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The image is a line graph depicting the number of people participating in four different sports from 1985 to 2005. In 1985, Basketball had 180 participants, Tennis had 200, Badminton had approximately 160, and Rugby had 120. By 1990, Basketball increased to 240, Tennis decreased slightly to 190, Badminton grew to nearly 180, and Rugby dropped to 100. In 1995, Basketball participants declined to 220, Tennis decreased to 160, Badminton surged to 220, and Rugby fell further to 60. By 2000, Basketball remained at 220, Tennis dipped to 100, Badminton maintained at 220, and Rugby had about 50 participants. Lastly, in 2005, Basketball participation decreased to 150, Tennis increased to 120, Badminton reduced to 200, and Rugby marginally rose to 60.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The graph illustrates the number of humans attending 4 sports in one area from 1985 to 2005.
Overall, tennis becomes the most popular sport in the region, while rugby loses its popularity throughout the given period. The number of people who play basketball and badminton does not change over time.
The popularity of tennis raises evenly in the first ten years, from 150 sportsmen in 1985 to 200 in 1995. It continues to increase equally, but with different rate – it reaches approximately 225 people in 2005. On the contrar, the number of individuals playing rugby decreases dramatically in the first ten years – from about 250 in 1985, to just over 200 in 1995. After, in 2005 it sharply reaches a bottom of 50 persons.
The lines of basketball and badminton go similarly – they both fall down slightly in the first 5 years of the period, but in different rates. Then, they remain stable until the end with roughly 70 and 50 people playing basketball and badminton respectively.
Word Count: 170