学年

教科

質問の種類

英語 高校生

合ってるか見てほしいです🥲‎

12. I'm very glad ( ) the news. hearing ②to to hear 3 to hearing 1 heard □ 13. 書くペンがありません。 [ 語順整序 I have (with/to/ no pen / write). no pen to write with 14. A new supermarket is going to ( ①build 2 be pe built ) next year. (駒澤大) (福岡工業大) ( 神戸学院大) ③be building building 15. すべてが円滑に進んでいるようである。 Everything (smoothly / seems/be/to/going). seems to be going smoothly, (東邦大) 16. The picture seems () in the 1600s. (日本大) ①that it has been painted that it was painting 3 to be painting to have been painted 不定詞 (摂南大) ①not to 17. I swam in the river, even though my parents had told me ( ). ①don't to not 3 not do it □18. この映画は, 何度見てもいいほど面白い。 (金沢工業大) This (enough/interesting is / many/movie/watch/times/to). movie is interesting enough to watch many times. □19 こんな時間に来るなんて、 彼はなんて無神経な男なんだ。 (十文字学園女子大) How could he be so (as / at /to/ come / insensitive) a time like this? insensitive as to come at 20 この数学の問題は, 私には複雑すぎて解けない。 This (me/to/complex / math /too/is/problem / for) solve. too complex for me to math problem is 21. 私のコンピュータを修理するのに300ドルかかった。 It (repair/three hundred / cost/my/ dollars/me/to) computer. (尾道市立大) cost me three hundred dollars to repair my 22. The meeting is ( ) in Chicago next month. ①to be held 2 hold ③holds (日本大) (神奈川工科大) to holding

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

英文の方写真汚くて申し訳ないです汗  3パラグラフ目の印のしてあるaround が、和訳中のどの部分に当たるか分かりません。教えていただきたいです。

テーマ 専門性☆☆☆ 英文レベル★★★ 30 DNAはウイルスから? 文 11 What with the threat of bird flu, the reality of HIV, and the genera unseemliness of having one's cells pressed into labour on behalf of something alien and microscopic, it is small wonder that people don't much like viruses. But we may actually have something to thank the little 5 parasites for. They may have been the first creatures to find a use for DNA, a discovery that set life on the road to its current rich complexity 12 The origin of the double helix is a more complicated issue than it might at first seem. DNA's ubiquity -all cells use it to store their genomes - suggests it has been around since the earliest days of life 10 but when exactly did the double spiral of bases first appear? Some think it was after cells and proteins had been around for a while. Others say DNA showed up before cell membranes had even been invented/ The fact that different sorts of cell make and copy the molecule in very different ways has led others to suggest that the charms of the double 15 helix might have been discovered more than once. And all these ideas have drawbacks. "To my knowledge, up to now there has been no ⚫ convincing story of how DNA originated," says evolutionary biologist Patrick Forterre of the University of Paris-Sud, Orsay. 13 Forterre claims to have a solution. Viruses, he thinks, invented » DNA as a way the defences of the cells they infected. Little more than packets of genetic material, viruses are notoriously adept at* avoiding detection, as influenza's annual self-reinvention attests. Forterre argues that viruses were up to similar tricks when life was young, and that DNA was one of their innovations. To some researchers 25 the idea is an appealing way to fill in a chunk of the DNA puzzle. 270 •

解決済み 回答数: 2
英語 高校生

2パラグラフ目の和訳の、 可能性が30~50%あるかもしれないというので の、ので、が英文中のどこからきたのかわかりません、、訳していく中で自然とそうなるんですかね?

テーマ 専門性★☆★ 英文レベル★★★☆ 24 ヘルシンキ宣言 英文 ①② つなぎ方 11 The ultimate ethical standard among the medical profession demands that the physician use every means possible to cure the patient's illness-but does this apply in a clinical trial, which is understood to be experimental, not treatment? In a clinical trial, tension 5 exists at the beginning between gaining knowledge that can be used in the longer term to benefit the public health, and the basic right of the patient to receive treatment. 12 For the scientific profession, the últimate standard is to produce results that withstand scrutiny. For physicians and researchers, the 'gold 10 standard' in testing new drugs is a placebo-controlled study* in which some of the patients receive no treatment at all. These standards present an ethical dilemma as drug-approval agencies tend to lean toward the Kneed for clear scientific data, which is best gained when a drug is tested against a control, or placebo. Furthermore, it becomes harder to 15 convince patients in First World countries to participate in drug trials when there may be a 30-50% chance of receiving only a sugar pill instead of a helpful medicine.

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

31行のitは何を指していますか?itがthingを指しているのかとも思ったのですがそれだとundurstandの後に名詞の穴ができてしまっておかしいのではないかと思いました。教えて頂きたいです。

25 out of twenty native Alaskan languages, 冬の最 Although language extinction is sad for the people involved, why should the rest of us care? What effect will other people's language loss have on the future of people who (A): speak English, for example? Replacing a minor language with a more widespread ・ゆる可能 124) = permit . 20 one may even seem like a good thing, allowing people to communicate with each other more easily. But language diversity is as important as biological diversity. といい hot all ~70% Andrew Woodfield, director of the Centre for Theories of Language and Learning 1-14 in Bristol, England, suggested in a 1995 seminar on language conservation that people do not yet know all the ways in which linguistic diversity is important. "The fact is, no one knows exactly what riches are hidden inside the less-studied languages," he says. Woodfield compares one argument for conserving unstudied endangered plants - that they may be medically valuable with the argument for conserving endangered languages. We have inductive evidence based on past studies of well-known danguages that there will be riches, even though we do not know what they will be 単語 をだすことが It seems (B) 30 paradoxical but it's true. By allowing.languages to die out, the human race is destroying 便 4714 things doesn't understand," he argues. (243) Stephen Wurm, in his introduction to the Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger 1-1

解決済み 回答数: 1