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English Senior High

問1 英文に文化は農業にシフトしたってあったから、選択肢③の狩猟や採集に加えてっていうのがひっかかったんですが農業にシフトしたのはseveral cultureだからでしょうか?それとも農業にシフトしたっていっても完全にはシフトしてないからですか??

Modern humans evolved in Africa about 200,000 years ago and began You are studying about the world population. You are going to read the Then just 12,000 years ago, several cultures shifted from hunting and migrating to other parts of the globe about 100,000 years ago. Our earliest ancestors relied on hunting and gathering their food to survive. Only a finite number of people could be supported on the wildlife in an area for a to control its own food supply. Civilizations grew and so did the human 30 B*★★ following article to understand how the world population has grou limited amount of time. gathering to farming. Humans became the first and only species a population. About 2,000 years ago, the estimated world population wo. 170 million people. The largest civilizations at this point in history wew. the Roman Empire and the Han Dynasty in China. The next 1,700 years were marked by the growth and conquest of empires, global navigation and exploration. People had yet to understand the science behind life and death, or how to prevent and treat most diseases. As a result, many children died young. Our global population grew, but slowly, reaching / angh waibdlie, aumans in Alfs about 500 million around 1500 and 1 billion by 1804. By the late 1700s, the world was embarking on the Industrial Revolution, a period of history in Europe and North America, where there were significant advances in science and technology. The Industrial Ainge and Chia Revolution brought the invention of the steam engine and the use of mlontrl the l ie Romam humans start electricity. During this period, there were also many inventions that promoted longer life. These included improvements in farming, nutrition, medicine and sanitation. Now, people were able to fight once-deadly Banpe and germs, produce more and different kinds of food, and cure more illnesses. Before long, these new discoveries and inventions spread throughout the world, lowering death rates, especially among children, and improving people's quality of life. Now you might be wondering what happened to the birth rates while the death rates were coming down. In Europe and North America, on re attes sa/and lar mle Acoher thar deuath pgoulatron had doudled to ton er bitkien br1974(0m pits decran groo tas beer oing Dulton pes Hamans fiaing adut.

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English Junior High

ここの(3)の問題なんですけど、答えが(ウ)になるんです。けどなんで(ウ)になるのか分かりません。読むと(ウ)が合うのは分かりますけど、(ウ)以外も合うくないですか?教えてください🙇‍♀️

Passerby: OK. First, choose the same street from the cake shop, and turn left at the second m 次の英文は, 留学生のリサ (Lisa)と通りすがりの人 (Passerby)が交わしている会話である。次 の地図を参考にして英文を読み,後の問い(1)~(4)に答えよ。 Excuse me. Could you help me? Lisa 地図 Passerby: Yes, of course. (ア) : Look, I have a map of this city, but I Lisa don't know where I am. I want to go to Yume Library (エ) Hikari Station to meet my friend coming from my country, and before that, I want (イ) to go to this cake shop called Yume. Post Office Hikari IStation Could you tell me to go to the cake shop and the station? (ウ) Passerby: Sure. We are here on this map. Lisa I see. Passerby : You want to go to the cake shop first, right? Walk *along this street, and turn left at the first *corner. Walk a little, and then, you'll see the cake shop on your right. You can get there in five minutes. It is my favorite cake shop. Lisa : I'll go to the cake shop for the first time. Which cake should I buy? Passerby: Well, I think the chocolate cake is very good. Lisa I see. I will buy one. Then, 3 long will it take to go to the station from the cake shop? Passerby: There are some ways to walk to the station. It'll take twenty minutes if you choose an easy way. I think this way is good for you because you don't know this city well, right? Lisa : Right. Could you tell me about it? Passerby : Sure. Let's look at the map again. Go along the street in front of the cake shop, will see the library on your right. Walk a little, and when you see the post and you office on your right, turn left at the corner. After walking across the large street with trees, you'll be at the station. Lisa I see. That sounds easy. Passerby If you want to know another way, I'll tell you about it. It's a difficult way, but it's faster. Lisa * Well, I want to get to the station early, so please tellme.

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English Senior High

答えが無くて分からないので教えて欲しいです

SIMなし合 22:01 Cop 【1】次の英文を読んで, 設問 1~12に答えなさい。 なお, *印の語(句)には文末に注 がついています。 Modern examinations of working conditions in British and U.S. industry in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries concentrate mainly on the experiences, Complaints, and overall difficulties of working-class laborers. The first complaint that a majority of industrial workers had was that their workdays* were too long. The average (ア) of hours in a shift varied from industry to industry, from place to place, and from era to era. Workers in British and American textile mills* in the early to middle 1800s generally worked twelve to fifteen hours, six days a week, ( イ) only Sundays off. Their average workweek* was seventy-eight hours. In contrast were the hours of workers who labored in American steel mills in the late 1800s. The length of their shifts was determined by the fact that the blast furnaces* they tended almost always operated twenty-four hours a day. Thus, (oit became customary* for steel mills to have two twelve-hour shifts. However, many of the steel workers labored seven days a week. (a)That gave them a workweek of sighty-four hours. Moreover, sometimes they had to work extra hours on top of this demanding schedule. (オ )the minor differences in the length of workweeks from one industry to another, the average worker put in twelve-to fourteen-hour days at least six days a week, This harsh schedule remained more ( カ) less standard well into the twentieth century. It was not until 1920 that a fifty-hour workweek was introduced in the United States. Anda forty-hour week did not become the rule in most industries until 1938. Low wages was another common complaint of industrial workers. In 1851, the average wage earned by American industrial workers in general was seven to ten dollars per week. That same year New York's Daily Tribune* reported that a worker's family of five required just over ten dollars a week just for basics such as rent, food, and fuel. Most ordinary workers could not afford many simple comforts that middle-class workers enjoyed. (o This miserable situation lasted in America for decades and improved only slowly. As late as 1912, a study found that only 15

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English Senior High

3段落目の2文目でどこで他の州でと言っているのかわかりません。。stateとthis stateと分けているからstateが他の州という意味になるのでしょうか?

16 本 単A1OS 第4問 次の問い(A B) に答えよ。(配点35) bahaっ t rmed about Clyelho nw eっもndhaらgi oke A 次の文章はある報告書の一部である。この文章とグラフを読み,下の問い(間 に入れるのに最も適当なものを,それぞれ下の from sticki 28umel tio Sw 1~4)の 35 38 g Direeり o d行dde R cause 0~Oのうちから一つずつ選べ。 re sonich lates t0 Engiish. (here remane 問1 97 Magnet and Sticky: A Study on State-to-State Migration in the US g Seli5 alvu bue ainobute Tuo ToY risnnoijesup Some people live their whole lives near their places of birth, while others ale97 io 0 ge 10 elsog 91u11 brts SO bue move elsewhere. A、study conducted by the Pew Research Center looked into the state-to-state moving patterns of a iencans. T he study examined each Frefichand Spamssh state to determine how many of their adult citizens have moved there from ld e nostusefui bec Chna is a fasteOwing ecoons States with high percentages of these residents are called Chimese beeause Chioa has the greatest *magnet" states in the report. \The study also investigated what percent of other states. u beusefmte pegol adults born in each state are still living there. States high in these numbers uronean are called ticky) states. The study found that some states were both magnet and sticky, while others were neither. \There were also states that were only magnet or. only sticky. Figures 1 and 2 show how selected states rank on magnet and sticky scales, respectively. Eloridd' is a good example of a state that ranks high on both. \ Seventy percent of its current adult population was born in another state; at the same time, 66% of adults born in Florida are still living there. On the other hand, West Virginia is neither magnet (only 27%) nor, particularly sticky(49%). In other words, it has few newcomers, and relatively few West Virginians stay there. Michigan is a typical example of a state which is highly sticky, but very low magnet. In contrast, Alaska, which ranks near the top of ss the magnet scale, is the least sticky of all states. g oareon 9 at Three other extreme examples also appear in Figures 1 and 2. The first is Nevada) where the high proportion of adult residents born out of state makes this state America's top magnet. \(New York) is at the opposite end of the magnet scale, even though it is attractive to immigrants from other nations. The third extreme example is Texas, at the opposite end of the sticky scale 004

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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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