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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

赤い枠の単語を必要があれば品詞を変えて埋めるのですが、よく分からないので教えてください。

Vocabulary Practice A. Completion. Complete the paragraphs below using the correct form of the words in the box. One word is extra. hazardous discard pile substance notify infrastructure Reuse and recycle: these well-known ideas for dealing with trash are being employed to handle e-waste such as old computers, cell phones, and televisions. Many companies send used electronic items from the United States and the European Union to developing nations. They claim to be recycling, and also helping the developing world modernize its Customers shop for used televisions at a secondhand electronics market in Lagos, Nigeria. - However, the reality may be quite different. The Basel Action Network of Seattle, Washington, recently reported that three-quarters of the supposedly reusable electronics shipped to Lagos, Nigeria, are in fact broken. Consequently, 2.. roads. Often it's picked apart by the desperately poor, who come in contact with toxic 4. 5. Richard Guttierez of the Basel Action Nerwork believes companies in developed nations pay lip service' to recycling while actually disposing of their e-waste as cheaply as possible, leaving the developing world to deal with the problems it causes. of e-waste end up being 3.. - along rivers and -Such as lead-in the broken equipment. Lead is known to be especially to the health of growing children.

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英語 高校生

(a)に入るのが、attendingなのですが、なぜでしょうか? 教えてください!

その番号を記入せよ。 なんて attend ing (24点) This weekend, I had the pleasure of ( a ) my dear friend Dara Lynn's baby shower. Over a lunch of clam chowder, sirloin steak, and chocolate cake, I caught up (b) two of her friends, Amanda and Andrea, from law school. They were both lawyers now, and the subject of networking and responding to requests from people who were looking for career advice ( c ) up. Like many successful professionals, the two women were happy to help those who reached out to them for their professional opinion and guidance. However, they had a hard ( d ) believing how many of those people failed to thank them for their time afterward. It is unbelievable that anyone would reach out to a person who is obviously quite busy witha demanding job in addition to ( e )a parent and home-owner, ask that person to give up their time, and then not follow up with a simple thank you. If you are asking someone for a ( f ), you should let them know you appreciate that person's effort. Amanda told the story ofa young man, a few years out of law school, with (g) she had spent more than an hour giving advice. Shenoted he was not writing down any of the names of people or organizations she had suggested he contact. Instead of a thank-you note the following day, she received an email from him asking her ( h ) send him the names of the people she had mentioned. I was shocked that someone would be so “self-important"” and show such a ( i )

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英語 高校生

1つ目の画像の一番下の行のBecauseから、2枚目終わりまでの和訳を教えていただきたいです。よろしくお願いします。(1枚目と2枚目の文章は繋がっています)

1. Introduction In the 1980s, Japanese financial institutions increased their presence in Western financial markets. Japanese financial institutions had close business relationships with large Japanese corporations (interlocking keiretsu business relationships) and suffered few non-performing loans because of the country's steady economic development, making them the soundest financial institutions in the world. Table1 shows the transition in the eredit ratings of major Japanese financial institutions and demonstrates that in 1988, many Japanese financial institutions were given a top credit rating. However, in the 1990s, the financial condition of Japanese financial institutions deteriorated rapidly as a result of an increase in non-performing loans brought on by an economic slump. For example, Figure 1 shows the changes in the balance of non-performing loans that Japanese banks held. At its peak at March 2002 (i.e., the end of FY 2001), this level exceeded ¥40 trillion. Figure 2 clearly indicates the severity of the problem, and Figures 1 and 2 show that, despite disposing of non-performing loans exceeding ¥10 trillion several years in the late 1990s, the balance of non-performing loans stillincreased. In 1997, the financial condition of major banks grew severe, as evidenced by the failure of institutions such as Hokkaido Takushoku Bank, which had a significant standing among major commercial banks, and Yamaichi Securities, one of the four major security corporations. Many financial institutions that survived with government assistance barely escaped bankruptcy. In the past, Japanese banks were subjugated under extremely strict regulations implemented by the Ministry of Finance. In the 1980s, however, financial globalization progressed, increasing the concern that if the regulations did not change, they may promote the hollowing out of domestic markets. Beginning in 1996, the Japanese government advocated Japanese “Big Bang" financial reforms and fundamentally restructured the regulations. These reforms could have becen viewed as a "constructive" approach to financial regulations for a new cconomic environment. On the other hand, the deterioration of the business conditions of financial institutions progressed at a speed and scale greater than what was anticipated. Because the laws that

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