
Meet Minho Kang
Minho is one of four contestants competing in The English Race, a language competition that takes teams across Britain and Europe. He grew up in Seoul as the only child of two high-achieving parents, and for a long time his life followed a clear plan. Then he became a competitive swimmer — and then, at eighteen, an injury ended that career before it had properly begun. In this interview, he talks about preparation, precision, and the things he did not expect to find in Britain.
| Word / Phrase | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| methodical | doing things carefully, in a fixed and logical order, without rushing or skipping steps | She was methodical in her preparation — she checked every detail before the presentation began. |
| anticipate | to think about something that will happen and prepare for it in advance | A good chess player tries to anticipate the opponent’s next three moves. |
| discipline | the ability to control your behaviour and make yourself do difficult or unpleasant things when necessary | It takes real discipline to train every morning before school. |
| precise | exact and accurate, with no unnecessary detail and no errors | The instructions were precise — one wrong measurement and the whole experiment would fail. |
| composed | calm and in control of your feelings, especially in a difficult or stressful situation | Despite the chaos around her, she remained composed and kept working. |
| threshold | the point at which something begins or changes; the level you must reach before something happens | He was right at the threshold of exhaustion — one more kilometre and he would have stopped. |
Connect each sentence to the vocabulary word it best describes.
Tap a sentence on the left to select it, then tap the correct word on the right.
Listen to Minho’s Interview
Minho says “I have not fully processed what that meant.” This is the present perfect tense — he uses have not + past participle (processed). He chooses this tense because the situation is still connected to now: the injury happened in the past, but its effect on him is ongoing. Compare: “I didn’t process it” (simple past — finished) vs “I haven’t processed it” (present perfect — still unresolved). Listen for this tense when people talk about unfinished emotional situations.
Why did Minho accept his parents’ plan for his life without question?
Why was swimming so important to Minho?
What does Minho say about his shoulder injury?
What lesson did the Edinburgh challenge teach Minho?
What does Minho mean when he says his partner is “one of the things he did not prepare for”?
- Minho says that for a long time, his parents’ plan “felt like structure, not like a cage.” Have you ever followed a plan — for school, work, or your future — that felt right at first but later felt limiting? What changed?
- Minho admits that in Edinburgh, he “described the facts of a door” while his partner told a story — and she scored higher. Do you think it is more important to have all the facts, or to communicate well? Can you think of a time when one mattered more than the other?
- Minho says he “has not fully processed” losing swimming. Is there something in your own life that you have not fully processed? You do not need to share it — but think about why some experiences take longer than others to understand.
Next in the series : Ádám Tóth