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英語 高校生

黄色い線部分の意味がわかりません。

第2問 (配点 10) Your school is arranging a work experience programme for students in Years 10 and 11. As a member of the student council, you want to present 11/ some ideas to the school to make the programme a success. You have found a report written by the school council at a school in the UK which looks helpful. Work Experience Week Last month Work Experience Week was held at our school. A11 400 students in Years 10 and 11 were asked to participate. The school provided a list of companies that were willing to accept students for a week, and students were also given the chance to contact companies by themselves. Nevertheless, some of them failed to find a place to work. Students who were not successful in finding a company had to come to school for self- study, so we should find a better way to match up students and companies next year. According to the school, 6% of Year 10 students and 34% of Year 11 students didn't participate. Why was there such a difference? The comments below clearly show the reason for this. Feedback from participants Harry, I really enjoyed the work experience. I found my company from the school's list, so it was easy to set it up. Yu-ming: This was my second time, I'm happy I did it, but most kids in my year just wanted to study for their exams. Maybe it should just be for Year 10. Clara: I couldn't get my first choice, so the workplace was a bit too far. But I think the experience helped me to try harder. Mo: I arranged my own this year. The ones on the list are fine, but several students go to the same place. I wanted to be the only student, and this time I was. Ryan: I already know what I want to be (a physical therapist) and this 2, 3 LIKE 3 To

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英語 高校生

ComprehensionのAとB両方分からないです。 教えてください🙇‍♀️

A Fermented foods A The special sheet Q. Listen and choose the best match for the pictures above. Part 3 fermentation Harmentéif(a)n/ rapidly rapidli dominant /dá(:)minant/ growth /grou0/ ferment(ed) /forment(id)/ soy (s51/ sauce/s5:s/ pickle(s) /pik(a)l(z)/ cuisine/kwizi:n/ exist /igzist/ collaborating /kǝlæbǝrèitin/ <collaborate naturally /næetf(ǝ)r(ǝ)li/ instead /instéd/ A Fish wrapped in the special sh Kanata introduces a variety of fermented foods in Japan Fermentation is another way to preserve food. A goo microorganism is added to the food. It grows rapid becomes the dominant microorganism present in the food and inhibits the growth of bad microorganisms. As grows, it changes proteins or sugars or both in the food and makes it more delicious. Japanese people eat many fermented foods: soy sauce miso, natto, Japanese pickles. Japanese cuisine could not exist. Without these foods Recently, collaborating with a university, a company in Japan developed a special sheet coated with a good microorganism. When you wrap meat or fish in this sheet, the good microorganism protects the food from bad microorganisms. The food naturally begins to ferment without spoiling, and its taste becomes richer and more delicious. The sheet may also solve the food waste problem. Restaurants that use the sheet can keep extra food longer instead of throwing it away. Hints for Understanding 「もし(今) 〜がなければ」 Without ~ 1.8 Without these foods, Japanese cuisine could not exist. ~がなければ Comprehension A Answer true or false. ・できないだろう (could not + 動詞の原形) 仮定法過去 1. Soy sauce, miso, and natto are Japanese fermented foods. 8 2. The special sheet for keeping food was developed by a company in the USA. 3. If restaurants wrap meat or fish in the special sheet, they will throw away less extra food. B Fill in the blanks. 1. Fermentation process A (① ) microorganism is (2 It grows rapidly and slows the (3 microorganisms. ) to the food. ) of (① ) proteins and (6 ) in the food. The food becomes more (⑦ ➡It (6 2. The special sheet The sheet (① \I/ ) the food from (2 ) microorganisms ) microorganism. because it is coated with a (3 GO Give Your Opinion A: Have you eaten fermented foods recently? B: OK, let me see. I ate ① natto How about you?

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英語 高校生

付箋で貼った2文がどうしてそのような訳になるのかわかりません。

た次の英文を読み, 設問に答えなさい。 (学習院 法学部 2022年) Society is everything. Many of us go through life thinking we are self-made and self-sufficient. Some may credit (or blame) their families for success or failure in life, but rarely do we think about (1) the bigger forces (that determine our destinies - the country we happen to be born in, the social attitudes common at a particular moment in history, the institutions that govern our economy and politics, and the randomness of just plain luck. These wider factors determine the kind of society in which we live and are the most important determinants of our human experience. 2 Consider an example of a life in which society plays a very (X) role. In 2004 I spent time with a family in the Ecuadorian Amazon*. Antonia, my host, had twelve children, and her oldest daughter was about to give birth to her first grandchild. They lived on the edge of the rainforest with no road, electricity, clean water or sanitation*. There was a school, but a considerable distance away, (Y) the children's attendance was irregular However, Antonia was a community health worker and had access via radio* to a doctor in a nearby town who could provide advice to her and others. Apart from this service (arranged by a charity), she and her husband had to be completely self-reliant gathering food from the forest, educating their children on how to survive in their environment. On the rare occasions when they needed something they could not find or make themselves (like a cooking pot), they searched for bits of gold in the Amazon, which they could exchange for goods in a market at the end of a long journey by boat. 3 This may seem like a very extreme and distant example, but it serves to remind us how accustomed we are to the things that living collectively gives us infrastructure, education and health care, laws that enable markets in which we can earn incomes and access goods and services. Antonia and her daughter promised to name the baby (they were Minouche, (2) which was a great honour. I often wonder what kind of life that other Minouche will be having as a result of being born in a very different society. V+ re expecting The way a society is structured has profound consequences for the lives of those living in it and the kinds of opportunity they face. It determines not just their material conditions but also their well-being, relationships and life The structure of society is determined by institutions such astical and legal systems, the economy, the way in which family and community life are organized. All societies choose to have some things left to individuals and others determined collectively. The rules governing how ? those collective institutions operate form what might be called the social contract, which 1 believe is the most important determinant of the kinds of lives we lead. Because it is so important and because most people cannot easily leave their societies, the social contract requires (Z) of the majority and necessary changes ás circumstances change. VF vf ⑤We are living at a time when, in many societies. people feel disappointed by the social contract and (3) the life it offers them. This is despite the huge gains in material progress the world has seen over the last 50 years. Surveys Social contract people

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

(4)について This is why にしてしまいました。  This is becauseというようなThis is whyの表現ではだめな理由を教えてください

(60分) Ⅰ 次の英文を読んで、下の設問 (1)~ (11) の語には注が付いています。 に答えなさい。 なお、 Food is fuel. When your body needs energy, you eat. When it doesn't you don't. It should be so simple when you think about it, but that's exactly the problem: us big smart humans can and do think about it, (, introduces all manner of problems and neuroses*. Have you noticed how you always have "room for dessert"? You might have just eaten the best part of a cow, or enough cheesy pasta to sink a gondola, but you can manage that fudge brownie or sundae. Why? How? If your stomach is full, how ice cream triple-scoop b) eating more even physically possible? It's largely because your brain makes an executive decision and decides that, no, you still have room. The sweetness of desserts is a palpable* reward (7)that the brain recognizes and wants so it overrules the stomach. C Exactly {c case is ③ is 4 the this why) uncertain. It may be that humans need quite a complex diet in order to remain in tip-top* condition, so rather than just relying on our basic metabolic systems to eat whatever is available, the brain steps in and tries to regulate our diet better. And this would be fine if that was all the brain does. But it doesn't. So it isn't. Learned associations are incredibly powerful when it comes ( d ) eating. You may be a big fan of something like, say, cake. You can be eating cake for years without any bother, then one day you eat some cake that makes you vomit. Could be some of the cream in it has gone sour; it might contain an ingredient you're allergic to; or (and here's the annoying one) it could be that something else entirely made you throw up shortly after eating cake. out of The disgust eating poiso g And it consider th The brain than food, it doesn't worryingl needlessl one of li shovelin the brai (注) (1) (2

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