Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Question for Oct 21 - PS

Below is a set of images that are ordered and exhaustive (the second image is missing).

Identify what the images represent.

A)


C)


D)


E)


F)


7 comments:

Nikhil said...

Had to check online what the first pic meant (bogie) before I figured this out...

Bogie, Par, Birdie, Eagle, Albatross and Condor: golf scores (1, 0, -1, -2, -3, -4 shots with respect to par)

Actually this is NOT an exhaustive list. Double bogies, triple bogies etc. exist and are all too common.

Ankur said...

Golf Scores?
A) Bogey
C) Birdie
D) Eagle
E) Albatross or Double Eagle
F) Condor

B) The missing one would be Par

If my ans is right... you have got the images wrong, at least E and F.
E is no way an albatross (unless its a flying eagle which counts as a double eagle). F looks to docile to be a condor.

Gaurav Kane said...

The dude in the play looks like Elvis.. So summat to do with him? Thats my flimsy guess...

shiv said...

Something to do with The rolling stones?

Hariharasudhan Viswanathan said...

I think something to do with terms (points system) in Golf. Birdie, Eagle and so on. Sorry, couldn't be particular as I do not know all the terms.

Kiran Vyakaranam said...

These are the nicknames for scores in golf. Going from F to A they are Condor (4 under par), Albatross (3 under par), Eagle (2 under par), Birdie (one under par), Par and Bogey (for all over par scores - single, double, triple etc). Nice question although I don't know what the bye bye clue is. Also as far as I remember the train compartments in India were called "bogies" not "bogeys"...

The Answer said...

Terms for Golf scores: Bogie, Par (the missing picture), Birdie, Eagle, Albatross and Condor: 1, 0, -1, -2, -3, -4 shots with respect to par.

The blurred word in the second picture is Birdie, its the picture of the broadway Bye Bye Birdie.

Congrats Nikhil, Ankur, Hari, Kiran.