Zika was a big deal during the 2016 Olympics, many of the US Women's Soccer team expressed concerns traveling to Brazil due to the virus and future health concerns. One of the most outspoken was the keeper, Hope Solo. Every time she took a goal kick during the games, the crowd yelled "ZIKA!" at her.
9/10, broke a 5-day streak, but no complaints, I had no idea about the pilots thing, I thought for sure it was a 50/50 between departure country and arrival country. Feels crazy to think that even on a flight from China to Vietnam the pilots default to English.
That one took me the longest. I figured that international airports would get flights from dozens of different countries, so they had to use a lingua franca..
Interesting would be whether this is valid for domestic flights, too, when you can be sure everyone is speaking the same language. (Or e.g. in Latin America, flights from Mexico to Chile or Argentina to Peru - everybody speaks the same language.)
Yeah, I did a little googling before bed and found that "aviation English" is indeed a thing, but I didn't look deep enough to know if it applies domestically as well. Very interesting though
As I understand it, strictly speaking, "Aviation English" is only a recommendation from ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization - the UN Agency that coodinates this stuff), not a requirement. But, in practice, it's a de facto rule that commercial airline pilots and air traffic controllers be proficient in it.
It is, however, common practice for domestic flights to conduct communications with ATC in the local language - they might have to be *able* to use Aviation English but (unless local regulations/law etc. says otherwise) they don't necessarily have to do so if the flight crew and controller have another language in common.
I ended up knowing them all, but kept second guessing myself after the string of rough scores over the last month! Oh well, I’m happy my one educated guess was right, and hopeful I can string a few of these together!
I was cruising until Q10, not too quickly mind you, but only guessed on one question. I went with protein powder instead of the red food coloring in a coin flip.
9/10 virus got me, Q7 was a slightly educated guess. Altho I think of cochineal as more of a dye than a food coloring, cloth, cosmetics (Egyptians). Didn't M&M candy stop making red ones, red dye scare?
9/10 with no guesses until a wrong 50/50 guess on the last one. I almost missed yerba mate though because I usually just say mate. Thanks to my one Argentinian friend for teaching me that, Che!
Would have guessed Argentina in any case since it was the only South American option, but knew it immediately as I've been studying the country a bit. My daughter will be headed there as an exchange student in August. :)
Third 10 so far this year, but took it slow, so only educated guesses. As for Czechoslovakia, Atlantic Treaty is, I guess, the North Atlantic Treaty, Congress of Vienna was in 1815, and the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was a non-aggression agreement between Russia and Nazi Germany, which leaves the Munich Agreement.
Yerba mate is a plant used to make a beverage that can be hot or cold. The hot version is widely consumed in Argentina, Uruguay (where the drink is called mate), and southern Brazil (where it is called chimarrão). The cold version is mainly consumed in Paraguay and nearby Brazilian regions, and is called tereré.
It is, however, common practice for domestic flights to conduct communications with ATC in the local language - they might have to be *able* to use Aviation English but (unless local regulations/law etc. says otherwise) they don't necessarily have to do so if the flight crew and controller have another language in common.
The rationale is that other flights can hear the conversation too, so it's safer if every pilot can understand what's being said
Yerba mate was my downfall.