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英語 高校生

基礎英文解釈の技術100 クジラの公式は理解できるのですが、この文章が理解できません。 特に語句を補っている部分が分かりません。

82 演習 82(問題→本冊:p.165) A man like Kasparov studies chess constantly and has memorized large numbers of openings, closings, and midgame situations, so that in some respects he plays mechanically. A computer can, in principle, do this with greater memory capability and thus, eventually, outmatch any human being. But this no more shows any real superiority than when it carries out vast numbers of mathematical operations simultaneously. 【全文訳】カスパロフのような人は常にチェスを研究して相当数の序盤, 終盤そして中 盤を記憶してしまっていて,その結果,場面によっては機械的にチェスをする。 理 論的にはコンピューターはそれよりも大きい記憶力で機械的にチェスをすることが できるし,それだから結局はどんな人間にも優る。しかし, だからといってコンピ ューターのほうが本当にすぐれていることにまったくならないのは, それが膨大な 数の数学の演算を同時に行う場合と同様である。 【解説】 第1文で前置詞句1like Kasparov は man を修飾している。large numbers of 「相当多くの」。 So that ~ 「その結果~」。 in some respects は, 内容から 「場面によ っては」とした。 第2文の do this は play mechanically のことである。blo arb tud stuo2 bas 第3文の〈no more than>をマークするのがポイント。次のように語句を補うと 意味がはっきりする。 h elS R this no more shows any real superiority ([when it plays chess|) 0 atitのか S Vt S Vt 「これが何ら真の優越性を示すものではないのは」 this は前文の内容を指す

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

この英文の()に入る言葉が全然分かりません。 分かるところだけでも大丈夫なので説明してほしいです!

|1| The conversation begins with a British professor talking to a Japanese professor about a lesson he had conducted with his Japanese students. He explains how one of his students ( ① ) him by referring to one of the colors of traffic lights as blue 及する 指角する ( 2 ) of green. The Japanese professor points out that in the Japanese language some objects that are usually thought of as green in many languages are ((3 ) using a Japanese word for blue. The British professor then describes similar ( ④ ) in other languages and cultures, such as that of the Berinmo in Papua New Guinea. They also discuss how Japanese and other languages also have ( ⑤ ) words for light blue and blue. 特称もべろ 2| This leads to a discussion about whether Japanese people are( ⑥ ) different things when they look at objects, or whether they are just ( ⑦ ) different terms to describe them. The British professor then brings up a study that investigated how bilingual speakers of Greek and English ( ③ ) different shades of blue. He notes that the conclusion of the study was that those people who spent more time in the UK were ( 9 ) likely to describe the shades of light blue and blue as very different from each other. 3 The Japanese professor continues the conversation by bringing up a second study that further examines the idea that language can( 10 ) the way we think. This study involved Japanese and English speakers and found that the Japanese speakers judged shades of light blue and blue to be further apart. Both professors conclude the discussion by noting the ( ① ) in interpreting the results of these studies, with the Japanese professor observing that language could be influencing thought or that other ( 2 ) factors could be at work. (D) separate (B) cultural (F) effect (A) assessed (C) characteristics (G) society (H) in contrast (E) less (K) disagreeing (O) surprised (S) designed (W) seeing (L) more (1) using (J) instead (N) mistakes (P) dificulty (M) felt (T) critical (X) increasing (Q) need (R) affect (U) reinforce (V) referred )6(W) へ の( )の( C ) ⑤ ( の( 9

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英語 高校生

解答冊子を無くしてしまったので、分かる方、教えてください

Mr. White's job has ( 1 ) to do with computers. 2 someone の nobody FRAME 100 3 anything Fortu D eit. O something 開外 口12 EXERCISE A 空所に入れるのに最も適切なものを選びなさい。 Beca 口13 very 口01 ノwas a present from my father. 人 の m 2 My old this camera の This old camera of mine Jagm aomけらmoa L O My old camera of this くセンター試験) 3 This my old camera Tdil ot mi The population of Tokyo is much larger than ( bn) of New York. の which 口14 のAI 口02 の all くつくば国際大) 3 one ③M 2 that TO Aonm This year's fashions are quite different from ( ) of last year. 3 these 口15 ( pro 口03 の those の that 2 them 〈近畿大) 1shy のE 口04 )who would like to go ona trip should put their names on the list 3 Ones の They 2 Those の These (亜細亜大) wal erd 19 aloT ni St 口16 You 口05 My mobile phone is broken. I must buy ( ) today. JD Oit W9n d ot vs 2 that 3 this 4 one 〈福岡国際大) 口06 oTo apLojre aorga M I found these keys. Are they ( )that you lost yesterday? 0 one EXERCISE 2 ones 3 the one Jsdi 4 the ones 900 〈日本大) 口01 St 07 There are two reasons for our decision, and you know one of them. Now I' tell ( 9io S 19ddo eri D O another 1odtone (A 2 other OVす 3 the other 4 the others 口02 I m owi bejieiv I 口08 Havinga good idea is one thing. Having a successful business is ( くセンター試験) niD another 3 the others 2 other ud 2l 0uet gniggoda tnew i 4 the another TeO 910n 口09 I have five boxes here. One is full of books and ( ) are empty. 〈東京経済大) O other 3 the other ② the ones 80 JaomlA E sbens) 19vd ) 10 Yoko and I didn't know the time because ( )of us had a watch. の the others D04 〈関西学院大) の both on 2 either ③ neither の not (湘南工科大 50 New Frame 650 ロ

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英語 高校生

1、3、5は解けたのですがそれ以外が訳分からないので、教えてくれると嬉しいです!

取り組み日 再点 月 目標時間 STEP3 読解問題にアプローチ (2年7月改) 20分 The Latin word infans, from which “infant" comes, means "a person who is unable to speak" But all mothers know that communication begins long before actual speech. Babies “talk" to parents with their eyes, their expressions and their whole bodies, and parents respond to them in the same language. Human beings are different from other animals in our highly developed use of language and understanding. Ababy can hear conversations even while she is in her mother's womb. And then from the minute she is born she begins to feel the rhythms of her native language and gradually learns to recognize meaning. In South Africa, *the Bantu tribe celebrates the first time a child answers to her name witha special dinner. The best way to encourage your baby's language is to begin a two*way conversation. Mothers all over the world talk to their babies in a special language, known as "(ア)motherese" or “baby talk". Without learning how, we tend to use the simplest words, changing our grammar to make sentences shorter. Mothers talk of themselves in the third person, repeat things, and speak to their infants in a sing-song pitch. By looking at our babies while we are talking to them, we also teach them the facial expressions that come with speech. Babies start babbling from around three months, repeating easy sounds like “da", “ta", "ma", “ba" and “pa”. All around the world these first basic sounds are the roots of common names for other family members, most importantly “mother" and “father". For example, baba means “mother” among *the Gusii tribe of Kenya, while baban is “father" for *the Sambarivo people of Madagascar. The English word “daddy" is tata in Greek, tatasin Sanskrit and papa in French. Considering the amount of time she spends with her baby in the first months, a mother might expect her baby to say her name first. But this doesn't usually happen. Studies have shown that (イ)babies try to name their fathers before their mothers. Perhaps mothers want to hear their baby's first word as “daddy", in order to make a father feel more important and to add more meaning to his fatherhood. Or perhaps father, a familiar but often a little more distant person, is considered worth saying first. In Europe, the origins of the everyday words for “mother" are closely related to breastfeeding. Mom, Mam, Mummy - all these words come fronm the ancient Greek mamman, which means 17

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