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英語 高校生

解説の1の本文をNone of allthe uses of the body has reachedにしたらわかりやすいとあるのですが本文のnoneはなんでofの前にないのですか?一緒に前に行かないんですか?none以降の和訳が全然わからないです。踊りほど高い水準に達した... 続きを読む

Of all the uses of the body, none has reached S greater heights, or has been more cultures, than dance. VA variably utilized by ~ VB 単語チェック (a) use [ju:s] 名 使用・使用法] 名詞の場合の発音は、動詞の発音 [ju:z] とは異なりま すから注意してください。 [ height [hait] 名 高さ] high の名詞形です。 [variably [véariobli] 様々に] vary [séori] (様々である)の派生語です。名詞形は variety [varáioti] です。 [utilize [jú:talàiz] 単語です。 CD 2-36 動を利用する ] use 〜 と同じ意味ですが,こちらの方が堅い 英文分析 1. 文頭の Of 〜 はまず 「~の中で」と考える ① Tom is the tallest of all the boys in his class. トムはクラスの男子のなかで一番背が高い。 この例を難しいと感じる人は少ないと思いますが, of ~が文頭にきて ② Of all the boys in his class, Tom is the tallest. となると,少し難しく感じられるでしょう。文頭の Of ~ は「~の中でのうち と覚えておくと便利です。 ③ Of all the movies that are showing now, Roman Holiday is the only one in English. いま上映中の映画のうち、英語の映画は「ローマの休日」だけだ。 本文は None of all the uses of the body has reached と戻して考えれば分かりや すいでしょう。

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英語 高校生

この小論文を添削してほしいです。 ちなみに、本来は課題文型を解くので課題文型のコツみたいなのも教えてくださるとうれしいです。 私の課題は、筆者の主張を踏まえて問いに答えることができないところです。 熊本大学法学部後期の過去問を解いています。

学校で出された課題をインターネットを使い、他人から教えてもらうことについつ あなたはどう考えるか. 私は、インターネットを使って他人から学 校で出された課題を教えてもらうのは良いこ とだと考える。なぜなら、分からない課題を 分からないまま放置することは課題の意味が なくなるからである。 学校は、生徒にある事柄を身につけてもら うために課題を出す。自力で解くことができ るのであれば、自力で解くのが最善の方法だ とは思う。しかし、数学や和文英訳・英文和 訳など、ど どうしても解法が思い浮かばないと いうような問題もあるだろう。そのような時 誰かに教えてもらうか 白紙で提出す るしかない。白紙で提出することは 課題に 取り組んでいないと見なされるので誰かに教 えてもらうことが良い。 たしかに、誰かであるならば友達でも先生 「 でも良いのではないかとい れない。 0 し しか ことができず 1 コクヨ ケー35 20×20 う声があるかもし 先生は学校でしか教えても 友達もメールで尋ねても h 2 返信がない場合がある。一方で、インターネ

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英語 高校生

進研WINSTEP 短期集中 高2 英語vol.2の Unit4 step3の解答持ってる方いませんか💦 教えて欲しいです🙏🏻

10 STEP 3 読解問題にアプローチ iOC 目標 完了表現に注意して読もう。 月 (2年11月改) 目標時間 20 分 S 筆者が小学1年生の時の出来事。 学校で足が痛み、先生たちが靴を脱ぐよう促すが、筆者はどうしても脱 ごうとしない。 POINTE Mr. Stewart lifted me onto his desk. “Let me take a look.” He was just about to take the shoe off when I saw the hole. I grabbed the shoe and pulled it on and held it. The stinging hurt more, the tighter I held onto the shoe. POINTCO "Why won't you let us take off your shoe ?" Mr. Stewart asked as he looked from me to 5 Miss Bell and back at me in puzzlement. Miss Womble, the fifth-grade teacher, came into the office. “Can I help? I know her; she lives next door to me." “I suspect ants are in her shoes and stinging *the living daylights out of her, but she won't let us take off her shoes,” said Miss Bell. POINT Miss Womble was a great neighbor. She had even played *Annie-over with us on occasion. She put both hands on my shaking shoulders and looked into my worried, red eyes. "Oh, yes," she said, as if remembering a fact. "I had a bite from one of those ants. Did you know they are sock eaters ? By the time I got my shoe off, that ant had eaten almost the entire bottom off my sock.” She nodded her head up and down as she looked at the other two adults. 15 “Must be sock-eater ants.” POINT POINT >> They returned the nod, as if they also had been bitten by sock-eating ants. “Let me see here.” She freed my heel from the shoe. “Just what I thought. Those sock ants have eaten part of her sock.” POINT Miss Bell opened the medicine cabinet, got a cotton ball, and *saturated it with alcohol. 20 Miss Womble slipped off my shoe and sock and shook both of them over the gray trash bucket. Two red ants fell into the waiting container. A stray one ran for the wall, but Mr. Stewart's shoe stopped him. My *swollen foot throbbed. My stomach hurt. My head ached. Stroking the alcohol ball across the angry bites, Miss Womble lifted her head and smiled at me. “I think she's going to be okay now," she said, as she looked toward the two adults. The bell rang, ending the break period. “It's class time,” Mr. Stewart said, as he and Miss Bell hurried to their jobs. (イ) The alcohol felt cool on the stings. POINT “You were a pretty brave girl to take that many bites. I think you should leave this shoe and sock off for a while." She helped me off the desk. “Wait for me after school, and we'll walk home together.” POINT Pride can be a wonderful, terrible thing. I knew that Miss Womble had saved my pride ith (ウ) her sock-eating ant story. (エ) She had seen that Ⅰ would rather be stung to death POINT POINTO POINT ■an let others see my poverty. This kind, understanding teacher had taught me a lesson of > POINT >> mpassion that I have tried to use in my thirty-seven years of teaching. itd) an (481W) =the living daylights out of her = とてもひどく Annie-over = ゲームの一種 *saturate = ~を浸す *swollen = 腫れた - From Cup of Comfort for Teachers by Colleen Sell Copyright © 2004, by Simon & Schuster, Inc. [formerly F+W Media, Inc.J. Used with permission of the publisher. 単語を調べよう! Check your vocabulary! □ be (just) about to不定詞 ( ■ take off ~( □ suspect □angry 形 ( ( □ in puzzlement ( ) □ by the time ~ ) □ compassion 名 ( [問1] 下線部 (ア)について, この疑問文から伝わるMr. Stewart (スチュアート先生)の心情を次の文のよ うに表したい。英文の空所に入れるのに最も適当なものを下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (3点) He is ( ). 2 confused 2 まあ、こんなものか。 4 わあ、 かっこいい。 |TOTAL 1 angry 3 excited 4 happy [問2] 下線部(イ)の状況で、筆者が心の中で発した言葉として考えられるものとして, 最も適当なもの を、下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (3点) 1 ああ、よかった。 傷の痛みがひんやりと気持ちよく 感じられている状況から推測して みよう。 3 もう. いた~い。 [3] 下線部 (ウ)とはどのようなものか、 次のようにまとめたい。 下の2つの問い (①,②)に答えよ。 Womble (ウォンブル) 先生の(a) 気持ちから (b)_ ウォンブル先生がどんな 気持ちから何を話したの かを読み取る。 ① 空所(a)に入る日本語を答えよ。 ( 3点) [5] 筆者は現在、何をしている人と考えられるか。 英語で答えよ。 (3点) ② 空所(b)に入れるのに最も適当なものを下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (2点) 1 思い出した史実 2 思いついた理論 3 つくりあげた話 4 生み出した冗談 [問4] 下線部 (エ)を日本語になおせ。 (7点) (2) 並べ替え あなたのお写真をじっくり拝見させてください。 (4点) 〔good/let/a/look/at/ your picture / take / me 〕. ) ) - 直後の文で述べられているスチュ アート先生の様子に着目。 (3) 和文英訳 けさ 私の車がどうしても始動しなかった。 (3点) 過去完了 had seen に気をつけて → 訳そう。 POINT REVIEW< STEP0~2の英文を参考に解いてみよう! (1) 英文和訳 They had been married for six years when they had their first child. (3点) 本文全体の流れを把握したうえで 最後の文を見てみよう。 RE

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英語 高校生

全文訳お願いします!

4 20 科学 420 words Chapter 1 The recipe for making any creature is written in its DNA. So last year, when 1-1 geneticists* published the near-complete DNA sequence of the long-extinct woolly mammoth, there was much speculation about whether we could bring this giant creature back to life. 5 東京理科大学 Creating a living, breathing creature from a genome* sequence that exists only in a computer's memory is not possible right now. But someone someday is sure to try it, predicts Stephan Schuster, a molecular biologist at Pennsylvania State University and a driving force behind the mammoth genome project. So besides the mammoth, what other extinct beasts might we bring back to life? Well, 12 10 it is only going to be possible with creatures for which we can recover a complete genome Without one, there is no chance. And usually when a creature dies, the (1) - DNA in any flesh left untouched is soon destroyed as it is attacked by sunshine and bacteria. sequence. There are, however, some circumstances in which DNA can be preserved. If your 15 specimen froze to death in an icy wasteland such as Siberia, or died in a dark cave or a really dry region, for instance, then the probability of finding some intact stretches of DNA is much higher. Even in ideal conditions, though, no genetic information is likely to survive more than a million years. - so dinosaurs are out and only much younger remains are likely to yield good-quality DNA. "It's really only worth studying specimens that are less than 100,000 years old," says Schuster. The genomes of several extinct species besides the mammoth are already being sequenced, but turning these into living creatures will not be easy. "It's hard to say that something will never ever be possible," says Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute 25 for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, "but it would require technologies so far removed from what we currently have that I cannot imagine how it would be done." But then (3) 50 years ago, who would have believed we would now be able to read the instructions for making humans, fix inherited diseases, clone mammals and be close to creating artificial life? Assuming that we will develop the necessary technology, we have 30 selected ten extinct creatures that might one day be resurrected. Our choice is based not just on practicality, but also on each animal's "charisma" - just how exciting the prospect of resurrecting these animals is. 1-3

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英語 高校生

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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英語 高校生

この問題が分かりません教えてください

Lesson 19 , od ne mi m om a get their support. 5 He himself was through far-reaching reforms. He abolished slavery, introduced a *bureaucracv and 298628 ig piaum. ofh al nao o litmo of the 2010s, donated about 90% of his salary to charities which helped poor people. The he was often described as the world's *humblest head of state. Not all leaders are like them. Unfortunately, some leaders only care about their statis 15 When their popularity declines, they often try to shift the criticism onto others so as to maintain their power. The class system during the Edo period aimed at dividing people into classes and giving them contentment by encouraging them to look down on the lower classes. Hitler managed to win people's support by setting *Jews up as their enemies. It is quite difficult to satisfy everybody and unite a nation. Nevertheless, good leaders smo ons Tanolaom nd listen to people's voices, including critical ones, to make better policies for the welfare of 20 naw asng-1agie all the people from the perspective of national interests. So when you are qualified to vote, collect as much information as possible about candidates and political parties. It will help Coo b you judge whether they are willing to create a better society or are just trying to ake 25 advantage of their status for their own benefits. Your single vote can make a big differèIto to our future. oiauM 9oitasrf o eysW ) 363 words

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