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このページの日本語訳お願いしたいです! テストが近いので、早めでお願いします!ごめんなさい🙇‍♀️

Store When you stop thinking about the new information, your brain moves it from your short-term memory into your long-term memory*. It breaks the information into smaller parts. It stores the information in different areas of your brain. For example, when you learn a new word in English, you learn its spelling pronunciation, and meaning. This information is stored in different areas of your brain. 6 Do you ever see a word and sav. "I know it. but I can't say it!” That's because you can find some of the information, but you can't find all of it. You remember something about the word, but not enough to put it together. When you truly.remember the word, you connect all its. different parts.;Every time you think about the word, those connections get stronger. With every repetition, you can find the information faster. Repetition is the secret to good memory, but it does not mean repeating the same thing, the same way every time. If you practice your learning in different ways, your brain connections get stronger. For example, when you hear the word, you connect one way. When 7 8 you write the word, you connéct a different way. Each time you add new connections to the word, you make the memory stronger. Repetition and practice are the keys to remembering what you learn. 3 long-term memory: the type of memory that stores information for a long period of time

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英語 高校生

このページの日本語訳お願いしたいです! テストが近いので、早めでお願いします!ごめんなさい🙇‍♀️

Store When you stop thinking about the new information, your brain moves it from your short-term memory into your long-term memory*. It breaks the information into smaller parts. It stores the information in different areas of your brain. For example, when you learn a new word in English, you learn its spelling pronunciation, and meaning. This information is stored in different areas of your brain. 6 Do you ever see a word and sav. "I know it. but I can't say it!” That's because you can find some of the information, but you can't find all of it. You remember something about the word, but not enough to put it together. When you truly.remember the word, you connect all its. different parts.;Every time you think about the word, those connections get stronger. With every repetition, you can find the information faster. Repetition is the secret to good memory, but it does not mean repeating the same thing, the same way every time. If you practice your learning in different ways, your brain connections get stronger. For example, when you hear the word, you connect one way. When 7 8 you write the word, you connéct a different way. Each time you add new connections to the word, you make the memory stronger. Repetition and practice are the keys to remembering what you learn. 3 long-term memory: the type of memory that stores information for a long period of time

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英語 高校生

星マークの付いている文(Are there limits beyond which offensive or hateful speech deserves to be suppressed by state power?)のところの訳(2枚目星マーク)が意訳なのか、どうし... 続きを読む

| | Read the PaSsage and answer the questions below. In the summer of 1990, a group of teenagers in the city of St Paul, Minnesota, burned a cross in front of the house of an African-American family. The teenagers were arrested and charged with violating a St. Paul law called the “Bias-motivated Crime Ordinance.” The law made which one knows or has reasonable grounds to know arouses anger, alarm or ツ it iegal to place “on public or private property a symbol .… resentment in others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion or gender.” The teenagers challenged the legal basis of their arrest。 and in 1992、 the US Supreme Court declared the St. Paul aw an unconstitutional violation of freedom of speech. A European court would almost certainly have decided the case differently. Domestic national courts in Europe, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, are far more likely than their American counterparts to | 16 | “extreme speech"- speech that offends personal dignity on the basis of factors such as race ethnicity。 religion and sexual orientation. HateG crime prohibitions are familiar throughout Europe - laws that would not stand a chance of being accepted as constitutional in the United States. The differences between American and European approaches to the law raise pressing questions about the nature and limits of expressive freedom in democratic nations. What role, if any, should the law play in democracies in policing speech? there imits beyond which offensive or hateful speech deserves to be suppressed by state power? Do efforts to punish extreme speech produce a healthier democracy? ② One way to determine the extent to which free speech should be guaranteed would be to take into consideration the cultural and historical 2 ン 。 に

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