Grade

Type of questions

English Senior High

答えがありません、、 丸つけお願いします

) 次の英文を読み、下記の設問に対する答えとして最も適切なものを選択朋やー④の中から 1 つず 回 つ選びなさい。 Boxing fstsprobabjy began Boxing, a sportin which two people ight by hitting each other with th Howevef ittook along time to develop a8 the frst ime one person punched another in Dlay, not anger the use of padded gloves and allow boxers onlyto hi the activity we know today with rules that require aist and on the front or side。andLdo not allow holding an Opponent ) and ttaly, amd their opponents above their wi twas a popular sport in ancient Greece, Asia Minor (mostly modern day Turkey yas an Olympic event from about 688 BC。 Boxing gloves were apparentjy invented'around 1500, first recorded_boxing although fighting was still mainjy with bare fists for many years after that。 The din 1681zn Britain。 An English nobleman organized the fight between WO ofhis match' was hel Servants) The frst Enghish championzfn 1719.as James Figg and it was 3t this time that the word Boxers stil fought with bare fts and the earliest formal boxing'was first used to describe the sport (They recommended using rules were introduced by another champion、James Broughtoh in 1743 ining butn6Eim actual boxing matches。 jandages or padded mittens to protect the hands in tm Amajor change came when the Queensbury rules were published in LondoNAin 1862。 These rules made wearing gloves necessary, fixed the size of the ringranddecided that each, round should be They became the standard set ofrules three minutes long, wi breaks of one minute between rounds under which all boxing matches were foughtand they became common in the USAandCanad: ground 889. The first world heavyweight championship under the Queensbury rules took place in New Orleans in 1892. Bare fist fighting continued until the late nineteenth centuryalhogh 1aws were passed in Britain and the USA to stop 直 was considered to be a crime 6f violence) even ii he Righters both agreed to the match。 Even today, these fights still take place, and_most of the boxers are 'street jighfers' from poor areas of the world。 They are attracted by the prize moneyiand promoters of these iegal malches can st become very rich、in spite of breaking the law so long as they escape being caught.

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0
English Senior High

色をつけた部分の訳し方をお願いします。

ーー 次の英交を読んで, 後の設問に符えよ。 J Nor long ago, Bernard Levin wrote a piece in which he confessed,|a touch gleefulli, amd asleep。 and ra he loved. but haller ieft him cok artificial This、 coming frOm a art forms more artifcial than at he did not care for balet_ Ope ③ his he put dowm io the fact that he found it jover of opera. 1 found very strange。 There can be few 。 opera. in yhich the characters sing instead oC speak_ repeat things rathermore often an還識 we do in fe in a language which the audience scldom understands and play out a Stor7/ hich bas to be learnt beforehand if one j8 ー Twish TIiked opera. Treally do。 1have made every efforr Well quite a 知w efOrGS エ once heard Rossins TLa Cenerentola' on Radio 3 and enjoyed it a lo fnding it very fanny, ie despite not ( ⑮ ) the story。 There was a producton ( ⑥ ) in London a few months, Jater, so Iwent to see it一 and sat stonyaced throughout the entiro evening The onhy *Pit Tcan remember now was where a messenger yas being dispatched fronu court TgoTgoF he sang -Then go・sang is master ga TgoTago ・Then go, then go sang the chorus famigi 'e replk ttook him about tyo minutes to go. This 1 found quite fanny though 1 dont think ④ it was meant to be: る Butis notthis sort of arGificiality that disturbs me. The reason 1 dont hike opera 5 quite simply that 1 dont like the way they sing 環hnd the lassical convention of singtng whetherin opera or "ieder, so mannered, so alien andL T'snppose so unnatural that it NIS To become a good opera singer you have to gO through years of training in which the voice acquires a "timbre as artificial in its own way as the acting 2s in Noh plays or the dialogue in "situation comedies. Tf you like it is great If you dont @ (area closed プョンjsンartンwhole oo you. T havent discussed this with Bernard Levin for the simple reason that T haVe_neVer met him but I would imagine that there are sounds which he finds equalhy alien 一 the sound of the saxophone in jazz, perhaps or of the electic blues guitar, sounds which are o meat and dripk to me. IS a question of personal taste, perhaps of some kind of personal -chemish- Unfortunately for me。 there are some composers who wrote the kind Tjove but who decided to specialise in vocal music so ⑤ most of their output is o8 me *Bernard Levin : イギリス人ジャーナリスト (1928.2004) "bit : 「(劇, 映画などの) 一場面(部分」 "jieder :「リート : ドイツ歌曲] 単数形は lied。 "situation comedy : 「(テレビ・ラジオの) 6

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0