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English Senior High

この話の内容がいまいち理解できません😔 どなたか詳しく教えて頂けると助かります!!!!!!!!!💧 宜しくお願いします!!!!!!!🙇🏽‍♀️🙇🏽‍♀️

0 The English language is full of words which have changed their meanings 3lightly or even dranmatically over the centuries. Changes of meaning can be of a number of I (of の用法)【nice の意味の変遷) different types. Some words, such as nice, have changed gradually. Emotive words tend 例示1企 今例示2 2(文構造) to change more rapidly by losing some of their force, so that awful, which originally とzthe meant ‘inspiring awe', now means Very bad’ or, in expressions such as awfully good, い 5 simply something like *very. In any case, all connection with ‘awe' has been lost. 2 Some changes of meaning, though, seem to attract more attention than others. (0This is perhaps particularly the case where the people who worry about such things 3 (the case where 】 【文構造】 believe that a distinction is being lost. For example, there is a lot of concern at the moment about the words uninterested and disinterested. In modern English, the positive 10 form interested has two different meanings. The first and older meaning is approximately 今説明 4 las の用法) 'having a personal involvement in', as in otniab neit The second and later, but now much more common, meaning is ‘demonstrating or He is an interested party in the dispute. pd cooig 不説明 1s experiencing curiosity in, enthusiasm for, concern for, as in 和 He is very interested in cricket. (2)It is not a problem that this word has more than one meaning. Confusion never 小理由 seems to occur, largely because the context will normally make it obvious which meaning is intended. In all human languages there are very many words which have more than one meaning- this is a very common and entirely normal (3)state of affairs. Most 20 English speakers, for example, can instantly think of a number of different meanings for the words common and state and affairs which I have just used.

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English Senior High

なんで問5はイになるんですか?教えてください!

* Indeed there were severa! "false theories, according to Mr. Popik. Some said New York was the Big Apple because so many desperate people sold apples from carts during *the Great Depression, but the term had existed before that. Others said it was because of the famous apple tree planted in 1647 by Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch *governor of the city, which survived for 220 years on the corner of 13th Street and 3rd Avenue, but the history books show this was a "pear tree. It's difficuit to be totally certain where any word or expression first came frcm. But in 1997 the mayor's office informally accepted Mr. Popik's version of events when it added the name "Big Apple Corner" to the spot where Broadway meets West 54th Street. It was here that the long-forgotten racing reporter Mr. FitzGerald lived for the last 30 years of his life. I can't think of any city with a more famous nickname. (注) term: 葉 etymology: 語源 racetrack: 競馬場 ばてい groom: 馬丁(馬の世話係) thoroughbred: サラブレッド(馬の一品種) tourist board:観光局 false theory: 誤った説 なし the Great Depression: 大恐慌 governor: 植民地総督 pear: 梨 問5 Actording to one of the false theories in the 7th paragraph, the governor Sold many apples from carts : planted a famous apple tree ウ、sold many pears from carts エ, planted a famous pear tree

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