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英語 高校生

ポイントを読み取ろうと内容を確認しようの それぞれの回答があっているかの確認をお願いします また、間違っている場合は回答を教えてください (内容を確認しよう[1]2の「〜Florida」のあとの because〜って必要ですか? そちらも教えてください)

dod) bristetebnu od am 101 ◎区切りごとに意味をとりながら、 音読しよう。 海外で頻額をする上で大切なことは何ですか? I : ① What's important/when you perform rakugo overseas? // 新キャラクターがいないもと(原作)のストーリーを大切していると思います S: ② ©I consider it important / to keep the original stories,/ including the 10-1 lo stat 新 そうすることで、海外の環境 日本の文イルド settings and characters. // ③ By doing this, international audiences / 夢中になります。 become absorbed in Japanese culture. // ④ As a result, / they laugh more. // その聞、彼らはもっと笑います。 nothlists rol tod obratuo valg どうようにそれに気づきましたか。 ti 020 I : ⑤ How did you realize that? // .9m baiganos ed tedt gnieliqim アメリカでの公演で、破と気のエピソードを含む日本の計をしました S:⑥ In a performance / in the US / I told a Japanese story / which on inag muated nodw basing 4₁P 14. 15 onideoma included an episode / about a crane and a tortoise. //⑦I didn't think / 日本のツルノ、親しんでいるとは思いませんでした JLUS LGB なじみがある なのでそれ(ツルを the audience was familiar with a Japanese crane.//⑧So/Ireplaced it / ・知度は期待したほど笑いませんでoftome balsecoal フラミンゴに取りかえました。 with a flamingo. // ⑨ The audience didn't laugh / as muchas I had 911 その理由がわかりました 後で、 「フラミンゴ」という言葉は、 expected. // ⑩ Later, / I found out the reason. // ⑦ The word “flamingo" / 島で有名なフロリダに思いを馳せました。 brought their minds to Florida / because it's famous for those birds. // sw jedW. (I 私は彼の心を日本の世界に留めておく必要があることに気づきました。 12 I realized / I had to keep their minds / in a Japanese world. // as wear Fiotisioyami ogul we ad and thusiftib bail enidarue bib ted W (2

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

赤線の部分の訳と文構造が分かりません。 見ずらくてすいません🙇‍♂️

truly become between two independent individuals who fell in love and decided to make a life Such an important decision, perhaps the most important for themselves. decision of one's life, cannot be made by others. (1) sense. Marriage is But in many cultures it simply doesn't make fundamentally a social bond, uniting families and cementing their cultural and (イ) religious values. It may be romantic, but it is not just about the bride and groom; it's about family and community. Indeed, even in the West for most of history, marriage was not primarily about the individual needs and desires of a man and woman and the children they produced. Marriage had as ( ) to do with getting good in-laws and increasing one's resources and family labor force as it did with finding a lifetime companion and raising a beloved child. or Marriage spoke to the needs of the larger group. 3 Different traditions, different marriages. In India, over 90 percent of the (2) bemarriages are arranged. One survey in 2013 revealed that 74 percent of young 9 Indians aged between 18-35 years said that they would rather let their parents ad choose their life partners than choosing themselves. While the traditiona practice of arranged marriage has been illegal in China since the 1950s, parent remain heavily involved in their children's marital decisions, with many paren trying hard to persuade their children to get married by interrogating the (13) during family gatherings. In Japan, it was not until the early 1960s that le marriages outnumbered arranged ones. Arranged marriages can take a variety of forms ranging from fo marriages (where either the bride or the groom, or both, have no choice in matter) to consensual marriages (where the bride and groom have all 002 - 1

未解決 回答数: 0
英語 高校生

5つの下線部の正しい訳を教えて欲しです。 至急お願いします🚨🙇

Unit 12 Change the World Basic A few years ago, an obesity* researcher at the University of Washington-named Adam Drewnowski ventured into the supermarket to solve a mystery. He wanted to (1) figure out why (2)poor people were more likely to suffer from obesity in America. Obesity is, as you know, mainly caused by taking in too many calories. For most of history the poor have typically suffered from a shortage of calories, not an excess. So why do the people with the least amount of money to spend on food tend to be overweight today? 目 Drewnowski gave himself a dollar to spend, using it to purchase as many calories as he possibly could. He discovered that he could buy the most calories per dollar in the middle aisles of the supermarket, among the towering piles of* processed food and soft drinks. 3 Processed food is, in the broadest sense, any food that is changed from its natural, raw state. But here, it refers to food which has been chemically changed by using additives* such as flavors, colors, preservatives*, stabilizers*, etc., or which has been combined with other foods in a manufacturing process. Generally speaking, if the ingredients* aren't “natural,” then we consider it to be ( 3 ). Drewnowski found that a dollar could buy 1,200 calories of cookies or potato chips, which are typical processed foods, but only 250 calories of carrots. Looking for something to wash down those chips, he discovered that his dollar bought 875 calories of soda (a processed food) but only 170 calories of orange juice. 5 As a rule, processed foods are more “energy dense*” than fresh foods: they contain less water and fiber but more added fat and sugar, which makes them both (4)less filling and more fattening. 5 These particular calories also happen to be the least healthful ones in the marketplace, which is why we call the foods that contain them "junk*.” Drewnowski concluded that the rules of the food game in America are organized in such a way that if you are eating (6) on a budget, the most rational economic strategy is to eat badly-and get fat.

未解決 回答数: 1