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英語 高校生

至急です (  )に何が入るのかわかりません. よろしくお願いします!!

TR. 48-51 Reading 2 aud sdt To 19dmun ar) bas 0 asw anisy 1o smo s 「黄金の腕を持つ男」 James Harrison とは,一体どのような人物なのでしょうか。 dyo James Harrison is known as “the man with the golden arm” and has saved millions of 9eud no anisu sbin o lle obr law lives. When people hear this, they may think he is a kind of superhero with special powers. In fact, he looks like ( ① ) in Australia. However, he has something special: his blood. James was only fourteen years old when he had big surgery*. The surgery was hceKGug Coop 5 Successful, but he lost so much blood that he needed a blood transfusion*. 。This experience o AC taught him the importance of blood. He made his first blood donation* a few weeks after his 18th birthday. Soon after that, a special antibody was found in his blood. An antibody woH (S 3 au alnsbuie is a kind of protein* the body makes when it finds something bad in the blood. Every year, thousands of babies in Australia were suffering from* a type of blood 10 disease. Some babies even died before birth, while (④ ) were born Toortoe serious brain abute eri od gnib1o0oA (ト damage. The antibody found in James's blood can cure* this disease, and so he has ! with bluorta tsdhw Joorbe orly donated his blood more than 1,000 times over the past sixty years. His blood has helped to save about 2.4million babies, and his own grandson was one of them. In one interview, he said, “An hour of your time is a lifetime* for someone else," ( 63nineai. 15 James Harrison, the man with the golden arm, never gives up helping ( 6) さ史の素 関歩限のア い(ー ou とに、次の日本を英語にしなる (229 words)

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英語 高校生

こういった問題を早く解けるようにするにはどうしたら良いでしょうか。 読み方のコツとかあれば教えてください😭

T) Read the following passage, and for each of the numbered spaces 【31】- 【35】, hoose the most suitable word from those given below (1-8). Use each number only one time. [67 皮本日 Retirement is the stage when a husband and wife finally have the chance to spend time together, free from the stresses and strains of working life. But far from being an era of relaxed contentment, retirement can actually be a stressful experience for couples. Academics have (【31】 ) that many wives actually begin to suffer from “retired husband syndrome” once their men give up work. They discovered that nearly half of women complained of ( 【32】 ) levels of stress, depression and sleeplessness after their husbands retired. And to make matters worse, Italian researchers also found that with every extra year the husband spent in retirement, the wife's condition became worse. They said that the problem does not only affect housewives, but can be even worse for women who are still (【33】 ) while their husbands stay at home. “We have found that retirement effects are stronger for employed women, who are already stressed by their job and have( 【34】 ) time to deal with the additional requests by their retired husbands," they said. Part of the cause of greater stress was that women were faced with an increase in housework, the authors wrote. They also had to deal with the added burden of reduced income, an extra concern' for both partners. The research was ( 【35】 ) out by social scientists Dr. Marco Bertoni and Dr. Giorgio Brunello, from the University of Padova, who analysed interviews with 840 Japanese Women between 2008 and 2013. 1. carried 2. increasing 3. less 4. much 5. reducing 6. reported 7. suitable 常 () 8. working 帰 副内王 蓄田

未解決 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

全く和訳できません。

QHint attention from their friends and family. Also, people looking at 才ば Read the passage and answer the questions. A selfie is a Ophoto of a person ora group of people taken by m a person in the photo. Smartphones make it easier for people to take photos and they play a big part in the popularity of taking selfies. A device called a 'selfie stick' was created, that allows 5 people to take selfies more easily. And now people even use drone dróun drones to take pictures of themselves from all kinds of places. se 2 People enjoy taking selfies to show what they wear and how e DneiR. bmoie tuot,o19i they look. Young people often share their selfies on social networking services. When someone posts a positive comment 10 about a selfie, it can make the person in the selfie feel more confident. For young people, selfies are an easy way of expressing emotions and connecting with others. emotion imóuan connect with However, not everyone likes the new trend of taking and sharing selfies. ③ Many people don't feel comfortable looking at 15 other people's photos. They feel that those who post their selfies ~とつながる 44 eninelt on social media only think about themselves and just want 19 1600l them may feel sad and 1onely when they are not included n photos of family and friends having fun. 20 Posting selfies on social media can be a fun way of sharing8 personal experiences and feelings. But when we do D it, think about the effect our photos may have on our friends and family. we must

未解決 回答数: 2
英語 高校生

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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英語 高校生

なるべく今日中で至急お願いします! 2の(イ)はなぜwhichは駄目なのですか?答えはwhatです。

and touches it. Then, G. Answer the following questions. for farmers to grow the “Helping” others is not easy. Sometimes we send the wrong message when we say, "Can I help you?” We mean done as soon as possib well, but we sometimes send the message, “You are not OK; you need to change." I (ア)(むしろ~したい:2語) From the 1970s to th think of it this way: “I see you have a flat tire on your bike. I have some tools and patches here if you want to use There is, however, a b= them. (A) I can also stay around while you fix your bike if you want company." This is (イ) (適する関係代名詞: 1語)Ilearned from my experience along the Sumida River. cluster bombs. This m weapons of war. Let My work is my "vote” on what kind of society I want to live in, Food is also a "tool."(B) Iwant to live in place to live. a society where there is a way to get these “tools" to the people who need them. I don't think of my work as ける conflict 紛争 “helping" people, but rather matching up surplus food with those who can use it. I (ゥ) (~に情熱をもやしてい る:3語)making these matches. ② (much /what / it /sQ/ makes / is / myjob /Yun). 1. 下線部(1)が指して 他の兵器より破壊力 ( ③ ) ような兵 1. Choose the word from the text to match each of the following definitions. (1) the rubber, usually air-filled cover around the edge of the wheel of a car, bicycle etc. 2. 下線部(2)を並- (2) a choice or decision that you make by making a paper 3. Why is the cluster ヒ 2. Fill in the blanks of (ア)~(ウ) with suitable phrases. 4. Fill in the blanks of 3. For underlined part (A) into Japanese. (下の日本語に合うように答えなさい。) あなたが自転車を修理している間に ( 5.(あ)~(う)の空欄に (あ)~に出くわて 4. According to underlined part (B), what kind of society does Mr.Mcjilton want to live in? Answer it in Japanese. 5.下の日本語の意味になるように下線部②を並べ替えなさい。 「これが私の仕事をとても面白いものにする。」 6.In <Summary>, fill in the blanks of (あ)~ (う) with suitable words and complete the sentences. H. [Reading engine 1. 意味が通るように (1)彼女はみんなが目 she raised her vc

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英語 高校生

ものすごく至急です💦今日授業で当てられそうなのですか答えが確実じゃなくて焦っています 答えだけでいいのでほんとうによろしくお願いします 根拠の場所あれば教えて欲しいです

次の英文を読み,下の問いに答えなさい。 We all know the saying “To err is human." And this is true enough. When somethine 80es wrong, the cause is overwhelmingly attributed to human error: airplane crashes (70 percent), car wrecks (90 percent), workplace accidents (also 90 percent), You name it, and humans are usually to blame, And once a human is blamed, the inquiry usually stops ans ISL stu an 止 there. But it shouldn'tー atleast not if we want to eliminate the error. S In many cases, our mistakes are not our fault, at least not entirely. For we all have certain biases" in the way we see, remember, and perceive the world around us, and these biases make us commit certain kinds of errors, Right-handed people, for instance, tend to turn right when entering a building, even though that may not afford the best route to take. And most of us, whether left- or right-handed, show a preference for the number 7 and the color blue. We are also so persuaded by our first impressions of things that we are reluctant to change our first answer on a test; yet many studies have shown we would be better off if we did exactly this. Qur expectations can shape the way we see the world and often the way we act in itas well, In one case, people encountered an unknown man and were later told his occupation. When they were told that the man was a truck driver, they said he weighed more%; when they were told he was a dancer, they said he weighed less. In another case, half the people in a restaurant were told their free glass of wine that night came from France; the other half were told their wine came from somewhere else. Not only did the second group eat less of their meals, but they headed for the doors more quickly. Farmers too show the same tendency. Farmers who believe in global warming, for instance, have been shown to remember temperatures as being warmer than those recorded in statistical tables, And what about farmers who do not believe in global warming? They remembered temperatures that were colder than those in the record books. What's important about these examples is not that we think a truck driver is fatter than a dancer or that temperatures are warmer than they used to be. What'simportant is that these effects occur largely outside of our consciousness; we're biased ー we just don't know we' re biased. Some of these tendencies are so strone that eyen_when_we do know

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