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The image presents a bar graph illustrating the number of university applicants from four countries (China, Japan, USA, and Russia) over five years (2004 to 2008). In 2004, China had approximately 8,000 applicants, Japan about 19,000, USA close to 29,000, and Russia around 12,000. For 2005, applicants from China were approximately 9,000, Japan about 18,000, USA around 30,000, and Russia near 11,000. In 2006, China saw about 10,000 applicants, Japan around 18,000, USA near 31,000, and Russia roughly 15,000. In 2007, China's applicant numbers were about 11,000, Japan remained around 18,000, USA's applicants were approximately 33,000, and Russia's around 16,000. By 2008, China had nearly 12,000 applicants, Japan around 19,000, USA approximately 32,000, and Russia about 15,000.
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The column graph illustrates the number of university applicants from four nations—China, Japan, the USA, and Russia—to a European country over a five-year period (2004–2008).
Overall, China consistently had the highest number of applicants, while Russia remained the lowest throughout the five-year period. Notably, both China and the USA showed clear upward trends, whereas Japan and Russia experienced fluctuations with little overall change.
China dominated applicant numbers, starting at 30,000 in 2004 and peaking at 35,000 in 2008. Similarly, the USA saw steady growth, doubling from 5,000 applicants in 2004 to 10,000 by 2008. Both countries exhibited an upward trajectory, though China’s figures were substantially higher.
Japan’s numbers were more erratic, ranging from 10,000 to 15,000, with a noticeable dip in 2006 before slightly recovering. Russia, on the other hand, showed the least activity, with applicant numbers staying close to 5,000 each year, reflecting minimal variation or growth.
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