A vehicle moving in a group forms a caravan (collection). By the same group-relation, a player belongs to which collective?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Team

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Applying the Recovery-First policy, the stem evidently intends a collection relation: “vehicle → caravan (group/collective)”. The natural parallel is “player → team (group/collective)”. The original word “Prayer” appears to be a typo for “Player”; correcting it preserves solvability without altering core meaning.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • A caravan is a collection or convoy, i.e., many vehicles/units moving together.
  • A team is a collection of players competing together.
  • We aim to keep the “member → collective” mapping.


Concept / Approach:
Use category theory: member → group. Vehicle is to caravan as player is to team. Alternatives like “coach” or “captain” are member roles, not the collective. “Field” is a venue, not a group.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Identify relation: unit → collection. 2) Map to sports: player → team. 3) Eliminate role/venue distractors.


Verification / Alternative check:
In standard collective nouns, caravan (vehicles/people) and team (players) are parallel structures.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Coach/Captain: individuals, not collectives; Field: location; League: a higher-order collection of teams, not the immediate group of a player.


Common Pitfalls:
Mistaking a role (coach, captain) for the collective (team).


Final Answer:
Team

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