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English Senior High

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IR perceptions work>, or 〈how or why [ it does1)〉. our brain evolved (to perceive the way 希望や夢 着る服, 選ぶ職業, 思考, 信頼する人・・・ 信頼しない人などの土台としての役割 知覚が重要なのは、私たちが考え, 知り、信じるすべての物事、例えば私たちの どう訳す? を果たすからだ。 知覚とは,リンゴの味, 海のにおい, 春の魅力, 心地よい都市の雑音, 愛の感覚であり,さらには愛が叶わないことについての会話でさえある。私たちが存在を 理解するうえで最も重要な方法である自己意識は、知覚に始まり知覚で終わる。私たち皆 が恐れる死は、肉体の死というよりも、知覚の死なのである。なぜなら私たちの多くは、 「肉体の死」が起こってからも身の周りの世界を知覚する能力が持続することを知ったらと ても喜ぶであろうからだ。 これは、知覚こそが私たちが人生そのものを味わい、つまり 人生を生き生きとしたものとして感じることを可能にするものだからだ。 しかし、私たち のほとんどは、知覚がどのように,あるいはどうして機能しているのか,また,脳がどの ように,あるいはどうして現在のような知覚の仕組みに進化したのかを知らない。 15 'serve as 〜〜としての役割を果たす / basis 土台 基礎/profession 職業 /trust 圃信頼する /2 enchantment 魅力/glorious 形 すてきな、輝かしい/ impossibility 著名不可能性/3 sense 名 感覚 / essential 形 重要な, 必要不可欠な/end with ~~で終わる /* engage in ~ ~を行う/5 This is because S'V' これはS'V' だか らだ / see A as B AをBとみなす 音読をし When Humans ha that what minds of theories, The a We do no of parado yet the s accessin provide do / with and the number comes 1 5 文法・構文 '3つ目の and は, A, B, C, D, and E の形で, 「知覚が果たす役割」の「具体例」 our hopes the clothes ~ / the professions ~ ~the thoughts~ / the people ~ と羅 列されています。 3 essential は 「重要な」 を表す表現です。 allはweの同格です。 5 because は副詞節を作る接続詞ですが,今回のようにCのカタマリを作ることもありま す。 また, VAasBの形では,今回のようにBに形容詞がくることもあります。 Percep refined percep creativ G you co the ti us to 46 hunte S (Fortunately), the neuroscience of perception offers us a solution. The answer is essential (because it will lead to future innovations [in thought 「重要な」 を表す形容詞 s- 因果関係を示す表現 and behavior in all aspects of our lives, from love to learning]]), next greatest innovation? It's not a technology. S V R 幸いにも、知覚神経科学は私たちに解決策を示し 重要である。 なぜなら、それは愛から学習まで,私たち や行動の将来の革新につながるであろうからだ。 次の 技術ではない。 「ものの見方なのである。 語句 innovation 名革新 / aspect 名 側面 4と5 文法・構文 not A, but B 「Aでけ ⇒p.107)。 から 「but find citie som the beli W tho めて of a ゆ 思考 city 可 ser pe pe ab le 1 is

Resolved Answers: 1
English Junior High

英語の長文についてです。 写真↓の長文の音読に10分も時間がかかりました。5分に縮めるための解決策を教えて下さい。 ○今の自分の読み方 ・読んでいるところを見失わないように指でなぞる ・英文を1語1語読み込みすぎない ・英文を和訳するときに戻り読みをしてない        ... Read More

都立プレOP 1015 次の文章を読んで, あとの各問に答えなさい。 3 (*印がついている単語・語句には、本文のあとに 〔注〕 がある。) Food is useful and delicious. It gives us energy for daily life and many good things for our bodies. But if we do not take care of food, we may get *food poisoning. So, how can food *stay good for a longer time? And what can you do at home to make your food safe? Fresh food does not stay good for a long time. Many foods *go bad in a few days. Some change fast even in a few hours. Warm weather and water make this problem bigger. Very small living things can grow on food and in food. These living things are *microorganisms, and some of them are *bacteria. They can come from the air, hands, tools, and tables. When they become many, food can change. The color can change, and a strange *smell may appear. So people keep creating many ways to *preserve food. This means that food stays good longer, and it is safer to eat. One of the oldest ways is drying. Drying takes water out of food. With less water, microorganisms do not grow fast. Then food can stay good longer. Look at Picture 1. Long ago, people put food under the sun and in the wind for many hours. Dried fish and dried fruit are good examples. Drying makes food light and (1)-a So dried food was useful for travelers on long trips. However, dried food can change quickly after it becomes wet again. So people needed a dry place and a closed bag. 1 II Li Drying can also change the *taste and the feeling in the mouth. For example, grapes can become (1)-b Dried grapes taste good. On the other hand, when a bag of dried food is open on a very easy to carry very small and sawetan take in water. Then it may not taste good, and bacteria may start to grow. After that, the food may go bad soon. boll To make food drier, people used more ideas than just the sun and wind. One idea was salt. Salt could pull water out of food, and the food could become drier. For example, people put salt on fish, and then they put it outside. The fish became dry and very salty. It stayed good for many days, so people could eat it later. Before cooking, people often washed the fish in water, and some salt went away. Another idea was *smoke from a fire. People hung meat or fish over a small fire for many hours. The smoke made the food drier, and it could give a special smell and taste. This food stayed good longer than fresh food. But if the inside was still wet, it could go bad. These ways are still used today in many places.00 yw yron al sobi blo Another old idea is cooling. When the temperature goes down, changes in food become slower. Bacteria also grow more slowly. Today, many homes have a *fridge, but long ago, people used nature. In cold areas, people used snow and ice. In other places, people used cool places in the mountains or cold river water. Later, people built special places for ice. They put ice in ice houses with thick walls, and the ice stayed (1)-c . Look at Picture 2. In Japan, people built a special building. It was a himuro. They used it old for many mice for the summer. In winter, they brought snow and ice from cold places and put them inside. Even today, the same idea is useful. An *ice pack can alad be(2) But it slowly turns cool a lunchbox for some time. 9

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English Senior High

第5段落(⑤)の訳し方が分かりません。 教えてください🙏

5 In Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, on the wall of the Genki Curry (Vitality curry) restaurant here in the Shijocho district, (1)about 30 pieces of paper that look like movie tickets are posted. The papers are known as "Mirai (future) bet V.. 4517 Tickets." allowing anyone (in need) to take one and dine on a free plate of Genki Curry. allow O to do > They are the *brainchild of restaurant manager Shigeru Saito and a friend, who (2) decided to serve curry free of charge to help children and others 料で 理由 struggling in poverty to gain "vitality." When he heard an elementary school #* boy lamenting that he did not have enough money to learn a foreign language 10 Saito thought (about poverty in society) 考えた。 社会における貧困について、 "(3)I started the service, hoping that kindness shown *anonymously would lead to helping someone's future," said Saito, 48. fed, they said. ④ (4) Mirai Tickets are donated by charity-conscious customers who want to help individuals who cannot afford to buy lunch. By handing in an additional 15 200 yen when paying their own bills, customers can post Mirai Tickets (on the wall 形 形 (5 The unique system allows those (with modest but good intentions to treat people in need by paying for their meals. (5) Saito, who comes from Kashihara, also runs an English-language school/in 20 Nara Prefecture. About five years ago, Saito offered a free English-speaking lesson and heard a male elementary schoolboy who took part murmuring, “I envy people who can afford to learn English, because my family does not have much money." ⑦Around that time, the issue of poverty (among children and the elderly 25 started to be reported in the media. 報告され始めた ① 8 "Can I do something to contribute to those *on a tight budget in society?" 9くできない人々に何か貢献すること、 Saito asked his friend Katsunori Inoue, 49, who lives in Osaka and manages a nursing-care facility. The two ( 6 ) the idea of opening a restaurant to serve wtupon~という考え curry and rice (at very inexpensive prices. Sallow O to do ゆのおかけでは…できる 注) brainchild 「発想の産物」 anonymously 「匿名で」 on a tight budget 「経済的に逼迫 (ひっぱく)している」

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English Senior High

赤線部分についてです。私は「any species」を「いかなる種」と訳したのですが、日本語訳や解説を見るに、"any species"は"a species"という意味を表してるそうです。今までanyにひとつの物を限定するイメージを持っておらず、調べてもあまり理解できなか... Read More

2 Unit 20-Cognitive Linguistics- | 519 words / 筑波大 1 識別 One of the most important things that language does for us is help us make distinctions. implicitly, automatically all other When we call something edible, we distinguish it from - R オ 2 5 things that are inedible. When we call something a fruit, we necessarily distinguish it from vegetables, meat, dairy, and so on. 初期の人 組織した。彼らの精神と 基本的な私たちがまた 有効的に ② (1) Early humans organized their minds and thoughts around basic distinctions/that we still make and find useful. One of the earliest distinctions made was between now/and not-now; / these things are happening in the moment these other things happened in the past and are now in my memory. No other species makes this self-conscious distinction among past, present, and future. Of course many species respond to time by building nests, flying south, hibernating", 10 mating but these are preprogrammed, instinctive behaviors and these actions are not the 物体の永抂 result of conscious decision, meditation, or planning. 13 Simultaneous with an understanding of now versus before is one of (2) object permanence: Something may not be in my immediate view, but that does not mean it has ceased to exist. Our 存在をつかむではない? 何かはすぐには見えないかも brains represent objects that are here-and-now as the information comes in from our sensory 2 15 receptors For example, we see a deer and we know through our eyes that the deer is standing n& right before us! When the deer is gone we can remember its image and represent it in our mind's eve, or even represent it externally by drawing or painting or sculpting it. Jon 上の 4 This human capacity to distinguish the here-and-now from the here-and-not-now.showed up 初の記校 なだがここにあって、何がここにあったか at least 50,000 years ago in cave paintings. (3) These constitute the first evidence of any species on 芝援 識別 ひきる 120 earth being able to explicitly represent the distinction between what is here and what was here. In as other words those early cave-dwelling Picassos, through the very act of painting, were making a distinction about time and place and objects, an advanced cognitive operation we now call mental representation* And what they were demonstrating was an articulated sense of time: There was a deer out there (not here on the cave wall of course). He is not there now, but he was there before. 25 Now and before are different; here (the cave wall) is merely representing there (the meadow in front of the cave). This prehistoric step in the organization of our minds mattered a great deal. 5 In making such distinctions, (4) we are implicitly forming categories, something that is often す overlooked The formation of categories in humans is guided by a cognitive principle of wanting 多くの何報をできる! 325 h to encode as much information as possible with the least possible effort. Categorization systems optimize* the ease of conception and the importance of being able to communicate about those hibernate 冬眠する sensory receptor: 感覚受容器 (体の周囲の環境情報を感知する受容器の総称。 目、鼻、耳など) cognitive : 認識の mental representation 的表象(例えば人が「イヌ」を考えるとき、それは頭の中で文字でも映像でも 音でもない 何らかの形で思い描かれるが,この「頭の中の記号」のことを心的表象という) encode:・・・を記号化する optimize ... を最大限にする permeate : ・・・ に広がる 英 6 音

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