for column 1, both rows use basket? But the left icon for row 2 is crate, so conflict.
Perhaps for each column, the container for the first row is from bottom row 1, and for the second row from bottom row 2.
And the fruit in the bottom image is irrelevant; only the container matters.
So for top grid:
Row 1 (basket row): for each column, use the container from bottom row 1 of that column.
Row 2 (crate row): for each column, use the container from bottom row 2 of that column.
But then why have the fruit in the bottom images? And the left icons might be misleading.
Let's try that.
For top row 1 (which is next to basket icon, but perhaps that's just a label, not a constraint):
Column 1: bottom row 1 col 1: basket → so put Red Apple in basket
Column 2: bottom row 1 col 2: crate → put Orange in crate
Column 3: bottom row 1 col 3: crate → put Purple fruit in crate
Column 4: bottom row 1 col 4: basket → put Mangosteen in basket
Column 5: bottom row 1 col 5: crate → put Mango in crate
For top row 2 (next to crate icon):
Column 1: bottom row 2 col 1: basket → but the left icon is crate, so perhaps we should use crate? This is inconsistent.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the intended container for that row, and the bottom images are red herrings or for verification.
But that can't be, because then all fruits would go in basket for row 1 and crate for row 2, which is trivial.
I think I need to consider that the bottom images are showing the correct packing for each fruit, and we need to choose the container that is most frequently used for that fruit, or the one that appears in the context.
Let's list all instances:
From bottom 10 images, extract fruit and container:
1. Green Apple - Basket
2. Red Apple - Crate
3. Purple Spiky - Crate
4. Red Apple - Basket
5. Mangosteen - Crate
6. Mangosteen - Basket
7. [no fruit] - Crate (empty)
8. Orange - Basket
9. Green Mango - Crate
10. Purple Spiky - Basket
Now, for the top row fruits:
- Red Apple: appears in 2 and 4 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Orange: appears in 8 -> Basket
- Purple Spiky: appears in 3 and 10 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Mangosteen: appears in 5 and 6 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Green Mango: appears in 9 -> Crate
For fruits with tie, perhaps we can look at the order or something else.
Notice that in the bottom, for the purple spiky fruit, it is in crate in img3 and basket in img10. Img3 is earlier, so perhaps crate.
Similarly for others.
But let's see the position in the bottom grid.
Another idea: perhaps the bottom 10 images are to be read as 5 pairs, and each pair corresponds to a column in the top grid.
For example, for column 1:
- Bottom img1: basket with green apple
- Bottom img6: basket with mangosteen
Both are basket, so for column 1, use basket for both rows? But the top has only one fruit per column for the first row.
I'm stuck.
Let's think differently. Perhaps the task is to drag or select the correct container for each fruit, and the bottom images are the options, but since it's a grid, we need to fill the cells.
Maybe the empty cells in the top grid are to be filled with the container icon (basket or crate) based on the fruit above.
And the bottom images are examples to learn from.
So for each fruit in the top row, determine if it goes in basket or crate.
From the bottom images, let's see if there's a rule like "if the fruit is round, use crate" etc., but that's vague.
List the fruits and their containers from bottom, and see if we can find a pattern.
Fruit | Container(s)
- Green Apple: Basket
- Red Apple: Crate, Basket
- Purple Spiky: Crate, Basket
- Mangosteen: Crate, Basket
- Orange: Basket
- Green Mango: Crate
No clear pattern.
Perhaps the container is determined by the first letter or something, but that's silly.
Another thought: in the bottom images, when a fruit is in a basket, it might be because it's delicate, but that's not educational.
Let's count how many times each container is used for each fruit, but with ties, it's hard.
Perhaps for the purpose of this task, we can use the following: for each fruit, if it appears in a basket in any example, then it can go in basket, but the problem is to assign one container per fruit for the grid.
I recall that in some puzzles, the bottom images show the correct assignment for the corresponding position.
Let's assume that the top grid's first row corresponds to the bottom's first row of images, and the second row to the bottom's second row.
For top row 1, column 1: fruit is Red Apple. Bottom row 1, col 1: shows a basket (with green apple, but we care about the container). So for this cell, put basket.
Similarly, top row 1, col 2: fruit Orange. Bottom row 1, col 2: crate -> put crate.
Top row 1, col 3: Purple fruit. Bottom row 1, col 3: crate -> put crate.
Top row 1, col 4: Mangosteen. Bottom row 1, col 4: basket -> put basket.
Top row 1, col 5: Mango. Bottom row 1, col 5: crate -> put crate.
For top row 2, col 1: fruit is not specified, but the left icon is crate, and bottom row 2, col 1: basket -> but since the left icon is crate, perhaps we put crate, but that contradicts.
Perhaps for row 2, we use the container from bottom row 2, regardless of the left icon.
So for top row 2, col 1: bottom row 2, col 1: basket -> put basket
Col 2: bottom row 2, col 2: crate (empty) -> put crate
Col 3: bottom row 2, col 3: basket -> put basket
Col 4: bottom row 2, col 4: crate -> put crate
Col 5: bottom row 2, col 5: basket -> put basket
Then the left icons might be decorative or for another purpose.
But the left icons are "basket" for row 1 and "crate" for row 2, which matches what we have for row 1 in some cases, but not all.
In our assignment for row 1, we have: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate — which is not all basket, so the left icon "basket" for row 1 may not mean that all cells in row 1 must be basket; perhaps it's just a label for the row, but the actual container is determined by the bottom images.
Similarly for row 2, left icon is "crate", but we have mixed containers.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the default or something else.
I think the intended solution is to use the container from the bottom images for each corresponding cell.
So for the top grid:
First row (5 cells):
- Col 1: from bottom row 1 col 1: basket
- Col 2: from bottom row 1 col 2: crate
- Col 3: from bottom row 1 col 3: crate
- Col 4: from bottom row 1 col 4: basket
- Col 5: from bottom row 1 col 5: crate
Second row (5 cells):
- Col 1: from bottom row 2 col 1: basket
- Col 2: from bottom row 2 col 2: crate
- Col 3: from bottom row 2 col 3: basket
- Col 4: from bottom row 2 col 4: crate
- Col 5: from bottom row 2 col 5: basket
And the left icons are perhaps to indicate that row 1 is associated with basket-type decisions, but not that all are basket.
So the final answer would be to fill the grid as above.
To write it clearly:
For the first row of empty cells (under the fruits):
- Under Red Apple: basket
- Under Orange: crate
- Under Purple fruit: crate
- Under Mangosteen: basket
- Under Mango: crate
For the second row of empty cells:
- Under Red Apple: basket
- Under Orange: crate
- Under Purple fruit: basket
- Under Mangosteen: crate
- Under Mango: basket
And the left icons are just labels for the rows, not constraints.
I think this is the best we can do.
So the completed grid is:
First row (next to basket icon): basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
Second row (next to crate icon): basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
Now, to box the answer.
Since the question is to solve the problem, and the problem is to fill the grid, I'll provide the filled grid.
Final Answer:
First row (under fruits): 🧺, , 📦, , 📦
Second row: 🧺, 📦, 🧺, 📦, 🧺
Using text:
Row 1: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
Row 2: basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
To match the format, perhaps list the containers for each cell.
Since the user might expect the answer as the filled grid, I'll describe it.
In the context, probably they want the sequence.
So for the first row of empty cells: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
For the second row: basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
I think that's it.
We have a grid at the top with 5 fruits in the first row:
Apple, Orange, Purple fruit (like a plum or berry), Mangosteen (purple with green top), Mango.
Below that, we have two rows of empty boxes — one next to a basket icon, and one next to a crate icon. That means we need to sort each fruit into either “basket” or “crate” based on some rule.
Now look at the bottom part — it shows 10 examples of how fruits are packed:
Top row (left to right):
1. Green apple in basket → so green apple goes in basket
2. Red apple in crate → red apple goes in crate
3. Purple fruit in crate → purple fruit goes in crate
4. Red apple in basket → wait, this contradicts #2? Hmm… maybe not all red apples go same place? Let’s check more.
Wait — actually, looking again:
Actually, let’s list ALL 10 examples clearly:
Row 1:
- Basket: green apple
- Crate: red apple
- Crate: purple fruit
- Basket: red apple ← oh! So red apple can be in BOTH? That doesn’t make sense for sorting. Maybe I’m misreading.
Wait — perhaps the key is NOT the fruit type alone, but something else?
Look again at the bottom images — they show combinations of fruit + container. But notice: some containers are baskets, some are crates. And each image has exactly one fruit inside one container.
But here’s the trick: maybe the rule is about WHICH fruit goes in which container, and we need to match the top row fruits to the correct container based on the examples below.
Let’s list what we see in the bottom 10 images:
Image 1: Basket + Green Apple → Green Apple → Basket
Image 2: Crate + Red Apple → Red Apple → Crate
Image 3: Crate + Purple Fruit → Purple Fruit → Crate
Image 4: Basket + Red Apple → Red Apple → Basket ← contradiction? Unless... maybe it's not about the fruit, but about the position? Or maybe I misidentified.
Wait — let’s label the top row fruits as positions 1 to 5:
Position 1: Red Apple
Position 2: Orange
Position 3: Purple Fruit (spiky top)
Position 4: Mangosteen (round, purple with green cap)
Position 5: Green Mango
Now look at bottom images — there are 10 images, arranged in 2 rows of 5.
Bottom Row 1 (images 1–5):
1. Basket with green apple → not matching any top fruit directly? Top has red apple, not green.
Wait — maybe the green apple is meant to represent the mango? No, mango is separate.
Perhaps the bottom images are showing us the correct pairing for each fruit type, regardless of color variation? But red apple appears in both basket and crate — that can’t be.
Unless... the rule is not about the fruit, but about the CONTAINER TYPE assigned per COLUMN?
Wait — another idea: maybe the top grid is to be filled by matching each fruit to the container shown in the corresponding column of the bottom examples?
Let’s try this:
The bottom has 10 images — 2 rows × 5 columns.
Each column in the bottom corresponds to a column in the top grid.
So Column 1 of bottom:
- Top image: basket with green apple
- Bottom image: basket with mangosteen
Column 2:
- Top: crate with red apple
- Bottom: crate with orange
Column 3:
- Top: crate with purple fruit
- Bottom: basket with yellow fruit (looks like lemon or orange)
This is getting messy.
Alternative approach: Perhaps the bottom images are telling us which container each fruit belongs to, and we ignore duplicates or contradictions by taking majority or first occurrence?
Let’s list each unique fruit from top row and see where it appears in bottom:
Top fruits:
1. Red Apple — appears in bottom:
- Image 2: crate
- Image 4: basket
→ conflict
2. Orange — appears in bottom:
- Image 8: crate (empty crate? no, image 8 is crate with nothing? Wait no — let’s re-express all 10 bottom images properly.
I think I made a mistake in reading the bottom images. Let me describe them accurately:
Bottom section has 10 cells, 2 rows × 5 columns.
Row A (top row of bottom section):
Col1: Basket containing a green apple
Col2: Crate containing a red apple
Col3: Crate containing a purple spiky fruit
Col4: Basket containing a red apple
Col5: Crate containing a mangosteen (purple with green top)
Row B (bottom row of bottom section):
Col1: Basket containing a mangosteen
Col2: Empty crate (just the crate, no fruit)
Col3: Basket containing an orange/yellow fruit
Col4: Crate containing a green mango
Col5: Basket containing a purple spiky fruit
Ah! Now I see — the empty crate in Row B Col2 might be a clue. Also, note that some fruits appear multiple times in different containers.
But perhaps the rule is: for each fruit type, if it appears in a basket in ANY example, then it goes in basket; if only in crate, then crate? But red apple appears in both.
Another idea: maybe the container is determined by the POSITION, not the fruit. For example, column 1 always uses basket, column 2 always uses crate, etc.
Let’s test that.
In bottom section, for each column, what container is used?
Column 1:
- Row A: basket
- Row B: basket
→ both basket → so column 1 = basket
Column 2:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: crate (empty, but still crate)
→ both crate → column 2 = crate
Column 3:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: basket
→ mixed! Not consistent.
Column 4:
- Row A: basket
- Row B: crate
→ mixed
Column 5:
- Row A: crate
- Row B: basket
→ mixed
Only columns 1 and 2 are consistent.
Not helpful.
Back to fruit-based sorting.
Let’s list every fruit-container pair from bottom 10 images:
1. Green Apple → Basket
2. Red Apple → Crate
3. Purple Spiky Fruit → Crate
4. Red Apple → Basket
5. Mangosteen → Crate
6. Mangosteen → Basket
7. [Empty Crate] → no fruit
8. Orange/Yellow Fruit → Basket
9. Green Mango → Crate
10. Purple Spiky Fruit → Basket
Now, group by fruit:
- Red Apple: appears in Crate (img2) and Basket (img4) → conflict
- Purple Spiky Fruit: Crate (img3) and Basket (img10) → conflict
- Mangosteen: Crate (img5) and Basket (img6) → conflict
- Green Apple: Basket (img1) — only once
- Orange: Basket (img8) — only once
- Green Mango: Crate (img9) — only once
The conflicts suggest that maybe the container is not determined solely by fruit type.
Perhaps the task is to copy the container type from the bottom images for each corresponding fruit in the top row, using the first occurrence or something.
But the top row has specific fruits: let's map them to the bottom examples.
Notice that the bottom has 10 images, but the top has only 5 fruits to assign. Maybe we need to find for each top fruit, which container it should go in, based on the majority or the most recent example.
But that seems arbitrary.
Another thought: perhaps the bottom images are showing us the answer for each cell in the top grid. The top grid has 2 rows of 5 empty cells, and the bottom has 2 rows of 5 images, each image showing a fruit in a container. So maybe we just copy the container type from the bottom to the top, ignoring the fruit in the bottom image, and use the fruit from the top row.
For example, for top row position 1 (Red Apple), look at bottom row 1 col 1: it shows a basket, so put Red Apple in basket.
Similarly, top row position 2 (Orange), bottom row 1 col 2: crate, so Orange in crate.
Top row position 3 (Purple fruit), bottom row 1 col 3: crate, so in crate.
Top row position 4 (Mangosteen), bottom row 1 col 4: basket, so in basket.
Top row position 5 (Mango), bottom row 1 col 5: crate, so in crate.
Then for the second row of top grid (next to crate icon), we use bottom row 2:
Top row 2 pos 1: bottom row 2 col 1: basket → but the left icon is crate, so maybe we put the fruit in crate? This is confusing.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the container type for that row. So the first row of empty cells (next to basket icon) should all be filled with baskets, and the second row (next to crate icon) with crates. But that would mean all fruits go in both, which doesn't make sense.
I think I found the correct interpretation.
Look at the bottom 10 images: they are examples of how to pack the fruits. Each image shows a fruit in a container. The task is to determine, for each fruit in the top row, whether it belongs in a basket or a crate, based on the examples.
To resolve conflicts, perhaps we take the first occurrence or the most common.
But let's count for each fruit:
- Red Apple: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Purple Spiky Fruit: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Mangosteen: 1 in crate, 1 in basket → tie
- Green Apple: 1 in basket
- Orange: 1 in basket
- Green Mango: 1 in crate
Since the top row has Red Apple, Orange, Purple Spiky, Mangosteen, Green Mango.
For Orange: only seen in basket → so basket
For Green Mango: only seen in crate → so crate
For Red Apple: tie — but in the bottom, when it's with other fruits, perhaps we can see a pattern.
Notice that in the bottom, the empty crate in row B col 2 might indicate that for that position, no fruit is needed, but that doesn't help.
Another idea: perhaps the container is determined by the color or shape, but that seems unlikely.
Let's look at the bottom images again and see if there's a pattern in the arrangement.
Perhaps the bottom 10 images are to be matched to the top 5 fruits by type, and we use the container from the first time the fruit appears.
For Red Apple: first appears in img2 (crate) → so crate
For Orange: first appears in img8 (basket) → basket
For Purple Spiky: first appears in img3 (crate) → crate
For Mangosteen: first appears in img5 (crate) → crate
For Green Mango: first appears in img9 (crate) → crate
But then for the second row, we have another set.
The top grid has two rows of empty cells, so perhaps we need to fill both rows with the appropriate container for each fruit.
But the left side has basket for first row, crate for second row, so maybe for each fruit, we put it in basket in the first row and crate in the second row? But that would be redundant.
I recall that in such puzzles, often the bottom images show the correct assignment for each column.
Let me try this: the top grid has 5 columns. For each column, the fruit is given in row 1. Then, for that column, the bottom images show what container to use for that fruit in the two rows.
For column 1:
- Top fruit: Red Apple
- Bottom row 1 col 1: basket with green apple — but green apple is not red, so perhaps ignore the fruit in bottom, and take the container: basket
- Bottom row 2 col 1: basket with mangosteen — container: basket
So for column 1, both rows use basket? But the left icon for row 2 is crate, so conflict.
Perhaps for each column, the container for the first row is from bottom row 1, and for the second row from bottom row 2.
And the fruit in the bottom image is irrelevant; only the container matters.
So for top grid:
Row 1 (basket row): for each column, use the container from bottom row 1 of that column.
Row 2 (crate row): for each column, use the container from bottom row 2 of that column.
But then why have the fruit in the bottom images? And the left icons might be misleading.
Let's try that.
For top row 1 (which is next to basket icon, but perhaps that's just a label, not a constraint):
Column 1: bottom row 1 col 1: basket → so put Red Apple in basket
Column 2: bottom row 1 col 2: crate → put Orange in crate
Column 3: bottom row 1 col 3: crate → put Purple fruit in crate
Column 4: bottom row 1 col 4: basket → put Mangosteen in basket
Column 5: bottom row 1 col 5: crate → put Mango in crate
For top row 2 (next to crate icon):
Column 1: bottom row 2 col 1: basket → but the left icon is crate, so perhaps we should use crate? This is inconsistent.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the intended container for that row, and the bottom images are red herrings or for verification.
But that can't be, because then all fruits would go in basket for row 1 and crate for row 2, which is trivial.
I think I need to consider that the bottom images are showing the correct packing for each fruit, and we need to choose the container that is most frequently used for that fruit, or the one that appears in the context.
Let's list all instances:
From bottom 10 images, extract fruit and container:
1. Green Apple - Basket
2. Red Apple - Crate
3. Purple Spiky - Crate
4. Red Apple - Basket
5. Mangosteen - Crate
6. Mangosteen - Basket
7. [no fruit] - Crate (empty)
8. Orange - Basket
9. Green Mango - Crate
10. Purple Spiky - Basket
Now, for the top row fruits:
- Red Apple: appears in 2 and 4 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Orange: appears in 8 -> Basket
- Purple Spiky: appears in 3 and 10 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Mangosteen: appears in 5 and 6 -> Crate and Basket -> 1 each
- Green Mango: appears in 9 -> Crate
For fruits with tie, perhaps we can look at the order or something else.
Notice that in the bottom, for the purple spiky fruit, it is in crate in img3 and basket in img10. Img3 is earlier, so perhaps crate.
Similarly for others.
But let's see the position in the bottom grid.
Another idea: perhaps the bottom 10 images are to be read as 5 pairs, and each pair corresponds to a column in the top grid.
For example, for column 1:
- Bottom img1: basket with green apple
- Bottom img6: basket with mangosteen
Both are basket, so for column 1, use basket for both rows? But the top has only one fruit per column for the first row.
I'm stuck.
Let's think differently. Perhaps the task is to drag or select the correct container for each fruit, and the bottom images are the options, but since it's a grid, we need to fill the cells.
Maybe the empty cells in the top grid are to be filled with the container icon (basket or crate) based on the fruit above.
And the bottom images are examples to learn from.
So for each fruit in the top row, determine if it goes in basket or crate.
From the bottom images, let's see if there's a rule like "if the fruit is round, use crate" etc., but that's vague.
List the fruits and their containers from bottom, and see if we can find a pattern.
Fruit | Container(s)
- Green Apple: Basket
- Red Apple: Crate, Basket
- Purple Spiky: Crate, Basket
- Mangosteen: Crate, Basket
- Orange: Basket
- Green Mango: Crate
No clear pattern.
Perhaps the container is determined by the first letter or something, but that's silly.
Another thought: in the bottom images, when a fruit is in a basket, it might be because it's delicate, but that's not educational.
Let's count how many times each container is used for each fruit, but with ties, it's hard.
Perhaps for the purpose of this task, we can use the following: for each fruit, if it appears in a basket in any example, then it can go in basket, but the problem is to assign one container per fruit for the grid.
I recall that in some puzzles, the bottom images show the correct assignment for the corresponding position.
Let's assume that the top grid's first row corresponds to the bottom's first row of images, and the second row to the bottom's second row.
For top row 1, column 1: fruit is Red Apple. Bottom row 1, col 1: shows a basket (with green apple, but we care about the container). So for this cell, put basket.
Similarly, top row 1, col 2: fruit Orange. Bottom row 1, col 2: crate -> put crate.
Top row 1, col 3: Purple fruit. Bottom row 1, col 3: crate -> put crate.
Top row 1, col 4: Mangosteen. Bottom row 1, col 4: basket -> put basket.
Top row 1, col 5: Mango. Bottom row 1, col 5: crate -> put crate.
For top row 2, col 1: fruit is not specified, but the left icon is crate, and bottom row 2, col 1: basket -> but since the left icon is crate, perhaps we put crate, but that contradicts.
Perhaps for row 2, we use the container from bottom row 2, regardless of the left icon.
So for top row 2, col 1: bottom row 2, col 1: basket -> put basket
Col 2: bottom row 2, col 2: crate (empty) -> put crate
Col 3: bottom row 2, col 3: basket -> put basket
Col 4: bottom row 2, col 4: crate -> put crate
Col 5: bottom row 2, col 5: basket -> put basket
Then the left icons might be decorative or for another purpose.
But the left icons are "basket" for row 1 and "crate" for row 2, which matches what we have for row 1 in some cases, but not all.
In our assignment for row 1, we have: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate — which is not all basket, so the left icon "basket" for row 1 may not mean that all cells in row 1 must be basket; perhaps it's just a label for the row, but the actual container is determined by the bottom images.
Similarly for row 2, left icon is "crate", but we have mixed containers.
Perhaps the left icons indicate the default or something else.
I think the intended solution is to use the container from the bottom images for each corresponding cell.
So for the top grid:
First row (5 cells):
- Col 1: from bottom row 1 col 1: basket
- Col 2: from bottom row 1 col 2: crate
- Col 3: from bottom row 1 col 3: crate
- Col 4: from bottom row 1 col 4: basket
- Col 5: from bottom row 1 col 5: crate
Second row (5 cells):
- Col 1: from bottom row 2 col 1: basket
- Col 2: from bottom row 2 col 2: crate
- Col 3: from bottom row 2 col 3: basket
- Col 4: from bottom row 2 col 4: crate
- Col 5: from bottom row 2 col 5: basket
And the left icons are perhaps to indicate that row 1 is associated with basket-type decisions, but not that all are basket.
So the final answer would be to fill the grid as above.
To write it clearly:
For the first row of empty cells (under the fruits):
- Under Red Apple: basket
- Under Orange: crate
- Under Purple fruit: crate
- Under Mangosteen: basket
- Under Mango: crate
For the second row of empty cells:
- Under Red Apple: basket
- Under Orange: crate
- Under Purple fruit: basket
- Under Mangosteen: crate
- Under Mango: basket
And the left icons are just labels for the rows, not constraints.
I think this is the best we can do.
So the completed grid is:
First row (next to basket icon): basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
Second row (next to crate icon): basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
Now, to box the answer.
Since the question is to solve the problem, and the problem is to fill the grid, I'll provide the filled grid.
Final Answer:
First row (under fruits): 🧺, , 📦, , 📦
Second row: 🧺, 📦, 🧺, 📦, 🧺
Using text:
Row 1: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
Row 2: basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
To match the format, perhaps list the containers for each cell.
Since the user might expect the answer as the filled grid, I'll describe it.
In the context, probably they want the sequence.
So for the first row of empty cells: basket, crate, crate, basket, crate
For the second row: basket, crate, basket, crate, basket
I think that's it.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of logic worksheet.