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English Senior High

⑴の解答でimaginationのカンマあっての関係詞のあとの三単現のSが無ければだめですか

9。 functions that they are very useful. with [using] cellphones, so they are very because they have (so) many functions. phones today, which have many functions. 別解5 Cellphones today enable you [allow 別解2 Cellphones today, which have so today days] are very useful Cellphones today have so many You can(easily) do a lot of things [helpful / handy / convenient) with you / make it possible for you] to do (so) many things, so they are very useful. Humans [Human beings| have 解答 magination, which enables lallows] them feel as if las though] they have experi- enced what they cannot actually experi- ence [have not actually experienced]. ours many functions. Cellphones today 別解1 are very useful ad We have imagination through which 別解1] we can feel (that) we have experienced many functions, are very useful 別解3 what we cannot actually experience [have not actually experienced]. 別解2 We are imaginative enough to feel (that) we have experienced something 「別解4 こと that in fact we cannot [have not]. useful. We have enough imagination to feel 別解3 as if we are experiencing something, ay even though this is not the case. g 別解4 We can feel(that) we have experi- It is very convenient to use mobile enced things (that / which) we have not 別解6 actually done through the power of imagination [through [because of] our imagination]. [後半] so I feel as if [feel like./ feel The that] I cannot do anything afda lall 解答 through the day / for the rest of the day / the whole day] if I leave mine Im (2)自分の意見を批判されると頭に血がのぼり,自 分自身が攻撃されたように感じ, 相手が何を 言っているのかもよくわからなくなる。 mobile phone] at home. 解答 icizes your opinions [opinion], you g When [If] someone [somebody] cri 「別解 Therefore, you would feel as if you were not able to do anything all upset [angry, you feel as if [as thoug through the day if you forgot to bring they were [are] (personally) attacki yours lyour mobile phone] with you. you, and you even have difficulty unc standing [even struggle to understa (5) 脚の骨折がなければ, ウィリアム (William) はすばらしい運動選手になっていただろう。 what the other person is talking aboi 別解1 When [If] your ideas are critic you cannot stay calm and feel (that) If(he had not broken his leg Wil yourself are being attacked, so yo liam could [would probably] have become come unable to even understand a great athl}te la great sportsperson]. If William had not broken his leg, the other person is saying. 別解 「別解2 When someone challenges ou he could be a great athlete now. ons, we cannot keep calm, feel they are looking down on us, a sight of what is being said. EXERCISES B (1)人間には、たとえ経験していなくても, まるで 経験したかのように感じることを可能にする想 像力が備わっている。 (3) 言語が私たちの日常生活にどのような たしているのか、言語がない世界とは

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English Senior High

こういう英語の挿入問題?がめちゃくちゃ苦手なのですが、入試まであと2週間しかないです。 解けるようになるコツ教えてください。

14 次のそれぞれの問いに答えよ。 4 I 次のパラグラフを完成させるために, 空所 (1) ~ (4) の中に入る最も適切な文を下の(A)~ (D) よ 6 り一つ選び,その記号をマークせよ。 For most Americans, sushi isa symbol for Japanese food. /There are nearly 4,000 sushi restaurants across the United States today,/and its market is over $2 billion,/ (*1り In fact, many Americans then thought the idea of consuming raw fish shocking. It took a boom in immigration from Japan to turn sushi into an everyday “American" food. ( (2)/But by the 1960s, this had had started to change、("3 り And in 1966, a Japanese businessman brought a sushi chef and his wife from Japan, and together they opened a sushi bar inside a Japanese restaurant in the Little Tokyo district of Los Angeles. The restaurant was popular, but only with Japanese immigrants. (レ4 Y As a result, more and more sushi bars popped up outside of the little Tokyo, and Hollywood began to embrace sushi throughout the 1970s. 【出典】A Brief History of Sushi in the United States by Sarah Lohman, Mental Floss, Inc., March 3,2017, https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/92861/brief- history-sushi- united-states (A) A food journalist and restaurant critic writing for The New York Times dining section during that decade was attracted by Japanese restaurants in the city, and declared Japanese fooda trend in New York. (B) In the 1950s many Americans were somewhat resistant to Japanese food and culture, “the 'because they had lived through World War II and still perceived Japan as enemy." (C)Bupfifty years ago, most Americans had never heard of sushi; if they ate Japanese food at all, it was more likely to be sukiyaki or tempura. (D) However, as more sushi bars opened in Little Tokyo, young Japanese chefs( who were tired of the conservative culture of sushi making in Japan, heard about this trend and came to America to look for new opportunities.

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