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English Senior High

英語 これの答えなんだと思いますか?解いてみたのですが答えがなくて自信がありません。15番の選択肢は①ago ②from now ③past ④in です。 答えだけでかまいませんお願いします🙇‍♀️

A frosty Novemper morning decorates the leafless trees to perfection. When I went up the hill, the white frost was sparkling, and the of milky mist hanging in the air. 6 trees arose on all sides. There were layers The frost has not yet taken to lingering* on the trees in the morning. The air was soon mild. When I went to plant a new tree just received from the nursery*, a gentle moistnes prevailed. Planting trees is pleasant work, encouraging I dug the hole, the soil moved easily beneath the spade, soft and damp. thought about the future, and especially 7 so when conditions are as favorable as this. The weak roots settle 9 into the loam and compost and bone-meal*, pressed into the pit that has been dug; and the infant" thing, little more than a twig, is magnified in the 10 into a handsome and graceful maturity. The village has responded readily 11 the urgings* to plant more trees. In various corners single saplings* are being installed; where more space is available, groups are being planted. A decision as to 12 is not arrived at without much discussion, opinion being split, in general terms, between decorative exoties which put on a great show of blossom and those less showy trees, unfortunately slower in growth, which are more 13 to the village scene. To my relief the latter choice has been preferred. My immediate contribution has been to plant on the grassy edge of the lane which passes my house. 14 there is no room_for anything tall, I chose a white hawthorn*, and as I set it in the earth I could picture it giving pleasure to people who will walk along this lane many years 15 long after I am dead. [注] linger「とどまる」、nursery「苗床」 loam and compost and bone-meal 「黒土(ローム)と堆肥と骨粉」 infant「未発達の」、urging「奨励」、sapling「苗木」、 hawthorn 「セイョウサンザシ」 問6 0 green 2 rich 3 bare fallen 6 問7 0 Below As ③ Though Above 7 間8 0 for 2) dark ③ pessimistic の optimistic 8 問9 0 up hard unresistingly with difficulties 9 問10 0 imagination 2 real ③ future の life 10 問11 0 for ③ to by 11 on 問12 0 the way of planting の what to plant ③ how to plant 0 plant or not 12 問13 の traditional 2 colorful ③ dangerous 0 against 13 問140 If As long as 3 Unless Since 14

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English Senior High

この問題の答えわかる人いたら教えてください

The authoe w wsu In the beginning I wrote my diary on the backs of paper place mats. My friend and 答問題) 口次の英文は、筆者が20歳の頃に書き始めた日記についての話である。英文を読んで、あ le I were hitchhiking at the time. I was mailing regular letters and posteards to my friends back home, but because I had no fixed address, no one could answer them との間いに答えよ。 (配点 40) d And so I began writing to myself. Those first several years are hard to reread, not Seven is trulya wonderful age. For two days. That's the length of time my friend because they're boring-a diary is fully licensed to be boring- but because the writne is so horribly *affected. Pam and her son, Tyler, who is in the second grade, normally visit. He's at the stage (注)*conviction =確信 *repository =宝庫 where whatever I do, he wants to do. This includes wearing button-down shirts; singing * devotion =専念, 献身 *affected =気取った the same song until everyone begs you to stop; and carrying a small reporter's notebook. I gave him one the last time he came to the house and, imitating me, he stuck it in his pocket alongside a pen. That afternoon my friend drove us to a nearby town. There was 番号で答えよ。 an issue of the local paper in the backseat of the car, and reading it on our way there, I 2 1 came upon a headline that read, "Dangerous Olives Could Be on Sale." “Hmm, I said, and I copied it into my littlenotebook. l Tyler did the same but with less *conviction. "Why are we doing this again?" “It's for your diary," I explained. “You write things down during the day, then v tomorrow morning you expand on them." 4 “But why?" he asked. “What's the point?" ャ 3 That's a question I've asked myself every day since September 5, 1977. I hadn't known on September 4 that the following afternoon I would start keeping a diary, or that it would consume me for the next thirty-five years and counting. It wasn't something Td been putting off, but once I began, I knew that I had to keep doing it. I knew as wel that what I was writing was not a journal but an old-fashioned, secret diary. Often the terms are used in almost the same way, though I've never understood o 問2 下線部(ア)の内容を具体的に日本語で説明せよ。 why. Both have the word "day" at their root, but a journal, in my opinion, is a d hio hi d *repository of ideas - your brain on the page. A diary, by contrast, is your heart. As for “journaling," a verb that appeared at around the same time as “scrapbooking," that just means you're strange and have way to0 much time on your hands. ontdo bd al o ed sw ai o A few things have changed since that first entry in 1977, but I've never hesitated in ld eo o botele d my "devotion, skipping, on average, maybe one or two days a year. It's not that I think v e sd olaon my life is important. Perhaps it just feeds into my compulsive nature, the need to do the e d ba l exact same thing at the exact same time every morning. Some diary sessions are longer than others, but the length has more to do with my mood than with what's going on. 間3 次の英文は、筆者の日記に対する考えをまとめたものである。英文の空所( O), (の)に入れるのに最も適当なものを,それぞれ下の1~4のうちから一つずつ選び、 問5 下線部(イ)の理由について、当時の筆者の行動とともに次のようにまとめたい。次の空 所に35字程度の日本語を補い。文を完成させよ。ただし、旬読点も字数に数える。 番号で答えよ。ただし、同じ番号を二度用いてはならない。 当時,筆者は( "Journal" and "diary," both come from the same word originally, but the former is a warehouse of ideas or( の )on the page, while the latter is( の 1 your brain 2 your heart 3 your letters 4 your terms 3odw d 開4 次の Question に対するAnswer となるように、空所に入れるのに適当な内容を、英語で 補え。 Ouestion:Why has the author written in his diary almost every day since 1977? Answer He has never hesitated to keep a diary because he might feel uneasy if he 問6 次の英文は本文全体の内容をまとめたものである。空所(①. ) ~ ( ① ) に入れ るのに最も適当なものを,それぞれ下の1~4のうちから一つずつ選び、番号で答えよ。 thinks a child of age seven will ( ①)anything adults do. When the uthor did something, his friend's son, Tyler, would do the same thing. However, Tyler had a(の) about why the author kept a diary. The author has been keeping his Taiary for a long time. The contents of the first several years, however, are too affected for him to ( @ ) again. の 1 ak 2 Copy の 1 bellef 3 keep 2 confidence 4 1 『ead 3 eにTel 2 ing 4 question 3 underutand Write

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English Senior High

この英文の()に入る言葉が全然分かりません。 分かるところだけでも大丈夫なので説明してほしいです!

|1| The conversation begins with a British professor talking to a Japanese professor about a lesson he had conducted with his Japanese students. He explains how one of his students ( ① ) him by referring to one of the colors of traffic lights as blue 及する 指角する ( 2 ) of green. The Japanese professor points out that in the Japanese language some objects that are usually thought of as green in many languages are ((3 ) using a Japanese word for blue. The British professor then describes similar ( ④ ) in other languages and cultures, such as that of the Berinmo in Papua New Guinea. They also discuss how Japanese and other languages also have ( ⑤ ) words for light blue and blue. 特称もべろ 2| This leads to a discussion about whether Japanese people are( ⑥ ) different things when they look at objects, or whether they are just ( ⑦ ) different terms to describe them. The British professor then brings up a study that investigated how bilingual speakers of Greek and English ( ③ ) different shades of blue. He notes that the conclusion of the study was that those people who spent more time in the UK were ( 9 ) likely to describe the shades of light blue and blue as very different from each other. 3 The Japanese professor continues the conversation by bringing up a second study that further examines the idea that language can( 10 ) the way we think. This study involved Japanese and English speakers and found that the Japanese speakers judged shades of light blue and blue to be further apart. Both professors conclude the discussion by noting the ( ① ) in interpreting the results of these studies, with the Japanese professor observing that language could be influencing thought or that other ( 2 ) factors could be at work. (D) separate (B) cultural (F) effect (A) assessed (C) characteristics (G) society (H) in contrast (E) less (K) disagreeing (O) surprised (S) designed (W) seeing (L) more (1) using (J) instead (N) mistakes (P) dificulty (M) felt (T) critical (X) increasing (Q) need (R) affect (U) reinforce (V) referred )6(W) へ の( )の( C ) ⑤ ( の( 9

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English Senior High

問の部分で文法ミスとかありますか?

5.世界都市ランキング 東京は3位 TOKYO 3RD IN WORLD'S MOST ATTRACTIVE' CITIES A Japanese think tank has ranked Tobkyo third in its list of the world's F most (1)(attractive) cities. The Institute for Urban Strategies has given the capital the The highest ranking went to London, which has occupied that position for nine years same spot for five straight years. running. New York held onto second place. The gap from the first two down to Tokyo The assessment uses various indicators in six categories to rank 48 major cities, They look at the economy, research and development, cultural interaction, livability, environment, and accessibility. In the economy and cultural interactioncategories, Tokyo remained in fourth place. as widened、 Shanghai was the only new name in the top 10. It kept its third place ranking for research and development. But n terms of livabilitv dropped one spot to 12th. Japan's capital is near the bottom of the rankings when 。 Comes to work style flexibility. It came 41st on that measure, which looks at how easv it: for people to do their jobs remotely. 日本のシンクタンクの「都市戦略研究所」が世界で最も魅力的な都市のランキングを発 表し、東京は5年連続で3位になりました。 (総合ランキングの) 1位は9年連続ロンドンで、ニューヨークは2位を守りました。 (2) (和訳) 1位、2位を、乳の差は直がっています 1上胎っ納 。上位10都市に新しく入ったのは上海だけでした。 ランキングは、世界の主要な48都市を対象に、 「経済「(3)( 県 聞発 「文化·交流」「居住」 (「(4) まな指標で採点されます。 東京の評価は、「経済」 と 「文化·交流」 の分野で4位、 「研究 開発」の分野で3位を 維持した一方、「居住」の点では1つ順位を落とし、12位でした。 また、在宅勤務のしやす さといった「働き方の柔軟性」では、41位と最下位に近い順位になっています。 )」「交通·アクセス」 という6つの分野のさまざ (間) [Answer in English] In which categories, is Tokyo ranked highest and lowest? Highest rank ave research ond Lowest rank develapmant flexihlity inThhu is work Style [本文中の熟語) 「 の占で」のro

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English Senior High

英語に自信がある人回答づくりお願いします! ※書き込みは気にしないでください。 これプラス、問題に続きがあって、 問5 本文には、実物の動物を見ることによって人々がより深く理解できることが3つ書かれています。それらを日本語で答えなさい。 問6 本文には、動物園... Read More

第4問 次の英文を読んで、 設問に答えなさい。①~6は段落番号です。 黒体 6) のIn my view, (1)it_is perfectly possible for many species of animals living in gon.. ie parks to have a quality of life as high as, or higher than, in the wild. 'Animals in ood z0os get a varied and high-quality diet with all the supplements required. and anv 1pesses they might have will be treated.Their movement might be somewhat restricted. mt they have a safe environment in which to live, and they are spared bullying and social 神年 predators*2 or the irritation and pain of parasites or injuries. The average captive animal racism*1 by others of their kind. They do not suffer from the threat or stress of will have a greater life expectancy compared with its wild counterpart, and will not die of drought, of starvation or in the jaws of a predator. Alot of very nasty things happen to truly wild' animals that simply don't happen in good zoos, and to view a life that is 'free' as 術保者一 one that is automatically ‘good' is, I think, an error. Furthermore, zoos serve several key purposes. の Firstly, zoos aid conservation. Colossal numbers of species are becoming extinct across the world, and many more are increasingly threatened and therefore risk extinction. Moreover, some of these collapses have been sudden, dramatic and unexpected, or were simply discovered very late in the day. Aspecies protected in captivity can be bred up to provide a reservoir*3 population against a population crash or extinction in the wild. A good number of species only exist in captivity, with many ofthese livinginzoos. Stillmore only exist in the wildbecause they have been reintroduced from zoos, or have wild populations that have been1o0osted by captive bred animals Without (2these efforts there would be fewer species alive today. Although reintroduction successes are few and far between*4, the numbers are increasing, and the very fact that species have been saved or reintroduced as a result of captive breeding proves the value of such initiatives. ③ Zoos alsoprovide education. Many children and adults, especially those in cities, will never see a wild animal beyond a fox or pigeon. While it is true that television documentaries are becoming ever more detailed and impressive, and many natural history specimens are on display in museums, there really is nothing to compare with seeinga living creature in the flesh*5, hearing it, smelling it, watching what it does and having the time to absorb details. That alone will bring a greater understanding and perspective to many, and hopefully give them a greater appreciation for wildlife, conservation efforts and how they can contribute. ④ Inaddition to this, there isalsothe education that cantake place in Z0Osthrough signs, talks and presentations which directly communicate information to visitors about the animals they are seeing and their place in the world. This was an area where zoos used to be lacking, but they are now increasingly sophisticated in their communication and 8.

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