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English Senior High

288から303の解説を教えていただいたいです…(294と300は大丈夫です)

しまった。 st few / hardly / of) I became < 東邦大 > For years. 4 whether ause/down/ upon). lest study hard. while <京都学園大 > with <浦和短大 > <東京電機大〉 ring them back within a <立教大 > 〈 南山大 > could not pass it. ng, he kept making <東海大 > 094 095 096 295 296 ( ) he likes it or not, you must teach him how to handle it. What 2 Who 3 Whenever 4 Whether He ran ( (1) as 297 It was ( 000 1 very 299 ) quickly that I couldn't catch up with him. 2 too 3 so ) a bad snowstorm that they shut the airport down. 3 such 4 too SO 298 I opened the door quietly ( 1 so that 2 unless 4 more ) the teacher wouldn't notice me. 3 otherwise 4 because of 〈神奈川工科大 > 300 寝坊するといけないから目覚ましをかけておきなさい。 <1語(句) 不要) (in / the alarm/you/ don't/ case / set) oversleep. 301 ( ) you're a grown-up, you must stop this childish behavior. 1 Now that 2 As long as 3 Even though 4 In case <神奈川大 > 302( ) he made up his mind to go, there was no stopping him. Though 2 Whether 3 While 4 Once Our grandmother never travels by air ( ) she will have a heart attack. in case that 2 so that 3 in order that 4 for fear that <九州産大 > < 芝浦工大 > 〈 広島工大 〉 <日本大〉 097 <駒澤大 > 098 <九州産大 > 303 As long as I know, prices in Spain are much lower than those in Japan. 2 0 < 松山大 > 099 100

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English Senior High

「,well behind 」の部分の構造、意味を教えてください。

[Review] Back in the late sixties, thinkers on both sides of the Atlantic were troubled by problems which may seem strange to us today: they were worried that the leisure age which they believed was fast approaching would leave people with too much time on their hands. They were worried that the work ethic was losing its grip on a new rebellious generation and they pondered how they would motivate people to work. They needn't have worried. The much-predicted "leisure age" promised by technology has not materialized. In fact, quite the reverse: people are working harder than ever. There is less leisure time and, most surprising of all, the very workers with the greatest bargaining power are choosing to work the hardest. The problem is the burnout of white- collar Britain. For over a century, the average number of hours spent working over a lifetime slowly declined in Britain. The historian James Arrowsmith has calculated that in 1856 our ancestors put in 124,000 hours over a 40-year working life and, by 1981, it was 69,000. There it remained for a decade, but in the early nineties it began to increase again. On average full-time British workers now put in 80,224 hours over their working life, and that figure rises to 92,000 for those on a 50-hour week, which is common among the self- employed, the skilled, and professional and managerial workers. Many are working the kind of hours that would have been familiar to factory workers in the middle of the 19th century. The only difference is that now it's the bosses who are more likely to be putting in the hours than those on the shop floor. Britain has followed a US model of all work, no play, in contrast to continental Europe. Full-time workers in Britain now work the longest hours in Europe an average of 43.6 hours per week compared with an EU average of 40.3. Even more marked is the difference in holidays between Britain and continental Europe; the UK has, on average, 28 days a year, well behind France with 47, Italy with 44 and Germany with 41. Add the difference in weekly hours and holidays and it amounts to the British working almost eight weeks a year more than their European counterparts. -

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