0 of 10 Questions completed
Questions:
You have already completed the quiz before. Hence you can not start it again.
Quiz is loading…
You must sign in or sign up to start the quiz.
You must first complete the following:
0 of 10 Questions answered correctly
Your time:
Time has elapsed
You have reached 0 of 0 point(s), (0)
Earned Point(s): 0 of 0, (0)
0 Essay(s) Pending (Possible Point(s): 0)
Which description of motorcycle racers mentions: “Being great at modifying his racing motorbike”
Burt Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, best remembered for his remarkable Bonneville records. Born to a farmer, he was initially forced to take up the family profession. Munro’s father never supported his wish to see the world outside his farm, which gave rise to Munro’s passion for motorbikes. He not only raced on motorbikes but had also given two of his beloved bikes, an ‘Indian Scout’ and a ‘Velocette MSS,’ some advanced makeovers. Munro had set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938, eventually setting seven more of such records. He had travelled to the Bonneville Salt Flats 10 times, competing 9 times and setting 3 records, one of which still remains unbroken. Munro was 63 when he managed to overcome several obstacles to set world records. He set his last record while riding a 47-year-old bike. Besides his speed, Munro was known for his bike transformation skills. Munro’s inspiring story and achievements have been the subject of the film ‘The World’s Fastest Indian’ (2005). His son has made a career in automobile transformation and inventions. | C. | Jorge Lorenzo is a professional Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who achieved fame at a very early age after winning five world championships. Competing in professional racing since his early teenage days, he went on to win the 2006 and 2007 250cc World Championships. He then started competing in the MotoGP class as part of the Yamaha team and has already won three titles and has finished as the runners-up three times. He recently ended his longtime association with Yamaha and switched to Ducati for the current season of the MotoGP race. His multiple premier class title wins made him the first Spanish racer to achieve this feat. Throughout his career, he has won 65 races, which places him fifth on the list of all-time winners in the GP motorcycle racing. He supported the Oxfam international confederation’s initiative to assist the victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. He has worn sponsored protective gear from Dainese for the most part of his early career, following which he started to represent another brand, Alpinestars. He endorsed the smartphone racing game, ‘Zopo Speed 7 GP’, made by Chinese company Zopo Mobile. |
Valentino Rossi, the ultimate idol of international motorbike racing, is one of the most talented and successful motorbike racers ever. Harbouring a passion for racing at a very young age, he won his first world racing title at the age of 18. Since then, he never missed a race and has been making records, one after another. Undoubtedly, he is on the track to becoming a motorbike legend or rather, he is one already! The Italian sensation who turned 34 this year, is also known for being a bit superstitious, especially, before competing in any race. His pre-ride rituals, as they are called, include bending down and holding the right-side foot-peg of his bike with his head bowed. For this he once made a statement, “It’s just a moment to focus and ‘talk’ to my bike, like moving from one place to the next.” Today, he is one of the most famous celebrities and is one of the greatest sportspersons. His achievements in the sport make him the most successful racer ever. However, this coveted racer is quite discreet about his personal life and likes to stay off the radar. | D. | Guy Martin is a British lorry-mechanic who is best known as a motorcycle racer and a television presenter. Born and raised in Lincolnshire, Guy’s father was also a lorry mechanic and a part-time Isle of Man TT racer. He also sold bikes to make the ends meet. Guy was highly impressed by his father and he developed an affection for truck engines and motorbikes at a very young age. Guy started his career in his late teen years and started working as an apprentice as a lorry mechanic. In the late 1990s, he assisted his father in the 1997 Manx Grand Prix where his father was a racer. In 1998, at the age of 18, Guy started racing himself and debuted on the road circuits at the Isle of Man TT in 2004. He raced for more than a decade following his debut and during a 2015 Ulster Grand Prix, he got into an accident and broke his back. He kept racing amidst the rumours of retiring though. In 2011, he made his debut television appearance on a documentary related to TT racing and followed that by hosting several television programmes about engineering and racing such as ‘Speed with Guy Martin’. |
Which description of motorcycle racers mentions: “Showing a high social solidarity”
Burt Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, best remembered for his remarkable Bonneville records. Born to a farmer, he was initially forced to take up the family profession. Munro’s father never supported his wish to see the world outside his farm, which gave rise to Munro’s passion for motorbikes. He not only raced on motorbikes but had also given two of his beloved bikes, an ‘Indian Scout’ and a ‘Velocette MSS,’ some advanced makeovers. Munro had set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938, eventually setting seven more of such records. He had travelled to the Bonneville Salt Flats 10 times, competing 9 times and setting 3 records, one of which still remains unbroken. Munro was 63 when he managed to overcome several obstacles to set world records. He set his last record while riding a 47-year-old bike. Besides his speed, Munro was known for his bike transformation skills. Munro’s inspiring story and achievements have been the subject of the film ‘The World’s Fastest Indian’ (2005). His son has made a career in automobile transformation and inventions. | C. | Jorge Lorenzo is a professional Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who achieved fame at a very early age after winning five world championships. Competing in professional racing since his early teenage days, he went on to win the 2006 and 2007 250cc World Championships. He then started competing in the MotoGP class as part of the Yamaha team and has already won three titles and has finished as the runners-up three times. He recently ended his longtime association with Yamaha and switched to Ducati for the current season of the MotoGP race. His multiple premier class title wins made him the first Spanish racer to achieve this feat. Throughout his career, he has won 65 races, which places him fifth on the list of all-time winners in the GP motorcycle racing. He supported the Oxfam international confederation’s initiative to assist the victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. He has worn sponsored protective gear from Dainese for the most part of his early career, following which he started to represent another brand, Alpinestars. He endorsed the smartphone racing game, ‘Zopo Speed 7 GP’, made by Chinese company Zopo Mobile. |
Valentino Rossi, the ultimate idol of international motorbike racing, is one of the most talented and successful motorbike racers ever. Harbouring a passion for racing at a very young age, he won his first world racing title at the age of 18. Since then, he never missed a race and has been making records, one after another. Undoubtedly, he is on the track to becoming a motorbike legend or rather, he is one already! The Italian sensation who turned 34 this year, is also known for being a bit superstitious, especially, before competing in any race. His pre-ride rituals, as they are called, include bending down and holding the right-side foot-peg of his bike with his head bowed. For this he once made a statement, “It’s just a moment to focus and ‘talk’ to my bike, like moving from one place to the next.” Today, he is one of the most famous celebrities and is one of the greatest sportspersons. His achievements in the sport make him the most successful racer ever. However, this coveted racer is quite discreet about his personal life and likes to stay off the radar. | D. | Guy Martin is a British lorry-mechanic who is best known as a motorcycle racer and a television presenter. Born and raised in Lincolnshire, Guy’s father was also a lorry mechanic and a part-time Isle of Man TT racer. He also sold bikes to make the ends meet. Guy was highly impressed by his father and he developed an affection for truck engines and motorbikes at a very young age. Guy started his career in his late teen years and started working as an apprentice as a lorry mechanic. In the late 1990s, he assisted his father in the 1997 Manx Grand Prix where his father was a racer. In 1998, at the age of 18, Guy started racing himself and debuted on the road circuits at the Isle of Man TT in 2004. He raced for more than a decade following his debut and during a 2015 Ulster Grand Prix, he got into an accident and broke his back. He kept racing amidst the rumours of retiring though. In 2011, he made his debut television appearance on a documentary related to TT racing and followed that by hosting several television programmes about engineering and racing such as ‘Speed with Guy Martin’. |
Which description of motorcycle racers mentions: “Being the first person from his country to win in different categories”
Burt Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, best remembered for his remarkable Bonneville records. Born to a farmer, he was initially forced to take up the family profession. Munro’s father never supported his wish to see the world outside his farm, which gave rise to Munro’s passion for motorbikes. He not only raced on motorbikes but had also given two of his beloved bikes, an ‘Indian Scout’ and a ‘Velocette MSS,’ some advanced makeovers. Munro had set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938, eventually setting seven more of such records. He had travelled to the Bonneville Salt Flats 10 times, competing 9 times and setting 3 records, one of which still remains unbroken. Munro was 63 when he managed to overcome several obstacles to set world records. He set his last record while riding a 47-year-old bike. Besides his speed, Munro was known for his bike transformation skills. Munro’s inspiring story and achievements have been the subject of the film ‘The World’s Fastest Indian’ (2005). His son has made a career in automobile transformation and inventions. | C. | Jorge Lorenzo is a professional Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who achieved fame at a very early age after winning five world championships. Competing in professional racing since his early teenage days, he went on to win the 2006 and 2007 250cc World Championships. He then started competing in the MotoGP class as part of the Yamaha team and has already won three titles and has finished as the runners-up three times. He recently ended his longtime association with Yamaha and switched to Ducati for the current season of the MotoGP race. His multiple premier class title wins made him the first Spanish racer to achieve this feat. Throughout his career, he has won 65 races, which places him fifth on the list of all-time winners in the GP motorcycle racing. He supported the Oxfam international confederation’s initiative to assist the victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. He has worn sponsored protective gear from Dainese for the most part of his early career, following which he started to represent another brand, Alpinestars. He endorsed the smartphone racing game, ‘Zopo Speed 7 GP’, made by Chinese company Zopo Mobile. |
Valentino Rossi, the ultimate idol of international motorbike racing, is one of the most talented and successful motorbike racers ever. Harbouring a passion for racing at a very young age, he won his first world racing title at the age of 18. Since then, he never missed a race and has been making records, one after another. Undoubtedly, he is on the track to becoming a motorbike legend or rather, he is one already! The Italian sensation who turned 34 this year, is also known for being a bit superstitious, especially, before competing in any race. His pre-ride rituals, as they are called, include bending down and holding the right-side foot-peg of his bike with his head bowed. For this he once made a statement, “It’s just a moment to focus and ‘talk’ to my bike, like moving from one place to the next.” Today, he is one of the most famous celebrities and is one of the greatest sportspersons. His achievements in the sport make him the most successful racer ever. However, this coveted racer is quite discreet about his personal life and likes to stay off the radar. | D. | Guy Martin is a British lorry-mechanic who is best known as a motorcycle racer and a television presenter. Born and raised in Lincolnshire, Guy’s father was also a lorry mechanic and a part-time Isle of Man TT racer. He also sold bikes to make the ends meet. Guy was highly impressed by his father and he developed an affection for truck engines and motorbikes at a very young age. Guy started his career in his late teen years and started working as an apprentice as a lorry mechanic. In the late 1990s, he assisted his father in the 1997 Manx Grand Prix where his father was a racer. In 1998, at the age of 18, Guy started racing himself and debuted on the road circuits at the Isle of Man TT in 2004. He raced for more than a decade following his debut and during a 2015 Ulster Grand Prix, he got into an accident and broke his back. He kept racing amidst the rumours of retiring though. In 2011, he made his debut television appearance on a documentary related to TT racing and followed that by hosting several television programmes about engineering and racing such as ‘Speed with Guy Martin’. |
Which description of motorcycle racers mentions: “Practising a unique habit before the race starts”
Burt Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, best remembered for his remarkable Bonneville records. Born to a farmer, he was initially forced to take up the family profession. Munro’s father never supported his wish to see the world outside his farm, which gave rise to Munro’s passion for motorbikes. He not only raced on motorbikes but had also given two of his beloved bikes, an ‘Indian Scout’ and a ‘Velocette MSS,’ some advanced makeovers. Munro had set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938, eventually setting seven more of such records. He had travelled to the Bonneville Salt Flats 10 times, competing 9 times and setting 3 records, one of which still remains unbroken. Munro was 63 when he managed to overcome several obstacles to set world records. He set his last record while riding a 47-year-old bike. Besides his speed, Munro was known for his bike transformation skills. Munro’s inspiring story and achievements have been the subject of the film ‘The World’s Fastest Indian’ (2005). His son has made a career in automobile transformation and inventions. | C. | Jorge Lorenzo is a professional Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who achieved fame at a very early age after winning five world championships. Competing in professional racing since his early teenage days, he went on to win the 2006 and 2007 250cc World Championships. He then started competing in the MotoGP class as part of the Yamaha team and has already won three titles and has finished as the runners-up three times. He recently ended his longtime association with Yamaha and switched to Ducati for the current season of the MotoGP race. His multiple premier class title wins made him the first Spanish racer to achieve this feat. Throughout his career, he has won 65 races, which places him fifth on the list of all-time winners in the GP motorcycle racing. He supported the Oxfam international confederation’s initiative to assist the victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. He has worn sponsored protective gear from Dainese for the most part of his early career, following which he started to represent another brand, Alpinestars. He endorsed the smartphone racing game, ‘Zopo Speed 7 GP’, made by Chinese company Zopo Mobile. |
Valentino Rossi, the ultimate idol of international motorbike racing, is one of the most talented and successful motorbike racers ever. Harbouring a passion for racing at a very young age, he won his first world racing title at the age of 18. Since then, he never missed a race and has been making records, one after another. Undoubtedly, he is on the track to becoming a motorbike legend or rather, he is one already! The Italian sensation who turned 34 this year, is also known for being a bit superstitious, especially, before competing in any race. His pre-ride rituals, as they are called, include bending down and holding the right-side foot-peg of his bike with his head bowed. For this he once made a statement, “It’s just a moment to focus and ‘talk’ to my bike, like moving from one place to the next.” Today, he is one of the most famous celebrities and is one of the greatest sportspersons. His achievements in the sport make him the most successful racer ever. However, this coveted racer is quite discreet about his personal life and likes to stay off the radar. | D. | Guy Martin is a British lorry-mechanic who is best known as a motorcycle racer and a television presenter. Born and raised in Lincolnshire, Guy’s father was also a lorry mechanic and a part-time Isle of Man TT racer. He also sold bikes to make the ends meet. Guy was highly impressed by his father and he developed an affection for truck engines and motorbikes at a very young age. Guy started his career in his late teen years and started working as an apprentice as a lorry mechanic. In the late 1990s, he assisted his father in the 1997 Manx Grand Prix where his father was a racer. In 1998, at the age of 18, Guy started racing himself and debuted on the road circuits at the Isle of Man TT in 2004. He raced for more than a decade following his debut and during a 2015 Ulster Grand Prix, he got into an accident and broke his back. He kept racing amidst the rumours of retiring though. In 2011, he made his debut television appearance on a documentary related to TT racing and followed that by hosting several television programmes about engineering and racing such as ‘Speed with Guy Martin’. |
Which description of motorcycle racers mentions: “Getting a demand from his family about his future profession”
Burt Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, best remembered for his remarkable Bonneville records. Born to a farmer, he was initially forced to take up the family profession. Munro’s father never supported his wish to see the world outside his farm, which gave rise to Munro’s passion for motorbikes. He not only raced on motorbikes but had also given two of his beloved bikes, an ‘Indian Scout’ and a ‘Velocette MSS,’ some advanced makeovers. Munro had set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938, eventually setting seven more of such records. He had travelled to the Bonneville Salt Flats 10 times, competing 9 times and setting 3 records, one of which still remains unbroken. Munro was 63 when he managed to overcome several obstacles to set world records. He set his last record while riding a 47-year-old bike. Besides his speed, Munro was known for his bike transformation skills. Munro’s inspiring story and achievements have been the subject of the film ‘The World’s Fastest Indian’ (2005). His son has made a career in automobile transformation and inventions. | C. | Jorge Lorenzo is a professional Spanish Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who achieved fame at a very early age after winning five world championships. Competing in professional racing since his early teenage days, he went on to win the 2006 and 2007 250cc World Championships. He then started competing in the MotoGP class as part of the Yamaha team and has already won three titles and has finished as the runners-up three times. He recently ended his longtime association with Yamaha and switched to Ducati for the current season of the MotoGP race. His multiple premier class title wins made him the first Spanish racer to achieve this feat. Throughout his career, he has won 65 races, which places him fifth on the list of all-time winners in the GP motorcycle racing. He supported the Oxfam international confederation’s initiative to assist the victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. He has worn sponsored protective gear from Dainese for the most part of his early career, following which he started to represent another brand, Alpinestars. He endorsed the smartphone racing game, ‘Zopo Speed 7 GP’, made by Chinese company Zopo Mobile. |
Valentino Rossi, the ultimate idol of international motorbike racing, is one of the most talented and successful motorbike racers ever. Harbouring a passion for racing at a very young age, he won his first world racing title at the age of 18. Since then, he never missed a race and has been making records, one after another. Undoubtedly, he is on the track to becoming a motorbike legend or rather, he is one already! The Italian sensation who turned 34 this year, is also known for being a bit superstitious, especially, before competing in any race. His pre-ride rituals, as they are called, include bending down and holding the right-side foot-peg of his bike with his head bowed. For this he once made a statement, “It’s just a moment to focus and ‘talk’ to my bike, like moving from one place to the next.” Today, he is one of the most famous celebrities and is one of the greatest sportspersons. His achievements in the sport make him the most successful racer ever. However, this coveted racer is quite discreet about his personal life and likes to stay off the radar. | D. | Guy Martin is a British lorry-mechanic who is best known as a motorcycle racer and a television presenter. Born and raised in Lincolnshire, Guy’s father was also a lorry mechanic and a part-time Isle of Man TT racer. He also sold bikes to make the ends meet. Guy was highly impressed by his father and he developed an affection for truck engines and motorbikes at a very young age. Guy started his career in his late teen years and started working as an apprentice as a lorry mechanic. In the late 1990s, he assisted his father in the 1997 Manx Grand Prix where his father was a racer. In 1998, at the age of 18, Guy started racing himself and debuted on the road circuits at the Isle of Man TT in 2004. He raced for more than a decade following his debut and during a 2015 Ulster Grand Prix, he got into an accident and broke his back. He kept racing amidst the rumours of retiring though. In 2011, he made his debut television appearance on a documentary related to TT racing and followed that by hosting several television programmes about engineering and racing such as ‘Speed with Guy Martin’. |
Which description of badminton players mentions: “Winning all major titles in badminton”
A. | P. V. Sindhu is a professional badminton player from India who rose to prominence after earning a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. With her victory, she became the first and youngest Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal. She has already won a lot of medals for her country, which helped her receive the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award, the country’s top two sporting honours. Sindhu was interested in badminton after watching Pullela Gopichand win the All England Badminton Championship in 2001. P. V. Divya, Sindhu’s elder sister, was a national-level handball player. She, on the other hand, was not interested in continuing a career in professional athletics and instead became a doctor. While being born into a sports-loving family may have aided her, her coach, Pullela Gopichand, believes that her perseverance and passion for the game are the cause of her success. | C. | Lin Dan is a Chinese badminton player who is widely regarded as one of the best singles players of all time. By the age of 28, he had won all nine major titles in badminton. He is now the only player to have accomplished this accomplishment and is widely regarded as the finest badminton player to have ever graced the sport. Peter Gade dubbed the player “Super Dan,” and he surely lived up to his moniker. He is not just a two-time Olympic champion, but he is also the first men’s singles player to retain the Olympic gold medal, having won in 2008 and defending his championship in 2012. Given his incredible success, it’s no wonder that his interest in badminton began at a young age. He began playing the sport at the age of five and became a professional as a teenager. He is well-known not just for his exceptional playing abilities, but also for his fiery demeanor and furious outbursts. |
B. | Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player who is ranked among the world’s top women’s badminton players and has won a number of championships. Nehwal first attended the Campus School on the Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University campus, but the family relocated to Hyderabad after a few years. She graduated from St. Anne’s College Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad. It was in the new city that she learnt the game’s intricacies. Nani Prasad was Nehwal’s childhood coach. S. M. Arif, an award-winning badminton coach, subsequently trained her. When she won the Under-19 national championships as a teenager, Nehwal rose from strength to strength as she swiftly refined her game and began collecting significant awards on the professional tour. The most significant victory of her career, though, was unquestionably her bronze medal performance in the London Olympics in 2012. | D. | Malaysian badminton star Lee Chong Wei has been dubbed “Dato” and is regarded as a national hero because of his years of exceptional performance. He began learning badminton at the age of eleven, influenced by his father. He would work out with a local coach every day after school. Misbun Sidek, Malaysia’s former top badminton player, found him and selected him into the national squad when he was 17 years old. Throughout his career, he has won multiple gold medals, including one at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 and another in Delhi in 2010. From August 2008 to June 2012, he was rated World Number 1 in singles for 199 weeks in a row. He is the only Malaysian badminton player to retain the number one position for more than a year. His biography, ‘Dare to be a Champion,’ was published in 2012 and quickly became a best-seller in his home nation. |
Which description of badminton players mentions: “Winning a bronze medal in the Olympics”
A. | P. V. Sindhu is a professional badminton player from India who rose to prominence after earning a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. With her victory, she became the first and youngest Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal. She has already won a lot of medals for her country, which helped her receive the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award, the country’s top two sporting honours. Sindhu was interested in badminton after watching Pullela Gopichand win the All England Badminton Championship in 2001. P. V. Divya, Sindhu’s elder sister, was a national-level handball player. She, on the other hand, was not interested in continuing a career in professional athletics and instead became a doctor. While being born into a sports-loving family may have aided her, her coach, Pullela Gopichand, believes that her perseverance and passion for the game are the cause of her success. | C. | Lin Dan is a Chinese badminton player who is widely regarded as one of the best singles players of all time. By the age of 28, he had won all nine major titles in badminton. He is now the only player to have accomplished this accomplishment and is widely regarded as the finest badminton player to have ever graced the sport. Peter Gade dubbed the player “Super Dan,” and he surely lived up to his moniker. He is not just a two-time Olympic champion, but he is also the first men’s singles player to retain the Olympic gold medal, having won in 2008 and defending his championship in 2012. Given his incredible success, it’s no wonder that his interest in badminton began at a young age. He began playing the sport at the age of five and became a professional as a teenager. He is well-known not just for his exceptional playing abilities, but also for his fiery demeanor and furious outbursts. |
B. | Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player who is ranked among the world’s top women’s badminton players and has won a number of championships. Nehwal first attended the Campus School on the Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University campus, but the family relocated to Hyderabad after a few years. She graduated from St. Anne’s College Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad. It was in the new city that she learnt the game’s intricacies. Nani Prasad was Nehwal’s childhood coach. S. M. Arif, an award-winning badminton coach, subsequently trained her. When she won the Under-19 national championships as a teenager, Nehwal rose from strength to strength as she swiftly refined her game and began collecting significant awards on the professional tour. The most significant victory of her career, though, was unquestionably her bronze medal performance in the London Olympics in 2012. | D. | Malaysian badminton star Lee Chong Wei has been dubbed “Dato” and is regarded as a national hero because of his years of exceptional performance. He began learning badminton at the age of eleven, influenced by his father. He would work out with a local coach every day after school. Misbun Sidek, Malaysia’s former top badminton player, found him and selected him into the national squad when he was 17 years old. Throughout his career, he has won multiple gold medals, including one at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 and another in Delhi in 2010. From August 2008 to June 2012, he was rated World Number 1 in singles for 199 weeks in a row. He is the only Malaysian badminton player to retain the number one position for more than a year. His biography, ‘Dare to be a Champion,’ was published in 2012 and quickly became a best-seller in his home nation. |
Which description of badminton players mentions: “Being the youngest woman of her nationality to win an Olympic silver medal”
A. | P. V. Sindhu is a professional badminton player from India who rose to prominence after earning a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. With her victory, she became the first and youngest Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal. She has already won a lot of medals for her country, which helped her receive the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award, the country’s top two sporting honours. Sindhu was interested in badminton after watching Pullela Gopichand win the All England Badminton Championship in 2001. P. V. Divya, Sindhu’s elder sister, was a national-level handball player. She, on the other hand, was not interested in continuing a career in professional athletics and instead became a doctor. While being born into a sports-loving family may have aided her, her coach, Pullela Gopichand, believes that her perseverance and passion for the game are the cause of her success. | C. | Lin Dan is a Chinese badminton player who is widely regarded as one of the best singles players of all time. By the age of 28, he had won all nine major titles in badminton. He is now the only player to have accomplished this accomplishment and is widely regarded as the finest badminton player to have ever graced the sport. Peter Gade dubbed the player “Super Dan,” and he surely lived up to his moniker. He is not just a two-time Olympic champion, but he is also the first men’s singles player to retain the Olympic gold medal, having won in 2008 and defending his championship in 2012. Given his incredible success, it’s no wonder that his interest in badminton began at a young age. He began playing the sport at the age of five and became a professional as a teenager. He is well-known not just for his exceptional playing abilities, but also for his fiery demeanor and furious outbursts. |
B. | Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player who is ranked among the world’s top women’s badminton players and has won a number of championships. Nehwal first attended the Campus School on the Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University campus, but the family relocated to Hyderabad after a few years. She graduated from St. Anne’s College Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad. It was in the new city that she learnt the game’s intricacies. Nani Prasad was Nehwal’s childhood coach. S. M. Arif, an award-winning badminton coach, subsequently trained her. When she won the Under-19 national championships as a teenager, Nehwal rose from strength to strength as she swiftly refined her game and began collecting significant awards on the professional tour. The most significant victory of her career, though, was unquestionably her bronze medal performance in the London Olympics in 2012. | D. | Malaysian badminton star Lee Chong Wei has been dubbed “Dato” and is regarded as a national hero because of his years of exceptional performance. He began learning badminton at the age of eleven, influenced by his father. He would work out with a local coach every day after school. Misbun Sidek, Malaysia’s former top badminton player, found him and selected him into the national squad when he was 17 years old. Throughout his career, he has won multiple gold medals, including one at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 and another in Delhi in 2010. From August 2008 to June 2012, he was rated World Number 1 in singles for 199 weeks in a row. He is the only Malaysian badminton player to retain the number one position for more than a year. His biography, ‘Dare to be a Champion,’ was published in 2012 and quickly became a best-seller in his home nation. |
Which description of badminton players mentions: “An emotional person”
A. | P. V. Sindhu is a professional badminton player from India who rose to prominence after earning a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. With her victory, she became the first and youngest Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal. She has already won a lot of medals for her country, which helped her receive the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award, the country’s top two sporting honours. Sindhu was interested in badminton after watching Pullela Gopichand win the All England Badminton Championship in 2001. P. V. Divya, Sindhu’s elder sister, was a national-level handball player. She, on the other hand, was not interested in continuing a career in professional athletics and instead became a doctor. While being born into a sports-loving family may have aided her, her coach, Pullela Gopichand, believes that her perseverance and passion for the game are the cause of her success. | C. | Lin Dan is a Chinese badminton player who is widely regarded as one of the best singles players of all time. By the age of 28, he had won all nine major titles in badminton. He is now the only player to have accomplished this accomplishment and is widely regarded as the finest badminton player to have ever graced the sport. Peter Gade dubbed the player “Super Dan,” and he surely lived up to his moniker. He is not just a two-time Olympic champion, but he is also the first men’s singles player to retain the Olympic gold medal, having won in 2008 and defending his championship in 2012. Given his incredible success, it’s no wonder that his interest in badminton began at a young age. He began playing the sport at the age of five and became a professional as a teenager. He is well-known not just for his exceptional playing abilities, but also for his fiery demeanor and furious outbursts. |
B. | Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player who is ranked among the world’s top women’s badminton players and has won a number of championships. Nehwal first attended the Campus School on the Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University campus, but the family relocated to Hyderabad after a few years. She graduated from St. Anne’s College Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad. It was in the new city that she learnt the game’s intricacies. Nani Prasad was Nehwal’s childhood coach. S. M. Arif, an award-winning badminton coach, subsequently trained her. When she won the Under-19 national championships as a teenager, Nehwal rose from strength to strength as she swiftly refined her game and began collecting significant awards on the professional tour. The most significant victory of her career, though, was unquestionably her bronze medal performance in the London Olympics in 2012. | D. | Malaysian badminton star Lee Chong Wei has been dubbed “Dato” and is regarded as a national hero because of his years of exceptional performance. He began learning badminton at the age of eleven, influenced by his father. He would work out with a local coach every day after school. Misbun Sidek, Malaysia’s former top badminton player, found him and selected him into the national squad when he was 17 years old. Throughout his career, he has won multiple gold medals, including one at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 and another in Delhi in 2010. From August 2008 to June 2012, he was rated World Number 1 in singles for 199 weeks in a row. He is the only Malaysian badminton player to retain the number one position for more than a year. His biography, ‘Dare to be a Champion,’ was published in 2012 and quickly became a best-seller in his home nation. |
Which description of badminton players mentions: “Making use of his/her spare time as a student to practice badminton”
A. | P. V. Sindhu is a professional badminton player from India who rose to prominence after earning a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. With her victory, she became the first and youngest Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal. She has already won a lot of medals for her country, which helped her receive the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award, the country’s top two sporting honours. Sindhu was interested in badminton after watching Pullela Gopichand win the All England Badminton Championship in 2001. P. V. Divya, Sindhu’s elder sister, was a national-level handball player. She, on the other hand, was not interested in continuing a career in professional athletics and instead became a doctor. While being born into a sports-loving family may have aided her, her coach, Pullela Gopichand, believes that her perseverance and passion for the game are the cause of her success. | C. | Lin Dan is a Chinese badminton player who is widely regarded as one of the best singles players of all time. By the age of 28, he had won all nine major titles in badminton. He is now the only player to have accomplished this accomplishment and is widely regarded as the finest badminton player to have ever graced the sport. Peter Gade dubbed the player “Super Dan,” and he surely lived up to his moniker. He is not just a two-time Olympic champion, but he is also the first men’s singles player to retain the Olympic gold medal, having won in 2008 and defending his championship in 2012. Given his incredible success, it’s no wonder that his interest in badminton began at a young age. He began playing the sport at the age of five and became a professional as a teenager. He is well-known not just for his exceptional playing abilities, but also for his fiery demeanor and furious outbursts. |
B. | Saina Nehwal is an Indian badminton player who is ranked among the world’s top women’s badminton players and has won a number of championships. Nehwal first attended the Campus School on the Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University campus, but the family relocated to Hyderabad after a few years. She graduated from St. Anne’s College Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad. It was in the new city that she learnt the game’s intricacies. Nani Prasad was Nehwal’s childhood coach. S. M. Arif, an award-winning badminton coach, subsequently trained her. When she won the Under-19 national championships as a teenager, Nehwal rose from strength to strength as she swiftly refined her game and began collecting significant awards on the professional tour. The most significant victory of her career, though, was unquestionably her bronze medal performance in the London Olympics in 2012. | D. | Malaysian badminton star Lee Chong Wei has been dubbed “Dato” and is regarded as a national hero because of his years of exceptional performance. He began learning badminton at the age of eleven, influenced by his father. He would work out with a local coach every day after school. Misbun Sidek, Malaysia’s former top badminton player, found him and selected him into the national squad when he was 17 years old. Throughout his career, he has won multiple gold medals, including one at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne in 2006 and another in Delhi in 2010. From August 2008 to June 2012, he was rated World Number 1 in singles for 199 weeks in a row. He is the only Malaysian badminton player to retain the number one position for more than a year. His biography, ‘Dare to be a Champion,’ was published in 2012 and quickly became a best-seller in his home nation. |