This video can not be played
Watch: Four year old boy joins Mensa, counts to 100 in six non-native languages
A boy who taught himself to read as a toddler has been accepted as the UK's youngest member of Mensa.
Four-year-old Teddy, from Portishead in Somerset, can count to 100 in six non-native languages, including Mandarin.
Mensa accepts people who score at the 98th percentile or higher on an approved intelligence test.
Teddy's mother, Beth Hobbs, said he learned to read at just 26 months old "by watching children's television and copying the sounds of letters".
"He started tracing the letters and so when we sent him back to nursery after Covid lockdown we told them we thought he'd taught himself how to read," she said.
"We had a phone call back from the nursery, who'd sent a pre-school teacher to check, who said 'yes he can read!'"
It was the latter that particularly astounded Teddy's parents.
"He was playing on his tablet, making these sounds that I just didn't recognise, and I asked him what it was, and he said "Mummy, I'm counting in Mandarin," said Mrs Hobbs.
Teddy was made a member of Mensa when he was three years old, making him the youngest current member of the organisation in the UK.
But his parents said they want him to have a rounded childhood.
"He's starting to figure out that his friends can't read yet and he doesn't know why, but it's very important for us to keep him grounded," Mrs Hobbs said.
"If he can do these things, then fine, but he sees it like 'yes I can read, but my friend can run faster than me', so we've all got our individual talents."
Follow BBC West on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: bristol@bbc.co.uk
Boy, 11, beats Hawking's Mensa score
Mensa
FHS to host free open day in Burnham to raise awareness
Ex-Argos centre in Bridgwater could become Hinkley park and ride site
Permission granted for care home at Orchard Grove in Taunton
Somerset women discuss menopause at work with Superdrug
Nub News plays a role as MPs say the time has come for change in UK publishing industry to ensure fairness and accurate local community reporting
Police seize car on A39 in Street for threadbare tyre
US joins Germany in sending tanks to Ukraine
Trump to be allowed back onto Facebook and Instagram
Director speaks out on misogyny after Oscars snub
Covid losses mount in rural China: 'There are just too many'
Why politicians keep misplacing classified documents
Britain, Spain, Singapore? Gibraltar mulls its future
The family tending war graves for 100 years
Egyptians use loans to buy books as inflation soars
Eating chicken without killing chicken? Video
The growing row over picking judges in India
Oscars 2023: The nominations in full
How to read the Doomsday Clock
The simple error that 16% of us make
Gen Z's latest surprising obsession
A return to old-school Canadian glamour
© 2023 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.