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English Junior High

添削お願いします🙇🏻‍♀️՞ 写真は左から、原文、問題、自分の解答です。 模範解答は、 D.Why don't you ask my mother and grand mother? E.They will tell you more about my red kimono... Read More

(Nana is showing Kate a photo at home.) Kate: You are wearing a red kimono in this photo. Nana: Thank you. My mother took it at my uncle's wedding. Kate: The flower pattern on your kimono is amazing. Nana: That's true. It's my family's precious kimono. Kate: Why is the kimono precious? Nana: Actually, is bought my grandmother I this the kimono ] for my mother thirty years ago. Kate: Oh, you used your mother's kimono. Nana: Yes, but she gave it to me last year. So the kimono is ( @). Kate: Why did your mother give it to you? Nana: This red kimono has long sleeves. She thinks this kind of kimono is for young people, so she doesn't wear it now. Kate: I have a ( ℗ ) experience. My mother has a nice dress in her closet, but she doesn't wear it. I always wear it when I go to birthday parties. Nana: I'm sure your friends like the dress. Kate: Thanks. When I wear it, ⠀ Nana: : The designs of old clothes are different from the new ones, right? み Kate: Yes! I think wearing used clothes is fun. ( © ), wearing other people's clothes isn't easy because of the size. Actually, my mother's dress was large for me, so she adjusted it. Who adjusted your kimono? Nana: B Sonimom vis ns diwalls of WH Kimono has a simple shape, so it can be used easily by different people. Kate: Interesting. Kimono is not only beautiful but also functional. Nana: Right, so I love kimono. I'm glad to give my red kimono a new life. Kate: C Nana: If I wear my red kimono, it will have more chances to get out of the closet like your mother's dress. Kate: That's a good idea to use the kimono again. smozgnilos ayoung H Nana: I'll wear it on special days!

Resolved Answers: 1
English Junior High

この問題の(1)→remind recollect rememberの違いについて解説して欲しく (2)何が対象のcoverか について詳しく教えて欲しいです。二枚目の選択肢にピンク丸をつけたものが正解です。

Test 1 READING AND USE OF ENGLISH Part 1 For questions 1-8, read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each gap. There is an example at the beginning (0). Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. 12 33 4 Example: 0 A gather C find B produce D gain A B Alfred Wainwright Alfred Wainwright came from a relatively poor family but managed to (0) ...ain qualifications in 鍼 accountancy. However it is not for his skill in accountancy that he is (1) yemem but for his pictorial guidebooks to the English Lake District. bered The Lake District is in the north-west of England and (2) Covers, an area of some 2,292 square kilometres. As its name (3) implies, it is an area of lakes and mountains. Alfred first went there on a walking holiday in 1930 and immediately fell in love with the area. He (4) divided the Lake District into seven parts and wrote a guide for each of them. The guides (5) consist entirely of copies of his hand-written manuscripts. All have descriptions of walks with hand-drawn maps and sketches of views from the summits of the different mountains. He intended the books to be just for his own personal (6) use... but was eventually (7) publish them. They are beautiful books which (8) ........ remain as popular as ever. to persuaded 5 276

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

12行め なぜ文字数制限を課していたら何らかの素早く簡単にメッセージを打つための新機能が必要なのですか、? あと右ページの日本語訳の最後の段落が何言ってるかわかりません、そもそも栗田はガラケーの絵文字を作った人ですか?

音読をしよう! 【06 reasone 正 Tiny smiling faces, // hearts, // a knife and fork, // or a clenched fist/ have become a global language for mobile phone messages. // Successors to ancient hieroglyphics, ina sense, // pictures of those emoji are now displayed in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. // Despite their almost universal presence, they started in 1998 with one Japanese man// a then 25-year-old employee of a mobile phone company called NTT DoCoMo, // who created the first set of 176 emoji in one month, // as he rushed to make a deadline. happened to arrive at the idea. // If I hadn't done it, // someone else would have," // said Shigetaka Kurita, // who now is a board member of another technology company in Tokyo. / “Digital messaging was just getting started, // so I was thinking about what was needed. // Here was Kurita's challenge: // NTT DoCoMo's mobile Internet service at that time. // named “i-mode," // limited messages to 250 characters, // which definitely called for some kind of new tool to write quickly and easily. // "Japanese tend to be outstanding when making the most of limitations. // It's a small nation filled with limitations," // said Kurita. // "We do well at carrying out tasks within a framework, // rather than being given a free hand." // In addition, // a message saying / "What are you doing now?" // could be threatening or annoying.// Adding a smiling face, // however, // could calm the tone down. // Kurita collected common images / including public signs, // weather symbols, // and comic book style pictures. // Then, // with simple lines, // he made five faces // happy / angry,/ sad surprised/ and puzzled. // A smiling happy face is still one of his favorites. // Following i-mode's launch in 1999, // the emoji became an immediate hit in Japan. // As we all know, // some visual images cross cultural gaps. // A drop of sweat rolling down a cheek can represent anxiety in almost any culture. // So, it was no surprise that major Western enterprises like Apple or Google / soon made emoji a global phenomenon/ "Perhaps because of the popularity of the iPhone, // Apple's emoji style became extremely influential, // to the point that when most people on this planet think of emoji, /// they bring to mind Apple's," // said Jason Snell, // a technology journalist. // Kurita doesn't care. // The dozen-member team that designed i-mode was making something for Japan, // not for the rest of the world, // long before smartphones were invented. // "Japanese are always too ahead of our time," / Kurita said. // "I think Galapagos is OK. // It's cool" // he said, // referring to the name of the remote Pacific islands with uniquely evolved animals, // used in Japan to describe its own insularity // "After all, / how can Japan hope to win from the start as a global standard? // We always go ahead with our own ways in Japan, // and then people abroad will see it as wonderfully Japanese." // @called chでを訪ねる ②~するほどにまで 存在 Presenti度している 現在の 日本語訳 小さな笑顔//ハート,//ナイフとフォーク, // 握りこぶしは / 携帯電話のメッセージで使わ れる世界共通語となっている。 //古代の象形文字を受け継いでいる, // ある意味では // こういっ 絵文字は今ではほとんど世界中で使われているが, // 最初は1998年に1人の日本人男性から始 た絵文字の画像が現在ニューヨーク近代美術館に展示されている。 // 個の最初の絵文字一式を作り出した//締め切りに間に合うように急いでいたときに。 //「私はた またまこのアイディアに行き着いたんです。 // もし私がやっていなくても、 // 他の誰かがやったこ まったのだった。 //彼は当時25歳の, NTTドコモという携帯電話会社の社員で, //1か月で17 止めている。/「電子メッセージがちょうど始まりつつあるところだったので必要なものを考え とでしょう」 //と栗田崇は述べた。 //彼は現在、東京にある他のテクノロジー企業の取締役を務 ていたのです。」// セージを打つための何らかの新機能が間違いなく必要とされていたのだ。 // 「日本人は制限を最 大限に活用することにかけては傑出している傾向にあります。 //制限でいっぱいの 小さな国です 栗田の挑戦は次のようなものだった。 // 当時のNTTドコモの携帯インターネットサービスは、 「iモード」という/メッセージに250文字の文字数制限を課していたので、素早く簡単にメッ から」 // と栗田は述べた。 // 「私たちは枠組みの中で業務を遂行するほうがうまくいくのです// 由裁量に任されるよりも。」// さらに,//・・・というメッセージは/「今何してるの?」 // 脅すような雰囲気になったり、うっとう しがられたりしかねない。 // 笑顔を付け加えれば, // しかし//トーンを和らげられるかもしれな い。// 栗田は、 よく使われる画像を集めた/公共の標識・・・などの、 // 天気記号//漫画風イラスト// それから/シンプルな線で, //彼は5つの顔を作った。 // 嬉しそうな顔 /怒っている/ 悲しそうな顔, /驚いている顔, / そして困っている顔である。 // 嬉しそうに笑っている頭は今 でも彼のお気に入りの1つだ。 // 1999年にiモードのサービスが開始されたのに続いて 字は日本ですぐにヒットした。 // 知っての通り、視覚イメージの中には文化の隔たりを超えるものもある。 頬を伝って落 る1滴の汗は、不安を表し得るほとんどあらゆる文化において。そのため、AppleやGoogleの ような西洋の大手企業が…ことは驚くようなことではなかった/絵文字をすぐに世界的な現象にし た。 // 「おそらく iPhone の人気によって, // Appleの絵文字スタイルがきわめて有力となり、 地球上のほとんどの人が、 絵文字といえば・・・ほどでしょう/Appleの絵文字を思い浮かべる と、ジェイソン・スネルは述べた//技術ジャーナリストの Lesson 6 たのであって、 //世界の他の国々のために作っていたわけではないのだ/スマートフォンが発明 されるずっと前// 「日本人はいつも、時代の先を行き過ぎているのです」と栗田は述べた 栗田は気にしていない。//iモードを設計した12人組のチームは日本のために何かを作ってい ラパゴス携帯 [ガラパゴス文化] はよいと思いますよ。 // かっこいいです」と彼は言い/ 自に進化した動物が住んでいる遠く離れた太平洋の諸島の名前を出したその孤立した環境を表 すために日本で使われている。 // 「そもそも日本が、 どうして最初から世界標準規格として勝つ ことが見込めるでしょうか(見込めるはずがありません)。私たちは常に日本独自のやり方で めていきすると海外の人々がそれを非常に日本的だとみなすのです。」// 12 112 113

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TOEIC・English Undergraduate

この長文問題の答えと解説をお願いします。

15 語数: 398 語 出題校 法政大 5 We are already aware that our every move online is tracked and analyzed. But you 2-53 couldn't have known how much Facebook can learn about you from the smallest of social interactions - a 'like'*. (1) Researchers from the University of Cambridge designed (2) a simple machine-learning 2-54 system to predict Facebook users' personal information based solely on which pages they had liked. E "We were completely surprised by the accuracy of the predictions," says Michael 2-55 Kosinski, lead researcher of the project. Kosinski and colleagues built the system by scanning likes for a sample of 58,000 volunteers, and matching them up with other 10 profile details such as age, gender, and relationship status. They also matched up those likes with the results of personality and intelligence tests the volunteers had taken. The team then used their model to make predictions about other volunteers, based solely on their likes. The system can distinguish between the profiles of black and white Facebook users, 15 getting it right 95 percent of the time. It was also 90 percent accurate in separating males and females, Democrats and Republicans. Personality traits like openness and intelligence were also estimated based on likes, and were as accurate in some areas as a standard personality test designed for the task. Mixing what a user likes with many kinds of other data from their real-life activities could improve these predictions even more. 20 Voting records, utility bills and marriage records are already being added to Facebook's database, where they are easier to analyze. Facebook recently partnered with offline data companies, which all collect this kind of information. This move will allow even deeper insights into the behavior of the web users. 25 30 (3) - Sarah Downey, a lawyer and analyst with a privacy technology company, foresees insurers using the information gained by Facebook to help them identify risky customers, and perhaps charge them with higher fees. But there are potential benefits for users, too. Kosinski suggests that Facebook could end up as an online locker for your personal information, releasing your profiles at your command to help you with career planning. Downey says the research is the first solid example of the kinds of insights that can be made through Facebook. "This study is a great example of how the little things you do online show so much about you,” she says. "You might not remember liking things, " but Facebook remembers and (4) it all adds up.", * a 'like': フェイスブック上で個人の好みを表示する機能。 日本語版のフェイスブックでは「いいね!」 と表記される。 2-56 2-57 2-58 36

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English Senior High

英語のこの問題の解答をおしえてほしいです。おねがいします!

・あなたは、外国人の知り合い (Jake) から、Eメールで質問を受け取りました。 この質問にわかりやすく答え る返信メールを、【 】に英文で書きなさい。 ・あなたが書く返信メールの中で、 Jake のEメール文中の下線部について,あなたがより理解を深めるため 下線部の特徴を問う具体的な質問を2つしなさい。 ・あなたが書く返信メールの中で【 】に書く英文の語数の目安は 40語~50語です。 解答は、解答用紙の裏面にあるEメール解答欄に書きなさい。なお、解答様の外に書かれたものは採点され ません。 ・解答が Jake のEメールに対応していないと判断された場合は、0点と採点されることがあります。Jake の E メールの内容をよく読んでから答えてください。 Hi! 】 の下の Best wishes, の後にあなたの名前を書く必要はありません。 Guess what! My parents gave me a camera for my birthday last week. I was very happy because I'd never ow ned a camera before. I take photos with it every day. I'll take a picture of you the next time I see you. Taking photos is great fun, but my camera has too many functions. I don't know how to use them all. Do you think cameras will become more popular in the future? Your friend, Jake Hi, Jake! Thank you Best wishes, for your e-mail.

Unresolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

答えあっていますでしょうか🥲🥲

20. This is a very large theater. It has a seating ( Dcapacity 2 ability ) of 3,200. 3 possibility 21. "Can you tell me where Niiza Station is?" "I'm sorry but I'm a ( 1 local ) here." 2 beginner (3) 初めての人 probability in ③ stranger 4 regular <跡見学園女子大〉 Aを自由に操る ant 4 way 〈札幌大〉 22. Educated in the U.S., Kozue has a good () of English. have a good command of A ① tongue 23. I have no ( 1 knowledge ②command 2 command o 3 use ) what he wants for his birthday. have no idea ②idea 3 consideration ④eagerness brfis m'l (B) 24. When you have time, please drop me a ( Daine 2 ring ) at kyorin@kyorin.ac.jp. drop A a line に一筆書き林大 3 phone 4 call 25. Let's go to the movies tonight. I'll look at some websites and ( see what's playing. ⑰give 2 offer Do 3 sell ) you a ring after I & give Aaring Aに電話を 4 buy かける 〈中央大 > 2 次の英文の下線部には誤っている箇所が1箇所ある。 その番号を選び, 正しい形に直しなさい。 一不可 26. Passengers should check their luggages with the airline agent at the ticket counter. luggage 〈国士舘大〉 27. I found that I had completed only about two third of the work I should have done so far. 19 〈西南学院大〉 ④ 1 thirds 3+ ZUKI ③ ③ 次の日本文の意味になるように,( )内の語を並べかえて適切な英文を作りなさい。 pany 28. 警察が提示した証拠をもって、彼の有罪は疑いの余地がなくなったようだ。 With the evidence presented by the police, there (no / doubt /for/room / about / seemed / be/his/to) guilt. w seimong alam seemed to be no room for doubt about his nomin 29. ここへ来るのに1時間半かかりました。 It (here / come / and /to/a/ one / took / hours / half ). G 〈関西外国語大〉 aib (1) yag of wend l'o took one and a half hours to come here

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