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The Toyota eQ/Scion iQ EV is based on Toyota's three generations of FT-EV concept. Shown is the Toyota FT-EV III concept car at the 2011 Tokyo Motor Show. A prototype of the Toyota eQ (Scion iQ EV in the US) was exhibited at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show. The Scion iQ EV is the successor to the FT-EV II as an electric vehicle based on the Toyota ...
iQ: iQ: 2012 2015 N/A Front-engine, front-wheel drive three-door hatchback city car. xA: xA: 2004 2006 Toyota NBC platform: Subcompact hatchback, rebadged Toyota Ist. xB: xB: 2003 2015 Toyota NBC platform. Toyota New MC platform. Subcompact hatchback (2003-2006), compact hatchback (2007-2015).
Scion vehicles This page was last edited on 22 May 2010, at 06:59 (UTC) . Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ; additional terms may apply.
Toyota iQ#Toyota eQ/Scion iQ EV To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
Pages in category "Scion vehicles" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. ... Scion iQ Concept; T. Scion tC; X. Scion xA; Scion xB; Scion xD
Scion was a marque of Toyota that debuted in 2003 and was available only in the United States and Canada. The marque was intended to appeal to younger customers: the Scion brand emphasized inexpensive, stylish, and distinctive sport compact vehicles, and used a simplified "pure price" sales concept that eschewed traditional trim levels and dealer haggling.
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Several studies have reported that children enrolled in ECE increase their IQ scores by 4–11 points by age five, while a Milwaukee study reported a 25-point gain. [61] In addition, students who had been enrolled in the Abecedarian Project , an often-cited ECE study, scored significantly higher on reading and math tests by age fifteen than ...