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English Senior High

回答お願いします。また、どんな話なのかも教えてほしいです🙏

13 20 速読 問題 Reading 1/52 Reading €77 Grammar /16 Writing have no choice but to~ /12 "Unless you're frank here, you'll go hungry all the time." When I was invited to an 次の英文を3分15秒で読んで, 1. の問いに答えなさい。 American woman's house for Christmas, her mother said to me, "We usually don't have a regular breakfast. Will you need breakfast tomorrow?" Out of reserve, I was not able to say "Yes, I will," because (1)that would require her to prepare breakfast for me 5 alone. I had no choice but to say, "No, thank you. (2)Her mother took me at my word, and assumed that I was also in the habit of skipping breakfast. When I was back at the university after the holidays, I (3)brought up the subject with a few Americans. 4)"If you had been in my place, and had needed breakfast, what would you have said?" One person said, "Your friend's mother was being frank, so I'd 00.00% 10 have said frankly, 'If you could prepare a little breakfast, I'm sure I'd enjoy it. (5) Otherwise, I'll eat out." Another person said, "That's not so polite. I'd have asked her politely, 'If you could prepare breakfast for me, I'd appreciate it." They asked me why I had been reluctant to give a frank opinion. I explained the Japanese cultural viewpoint. In Japan, immediately accepting an 15 offer of a meal is regarded as impudent; such an invitation is supposed to be declined at least once. But the host realizes that the guest has declined out of reserve, and makes it a rule to ask a second time. A Japanese guest never insists on being served a meal. The host understands the situation and the feelings of the guest and reacts appropriately. (7) "That idea has no chance at all of working here," one American said with total frankness. She continued, "Unless you're frank here, you'll go hungry all the time." (294 words) /11 reserve [rizá:rv] , be in the habit of ~ing 〜するのが習慣になっている 15 decline [diklain] (丁重に) 断る 19 appropriately [ǝproupriǝtli] 〜するしかない 13 reluctant [rilíktant] 気が進まない 嫌がる 精

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English Senior High

教えてください!

Akemi Hamano, a recruiting consultant at *Hays, says that, with the exception of blue-collar positions, companies are looking for a business level of Japanese ability sufficient for frequent back-and-forth communication and being able to make ( 1 ) together. David Price, client services director at *Robert Half, is more *succinct. "In most cases it's pretty simple - if your co-workers and/or clients can't or won't speak your language, then you must speak (and often read and type) ( 2 )," Price says. At the same time, whereas ( 3 ) for conversational level abilities are high, Alan Adkins, president of *The Refined Group, notes that there is more flexibility when it comes to reading and writing, due to an awareness that learning kanji is hard. The value placed on Japanese ability may not be only related to ease of ( 4 ) top communication. "Many companies also look at business level Japanese ability as a sign of ( 5 ) to Japan as well as solid work ethic as most Japanese people seem to understand how difficult their native language is,” says Anthony Blick, a senior consultant at *PowerUp Solutions. 注) Hays 会社の名前 Robert Half:会社の名前 succinct : 簡潔な The Refined Group : 企業グループの名前 PowerUp Solutions: 会社の名前 ( 1 ) 7. decisions X (2) 7. mine (3) 7. exceptions Y (4) 7. academic X (5) 7. command 7. illustrations 1. yours 1. expectations 1. business 1. commitment . quarrels 7. ours goog . experiences . daily . compassion pre prior 200 I. subscriptions I. theirs I. experiments I. professional I. competition

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English Senior High

これといてください。至急です お願いします 英語分かるかた

2010 解答用紙を6/1(木)に提出 解説は英語でします。 【1】 次の英文を読んで、後の設問に答えよ。 (配点 50) A few years ago, a certain famous university in Japan asked a unique question as its entrance examination in English. The question was this: Write a reply in English to a junior high school student who doesn't like studying. He says he has no intention of going abroad, so he doesn't think he needs to study English. Nor does he want to get a job in which the knowledge of math or science is required. He, therefore, insists that he cannot understand the reason he is forced every day to study subjects he is not interested in. As an entrance examination, it's not very difficult to write an answer to this question. (2) you take it seriously, however, it touches on such a profound aspect of human nature that it is worth thinking about. Fundamentally, why do you have to study? What is learning for? Would you still like to study even if there were no schools or examinations in the world? In my opinion, it is possible to answer such questions from a practical and essential point of view. First, it is not rare for anyone to find changes in their own preferences or desires over time. Sometimes we find ourselves possessing no interest in what we thought to be precious before. Sometimes we are surprised to realize that what we thought to be of little value is so important. So it is quite hard, especially for young people, to predict actually what one will want in the future, say, ten years from now. That's why it is highly desirable for students to prepare for their future by increasing their knowledge and improving their intelligence. Whatever job one may get, it is quite (4) that knowledge or intelligence gets in the way. This can be demonstrated partly by many adults confessing that they should have studied harder. ( 5 ), it's only while one is young that one has a good memory and can absorb and retain a vivid impression of what one has learned. Next, I would like to talk about a more subtle viewpoint. Essentially, no human beings can be satisfied with what they already have, and everyone has, at 1921 the bottom of their heart, the desire for a better existence. Please do not interpret (67 INT this only in terms of materialism or religious belief. Of course, food, clothing. and housing are important. Still, ( 7 ). Also, in the present age, it is difficulí to feel there is anything in the belief that God will come to help you have a better existence some day. Even if all of your basic needs are met, without one important thing, you cannot feel that your life is meaningful. This one thing is the ambition to improve yourself. When you learn something you didn't know before, you will surely feel the satisfaction that no other element in life can give. In this sense, learning will enable you to broaden your world, giving you the joy of knowing. In short, learning is an important way to make your own life richer. (A) 下線 (1) (3) を和訳せよ。 (B) 空所 (2) ( 5 )に入れるのに最も適切なものを、それぞれ次のア~エ の中から1つずつ選び、 その記号を記せ。 (2) 7 Because If (5) 7 For example In conclusion Though In addition What is worse (C) 空所 (4) に入れるのに最も適切な 同じ段落の中から抜き出して、 解答欄に記入せよ。 下線部)が表す内容を、 本文に即して70字以内の日本語で説明せよ。 1931 1. Unless

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English Senior High

赤線の部分の訳と文構造が分かりません。 見ずらくてすいません🙇‍♂️

truly become between two independent individuals who fell in love and decided to make a life Such an important decision, perhaps the most important for themselves. decision of one's life, cannot be made by others. (1) sense. Marriage is But in many cultures it simply doesn't make fundamentally a social bond, uniting families and cementing their cultural and (イ) religious values. It may be romantic, but it is not just about the bride and groom; it's about family and community. Indeed, even in the West for most of history, marriage was not primarily about the individual needs and desires of a man and woman and the children they produced. Marriage had as ( ) to do with getting good in-laws and increasing one's resources and family labor force as it did with finding a lifetime companion and raising a beloved child. or Marriage spoke to the needs of the larger group. 3 Different traditions, different marriages. In India, over 90 percent of the (2) bemarriages are arranged. One survey in 2013 revealed that 74 percent of young 9 Indians aged between 18-35 years said that they would rather let their parents ad choose their life partners than choosing themselves. While the traditiona practice of arranged marriage has been illegal in China since the 1950s, parent remain heavily involved in their children's marital decisions, with many paren trying hard to persuade their children to get married by interrogating the (13) during family gatherings. In Japan, it was not until the early 1960s that le marriages outnumbered arranged ones. Arranged marriages can take a variety of forms ranging from fo marriages (where either the bride or the groom, or both, have no choice in matter) to consensual marriages (where the bride and groom have all 002 - 1

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