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English Senior High

問題B 英作文の添削をお願いします🙇‍♀️

問題A.下線部(a), (b) を英訳しなさい。 A novel by Soseki Natsume begins, "I am a cat. I don't have a name yet." Practically all human beings are given names when they are born. A name is important. 名前があってこそ、その人を,ほかの人から識別できる。 (a) This is not restricted to human beings. Animals and plants also have names. Just as in the case of human beings, once one becomes interested in a bird or a flower, one wants to know its name. 美しい花は,名前を知ろう が知るまいが美しい, という考え方もあるかもしれぬ。 (b) But it seems that if you first learn its name, you come close to the substance for the first time. [出典] 朝日新聞論説委員室 『ベスト・オブ・天声人語』 講談社インターナ ショナル B. Read the e-mail below. Imagine that you are Koki, a friend of Yuki. In reply to Yuki's e-mail, write your advice to her in about 80 words in English. them work with children, some with old people and some work for organisations that help clean the environment. Some of my friends have asked me if I want to do volunteer work with them at a local school at weekends. It sounds interesting, but I'm not sure if I want to work for no pay. Also, I have to study a lot for my course, I don't want to give up any course of my free time. My friends tell me that volunteer work is good for the community, and that I'll learn more about English culture. I understand that, but I'm still not sure. What would you do? Can you give me some advice? Yuki ・解答欄末尾の所定の箇所に、解答に用いた語の数を 「 (80 words)」 のように 記すこと。 ・ただし、解答欄に印刷されている部分およびピリオドやコンマなどの句読点 は語数に含めません。 From: Yuki Ushida To: Koki Ando Subject: Voluntary Work? Hi, Koki. How are you? Let me write in English, because you said you also want to practice English, right? I'm enjoying my classes here at Oxford University I've made a lot of friends since I arrived, and last week I joined a tennis club. Many of the students here at Oxford University do voluntary work. Some of 10

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English Senior High

線を引いたところの訳し方を丁寧に教えて頂きたいです🙇‍♀️

L American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, "Every artist was first an amateur." He likely never thought those words would apply to machines. Yet artificial intelligence (AI) has demonstrated a growing talent for creativity, whether writing a heavy-metal rock album or producing an original portrait that is strikingly similar to a Rembrandt. Applying AI to the art world might seem unoriginal; there are, of course, plenty of humans delivering awe-inspiring work. Supporters say, however, the real beauty of training AI to be creative does not lie in the end product-but rather in the technology's potential to expand on its own machine-learning education, and to solve problems by thinking in different ways far faster and better than humans can. For example, creative problem-solving AI could someday make snap decisions that save the lives of the passengers in a self-driving car if its sensors fail. AI with a creative component will be essential in developing highly automated systems that can respond appropriately to human life, says Mark Riedl, an associate professor at Georgia Institute of Technology's School of Interactive Computing. "The fact is, we do lots of little bits of creativity every single day; lots of problem-solving goes on," Riedl says. "If my son gets a toy stuck under the couch, I have to devise a tool from a hanger to get it out." Riedl points out human creativity is also important in human social interactions, even telling a well-timed joke or recognizing a pun. Computers struggle with such subtleties. An incomplete understanding of how humans construct metaphors, for example, was all it took for an experiment in Al-generated literature to compose a new Harry Potter chapter filled with nonsensical sentences such as, "The floor of the castle seemed like a large pile

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