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English Senior High

なぜ人は地球上で単独で生きていけないのか。という質問に対して適切な答え英語で教えてください。お願いします。

0000 000 IPart 2 Enda Environment No one knows for sure the exact number of plant and animal species on the Earth. In fact, we will never know it because scientists find more than 15,000 new species for sure in fact more than~ each year. Plants and animals depend on each other to survive. No single species can exist alone in nature. They all share depend on ~ each other one of the same air, water, and soil. Humans are those species. But we often forget that. against nature s “Man is a part of nature, and his war is inevitably a war against himself,” said Rachel Carson author of Silent Spring. By saying so, she called for a call for ~ change in our view of the natural world. 「SILENT SPRING Rachel Carson Silent Spring (1962) Rachel Carson (1907-1964) was a biologist and conservationist from the U.S. exact ligzékt] species [spi:fi:z] depend [dipéend] survive |sarváiv] exist igzíst] soil [s5il] inevitably [inévitabli] Rachel Carson [réijal ká:rsn] author [5:0arl Jane did it. That's for sure. Ilike this movie. In fact, it's my favorite. | for sure lin fact The writer writes more than 300 pages a |more than~ day. You can depend on Bill to help you. The people at the party all know each other depend on ~ 口each other call for They called for an end to the war.

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English Senior High

1つ目の画像の一番下の行のBecauseから、2枚目終わりまでの和訳を教えていただきたいです。よろしくお願いします。(1枚目と2枚目の文章は繋がっています)

1. Introduction In the 1980s, Japanese financial institutions increased their presence in Western financial markets. Japanese financial institutions had close business relationships with large Japanese corporations (interlocking keiretsu business relationships) and suffered few non-performing loans because of the country's steady economic development, making them the soundest financial institutions in the world. Table1 shows the transition in the eredit ratings of major Japanese financial institutions and demonstrates that in 1988, many Japanese financial institutions were given a top credit rating. However, in the 1990s, the financial condition of Japanese financial institutions deteriorated rapidly as a result of an increase in non-performing loans brought on by an economic slump. For example, Figure 1 shows the changes in the balance of non-performing loans that Japanese banks held. At its peak at March 2002 (i.e., the end of FY 2001), this level exceeded ¥40 trillion. Figure 2 clearly indicates the severity of the problem, and Figures 1 and 2 show that, despite disposing of non-performing loans exceeding ¥10 trillion several years in the late 1990s, the balance of non-performing loans stillincreased. In 1997, the financial condition of major banks grew severe, as evidenced by the failure of institutions such as Hokkaido Takushoku Bank, which had a significant standing among major commercial banks, and Yamaichi Securities, one of the four major security corporations. Many financial institutions that survived with government assistance barely escaped bankruptcy. In the past, Japanese banks were subjugated under extremely strict regulations implemented by the Ministry of Finance. In the 1980s, however, financial globalization progressed, increasing the concern that if the regulations did not change, they may promote the hollowing out of domestic markets. Beginning in 1996, the Japanese government advocated Japanese “Big Bang" financial reforms and fundamentally restructured the regulations. These reforms could have becen viewed as a "constructive" approach to financial regulations for a new cconomic environment. On the other hand, the deterioration of the business conditions of financial institutions progressed at a speed and scale greater than what was anticipated. Because the laws that

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