It has occured to me that the entire badminton club of my university is composed of Chinese people, give or take a few. Why is this sport(along with ping-pong) so popular among Chinese?
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It has occured to me that the entire badminton club of my university is composed of Chinese people, give or take a few. Why is this sport(along with ping-pong) so popular among Chinese?
For table-tennis, I think I've solved the mystery; 8)
Maybe because having so many people, China doesn't have enough space to fit real life-size tennis courts, so instead they made little ones to put on their kitchen tables. :P :dunno:
But then it would make no sense why they have so many badminton courts. Maybe shuttlecocks are easier to mass-produce than tennis balls, or something. ;)
They also like to use a thing that looks a bit like a shuttlecock, it's larger, and they kick it and try to keep it up in the air as long as possible.
Other activities they like: skipping rope ( I mean young adults in big groups) - maybe it's just a recent craze, and my favorite, get up early in the morning and go jogging with them, and you'll see people walking backwards :o
It's difficult to explain why one culture prefers one sport over another. Football (soccer) is popular all around the world, I think that's because it needs so little in terms of equipment. I saw villagers in northern Thailand playing it with a ball made out of leaves or something :)
Football has some popularity here, but basketball is the guys' sport of choice.
You were in Northern Thailand? Northern-northern or northeast? Geez, man, I shoud just toss my EE degree and travel the world as an English teacher like you. Don't you have a degree in nuclear physics, BTW? :oQuote:
I saw villagers in northern Thailand
Northern-northern (Chiang Mai area). This was years ago, but I'll always remember that image of the universality of footie :)Quote:
Originally Posted by Pravit
Delai shto zahochesh :)Quote:
Geez, man, I shoud just toss my EE degree and travel the world as an English teacher like you.
Yes, my MSc is in unclear physics. It has been used sparingly :)Quote:
Don't you have a degree in nuclear physics, BTW? :o
Unclear physics?!!! :lol:Quote:
Originally Posted by waxwing
I practice that, as... I got 35%.
It was my little joke Brett .. I had a feeling people might think it was a misprint .. :)
Actually I've seen a sign recently somewhere on the net - it's a road sign in China and it says in English "Unclear power plant .. 8 miles" :o
Waxwing, did you read the book Физики продолжают шутить?:)
Ядрёная физика? ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by waxwing
Well, that would be a good translation :)
But I think I prefer the English one, it's somehow "scarier" ...
Ah OK :) . Well, my comment still stands - I practice UNclear physics, and I am excedingly proficent at it.Quote:
Originally Posted by waxwing
I think that UNclear physics in the Chiang Mai area is usually referred to as poppy growing.
they don't use badminton courts in china...they play anywhere and everywhere here...seriously...
on the sidewalk in front of your apartment building, around your apartment complex's grounds, in front of stores, in front of your school, at your school, in front of restaurants...i've seen em playing about everywhere...basically, anywhere where you can stand and hit a birdie at another person...
and never a net between them...have yet to see a single net in the 14 and 1/2 months i've been here...
No net, huh? So they're just a bunch of peace-loving hippies playing hackey-sack? How cute! :)
Friendy, я не знаю как waxwing, а я так давно хотела найти "физики шутят" в интернете. :) :) Спасибо!
I play badminton all the time now. I have been assimilated...