学年

教科

質問の種類

英語 高校生

enormously を辞書で調べると副詞と出て来ますが、この写真の文だと importantにかかってるように見えます。 あっ、形容詞を修飾してるから別におかしくないんですかね…?

Come to thinkl ofút) as a more or less automatic and natural act (like breathing ○状的詞 考え その事酒に、 or blinking. ) Of course, if we give the matter any thought at all> we must b/c realize that ,o,[language / there / automatic / is/ nothing / about].」 Children There 1s tgut Langirag e matic 5 must be taught their native language, and the necessary training takes a long 決要とあ3 に的に)受止継ゲ43 8.g 技街 time. Language is not something (that is inherited; it is an art that can be 事的に techniqu) passed on from one generation to the next ónly by intensive education) 通が 非常に ID is difficult [to realize the enormously important role (that language b/c. ( 3 )in our social behavior】 What_a different place the world would b e. Shad no one invented languagé!>There would of course be no books a こ け no one inad invented へ 手段 newspapers, tor writing or other means of communication(by words)would no というのも理由) exist. All of history would disappearforlwere it not for language there woul というのも理合) be no way of re-creating past experiences and communicating them to othersE V S 考過程 (of sharing in the mental processes of our fellowmen) Indeed, we couldn't thir もま張する。 at all. Many psychologists maintain that thought itself requires the use tv)

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

青で線を引いた部分の文の構成がわかりません。文の要素の説明して欲しいです🙇‍♀️

will interest anyone who has recently attendeda class reunion - or plans to. Bahrick and 記憶」に関する英文だよ。パラグラフごとに内容を確認しながら読んでみよう。 the 1970s, the noted psychologist Harry Bahrick conducted a landmark study th. Is "colleagues asked hundreds of former high school students to look back at th yearbooks and see whether they could remember the faces of their classmates. What tho 5 discovered is (ア)proof of the power of human memory. For decades after graduation t. memory of fofmer students for the faces of their classmates was nearly undamaged. Evos after nearly half a century had passed, the former students could still recognize seventw three percent of faces of their classmates. But when it came to names, Bahrick found, memories were much worse; after nearly fif.. 10 years the former students could remember only eighteen percent of their classmates names. Names, for whatever reason, donot stick very well in our memories, or they stick only partway, causing us to call our brother-in-law Bob, Rob, or to mistake the author Ernest Hemingway for the actor Ernest Borgnine. Why should we remember faces, but not the names that go with them ? Part of the answer 15 is that (イWhen it comes to memory, meaning is king, Our long-term memory, even for things we've seen thousands of times, is limited. It is prúmarily *semantic, which means that in most daily instances of.remembering what_we mist recallis meaning, not surface details. Take the common *penny, for instance. How well do you think you can remember its features ? In a well-known test, two researchers, Raymond Nickerson and Marilyn Adams. 20 asked just such a question. The answer they got surprised them - and may surprise you. In the test, Nickerson and Adams asked twenty people to do something that sounds really easy: from memory, draw the front and back of a penny. After the drawings were done, Nickerson and Adams graded them to determine how accurately the participants had drawn eight critical features, like the placement of Lincoln's profile on the front of the coin 25 and the placement of the Lincoln Memorial on the back. The results wereA Of the twenty people tested, only one - an *avid penny collector 一 accurately recalled and located all eight features. Of the eight features, the average number recalled and located correctly was just_three. Interestingly, the most frequently forgotten feature was 30 the word “LIBERTY," which appears on the front of the coin, to the left of Lincoln's profile. The findings from the penny-drawing test were conducted a series of follow-up tests to try to confitm what was going on here. Among othe= things, they wondered: If people couldn't recall exactly what a penny looks likeg would the (at least be able to tell the real thing from a fake ? To find out, they showed a new group of people fifteen drawings of the heads side of penny. Only one of the drawings was accurate; the rest were not. The participants' job w to pick the right one. Again, the results were disappointing. the right one. NT ONTO POINT B |enough that Nickerson and Adam: POINT C than half of the people in the study picls (51 注)*colleague =同僚 *vearhook 京竜アル

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

どなたか英語の得意な方この問題問いてくださいませんか、、 先日受験して不安で眠れません

6. 次の英文を読み, 以下の設問に答えよ。 legally as a *trophy. In 2003, a lone hunter killeda rhino on a legal safari in South Africa and brought it back to Asia. Dozens of poachers soon followed. The sound of rifles being fired could be heard in the dark forest just as each paying $50,000 for a hunt. It seems like a lot to pay, but poachers can Damien Mander arrived at his campfire after a long day training *game ranger make as much as $200,000 in profits by selling a pair of horns on *the black recruits in Zimbabwe's Nakavango *game reserve. "There, near the eastern market. boundary," he pointed. He and his rangers grabbed their guns, radios, and ull Many officials in Vietnam are fighting back against reports that the country medical kits. They then drove into the night, hoping to stop the shooter. is the main market for rhino horn, stating that rhino horn bound for Vietnam (21) And so goes a night on the front lines of southern Africa's ruthless * rhino is merely in transit for another country. Do Quang Tung, deputy director of war, which has seen more than a thousand rhinos killed since 2006. At the CITES Managing Authority in Vietnam, said the country "could not be the main bloody heart of this conflict is the rhino's horn, a prized ingredient in traditional market for South African rhino horn," claiming that the majority of Vietnamese Asian medicine. Prices range from $33 to $133 a gram, which at the top end is people would not be able to ( 26 ) rhino horn. Even if there is an emerging double the price of gold. group of people who can ( 26 ) it, he thinks it is too small to make the country Although the range of the two African species 一 the white rhino and its a significant consumer. Professor Dang Huy Huynh, chairman of the Vietnam smaller cousin, the black rhino- has been reduced primarily to southern Africa Zoological Society, says that rhino horn has never been a popular ingredient in and Kenya, their populations had shown signs of improvement. In 2007 white traditional medicine. rhinos numbered 17,470, while blacks had nearly doubled to 4,230 since the mid Recently, there has been a renewed interest in the unproven belief that rhino 90s. horn has healing power. For at least 2,000 years, Asian medicine has prescribed For conservationists these numbers represented a triumph. In the 1970s rhino horn to reduce fever and treat a range of illnesses, but the handful of 22 and '80s, *poaching had nearly caused the two species to become extinct. Ther studies which have been conducted on rhino horn have not found any proof that China banned rhino horn from traditional medicine, and Yemen forbade its ust it can reduce fever. The newest rumor is that it cures cancer, but doctors say in ceremonial knife handles. All signs pointed to better days. But in 2008 th the proof is nonexistent一 no research has been published on the horn's efficacy 23) number of poached rhinos in South Africa shot up to 83, from just 13 in 200' as a cancer treatment. But even if rhino horn is not an effective cure for anything, let alone cancer, that doesn't mean it has no effect, says Mary Hardy. By 2010 the figure had soared to 333, followed by over 400 in 2011. Most of th 27) medical director of Simms/Mann UCLA Center for Integrative Oncology. "Belief horn trade was found to lead to Southeast Asia. in a treatment, especially one that is wildly expensive and hard to get, can have *Javan rhinos once lived in Vietnam's forests. ( 24 ) It had a bullet a powerful effect on how a patient feels," she says. its leg and its horn had been removed. In any event, John Hume believes no rhinos need to die to supply the rhino Even with the rhinos gone, rhino horn can still be found in Vietnam. This 28 25 horn to those who want it. The 69-year-old * entrepreneur has acquired one of because South African law, which complies with the Convention on Internatio the largest privately-owned rhino herds in the world, and currently has more Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), allowS a rhino's horn to be expor ○M3(45)

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

問3について ④みたいな選択肢のとき、ついついwhenを 「~とき」と訳してしまいます。 模範解答は「いつ、他者のそばに立つべきか」と書いてあったのですが、なぜこのときはwhenを「いつ、~」と訳してるんですか?どういうときに「いつ」と訳せばいいんでしょうか? あと、「~... 続きを読む

第6問(配点 24) A findings to your classmates. social positions. Personal Space and Culture Hall also told an interesting story illustrating cultural influenee, He was Sitting alone on a chair in the lobby of a hotel when an unfamiliar Arabian man came within arm's length) The man looked as if he was waiting for someone and stood in front of than an Asian person. strangers. him. Due to his personal space being violated, he felt very uncomfortable and tried to show his discomfort, but the Arab did not seem to notice at all) Hall had no idea why the man was standing so close, thinking that even in a public place like a hotel lobby, someone's personal space should be respected by others. Afterward, when he 0 taik with your friends even when thev are closer than this distance. However, you met his Arab friend, Hall asked why the man had acted so rudely. His friend said, “That's just an American idea. Arabs believe that personal space does not exist for anyone in a public place like a hotel lobby." Furthermore, a distance of less than 1.5 feet (46cm) from you is called *“intimate In a globalized society, knowledge of cultural influence on interpersonal distance aistance." Since physical contact with others is likely to occur within this distance, is necessary in daily life/ People from different cultural backgrounds have a personal only those who have a very close relationship with you are allowed to come nearer space of a different size, and it is very likely that you will mistakenly violate their than that. By contrast, when you step into a stranger's space formed by intimate personal space. This may sometimes cause(serious trouble, Therefore, understanding distance, they may feel that you are trying to frighten them or physically attack them. the sense of interpersonal distances in other cultures will help avoid conflict with Hall classifies “personal distance” and “intimate distance” as someone's personal others. space. The space outside of your personal space can also be divided into two types, depending on the distance./ A distance of between 4 feet (1.2m) and 12 feet (3.7m) from you is called “social distance," and a distance of more than 12 feet away from you is called"distance." in non-situations, in business or parties, place at a social . On the other hand, a public distance is a public speech. You also to keep this distance when meeting people in important The point here is that , , the same for all , but are by your or, , by the culture you belong to. , that people in South , in , space than people in Asia, a South will allow a to get closer 3- 31 3- 30

解決済み 回答数: 2