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英語 高校生

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.

解決済み 回答数: 0
英語 高校生

問2について 答えは②らしいのですが、どうしても納得いきません。本文では、「現金を引き出すことは不便で危険だ」と言っていますが、「クレジットカードが便利で安全だと思う」なんて一言も書かれていません。 どなたか納得のいく説明お願いします🙏🏻

Change May Come to Denmark's Cash By Sandra Gray, Copenhagen March 8, 2020· 1:25PM enbbots Cash may be on the way out, in Denmark, where credit card and mobile pavments have been adopted_widely and have become more popular than old-fashioned cash payments. Figures from 2019 show that last year only 16 percent of ordinary store payments were made in cash! The government is now considering a proposal to allow businesses such as restaurants, convenience stores and clothing stores to refuse cash payments) Dana Hasbrook of Copenhagen is looking forward to a_cashless_society. and savs, Having to withdraw money is inconvenient and _risky." Police officer Peter Nielson also supports the proposal. "Criminals won't be able to steal money from stores anymore, which will make my job easier." Not everyone is happy about a world without cash, however. /…This is a double-edged sword. Certainly, people's wallets will be lighter, but what happens when there's a problem with the system that processes credit card and mobile payments?” says Mary Daniels, a schoolteacher. “Also, when you use a credit card at a store, staff members can see your name. People shouldn't have to give out their personal information for the sake of convenience."

解決済み 回答数: 2
英語 高校生

第3段落5行目のUnfortunately,~their objectives.までが上手く理解できないです。 2枚目の訳を読んでもどういうことを話しているのかわかりません。(文構造がわからないのではなく、日本語訳がわかりません) どなたか教えて下さると幸いです

relies on your ability to work successfully with people from around learning about eultural contexts is unnecessary, If your business succes the world, you need to have an appreciation for eultural differences as well as respect for individual differences. Both are essential. decades and travel frequently for business while remaining unaware and uninformed about how culture impacts you. Millions of people work in global settings while viewing everything from their own cultural perspectives and assuming that all differences, controversy, 音読用白文 It is quite possible, even common, to Work across eultures s.. and misunderstanding are rooted in personality、 This is not dws 1aziness, Many well-intentioned people don't educate themselves about cultural differences because they believe that if they focus on individual difterences, that will be enough. After I published an online article on the differences among Asian cultures and their impact on cross-Asia teamwork,one reader commented, “Speaking of cultural differences leads us to stereotype individuals and therefore put them in boxes with 'general traits" Instead of talking about eulture, it is important to judge people as individuals, not just products of their environment." At first, this argument sounds valid. Of course, individuals, no matter their cultural origins, have various personality traits. So why not just approach all people with an interest in getting to know them personally, and proceed from there? Unfortunately, this point of view has kept thousands of people from learning what they need to know to meet their objectives. If you go into every interaction assuming that culture doesn't matter, you will view others through your own cultural lens and judge or misjudge them accordingly. Ignore culture, and you can't help but conclude, "Chen doesn't speak up- obviously he doesn't have anything to say! His lack of preparation is ruining this training program!" Yes, every individual is different, And yes, when you work with peopie from other cultures, you shouldn't make assumptions about individual traits based on where a person comes from, But this doesnt me * 10回音読CHECK 1 10 2 3 6 8 9 5 94

解決済み 回答数: 2
英語 高校生

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.

解決済み 回答数: 1