Grammar
Vocabulary
Exsportise
British Culture
Sport
100

Complete: “If I ___ known, I would have called you.”

had

100

Give a synonym for “difficult.”

hard, challenging

100

What is the colour of Exsportise?

orange

100

Name 4 things you will find in a traditional “full English breakfast”?

bacon, eggs, beans, sausage, tomatoes, mushrooms, toast


100

How many sets do you need to win a men’s Grand Slam tennis match?

3 (out of 5)

200

Rewrite in passive: “They have completed the project.”

The project.....

...has been completed

200

What does the phrasal verb “give up” mean?

to stop trying, or to stop a habit

200

Which is NOT an Exsportise sport? Golf, football, rugby, basketball, hockey, gymnastics, horse-riding, dance.

gymnastics

200

What animal is a symbol of England?

A LION

200

How many goals do you need to score a hat-trick?

3

300

Change to reported speech: “I will visit tomorrow,”


She said....

She said she would visit tomorrow

300

What’s the noun form of “achieve”?

achievement

300

What year did Exsportise start?

1988

300

Who was the Queen of England before King Charles III

QUEEN ELIZABETH II

300

Explain the term “love” in tennis scoring.

Zero points

400

“It's too late now. You ___ have told me earlier!”

should (or could)

400

I made/did/played/said a difficult decision

made

400

Why is Exsportise orange?

Because Bram (the big boss) is from The Netherlands and their national colour is orange

400

Where is Big Ben located?

LONDON

400

What is a “canter” in horse-riding?

A controlled three-beat gallop

500

Combine using a relative clause: “The man lives next door. He is a teacher.”

The man who....

The man who lives next door is a teacher

500

Explain the idiomatic expression “to hit the nail on the head.”

to describe exactly what is causing a situation/problem

500

What is the slogan of Exsportise? Tell me and I forget, teach me and I remember, ________ and I _______

INVOLVE ME and I LEARN

500

What is the name of the river that runs through London?

The Thames

500

What does “to sprint” mean?

To run at full speed, usually for a short distance