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英語 高校生

回答お願いします。また、どんな話なのかも教えてほしいです🙏

13 20 速読 問題 Reading 1/52 Reading €77 Grammar /16 Writing have no choice but to~ /12 "Unless you're frank here, you'll go hungry all the time." When I was invited to an 次の英文を3分15秒で読んで, 1. の問いに答えなさい。 American woman's house for Christmas, her mother said to me, "We usually don't have a regular breakfast. Will you need breakfast tomorrow?" Out of reserve, I was not able to say "Yes, I will," because (1)that would require her to prepare breakfast for me 5 alone. I had no choice but to say, "No, thank you. (2)Her mother took me at my word, and assumed that I was also in the habit of skipping breakfast. When I was back at the university after the holidays, I (3)brought up the subject with a few Americans. 4)"If you had been in my place, and had needed breakfast, what would you have said?" One person said, "Your friend's mother was being frank, so I'd 00.00% 10 have said frankly, 'If you could prepare a little breakfast, I'm sure I'd enjoy it. (5) Otherwise, I'll eat out." Another person said, "That's not so polite. I'd have asked her politely, 'If you could prepare breakfast for me, I'd appreciate it." They asked me why I had been reluctant to give a frank opinion. I explained the Japanese cultural viewpoint. In Japan, immediately accepting an 15 offer of a meal is regarded as impudent; such an invitation is supposed to be declined at least once. But the host realizes that the guest has declined out of reserve, and makes it a rule to ask a second time. A Japanese guest never insists on being served a meal. The host understands the situation and the feelings of the guest and reacts appropriately. (7) "That idea has no chance at all of working here," one American said with total frankness. She continued, "Unless you're frank here, you'll go hungry all the time." (294 words) /11 reserve [rizá:rv] , be in the habit of ~ing 〜するのが習慣になっている 15 decline [diklain] (丁重に) 断る 19 appropriately [ǝproupriǝtli] 〜するしかない 13 reluctant [rilíktant] 気が進まない 嫌がる 精

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英語 高校生

英文長くてすみません💦 1番最後のitは何を指しているのでしょうか。署名を集めたことですか?それともプラスチック汚染のことですか?それともその後にHowever,they received no answer from the government of Bali とあるの... 続きを読む

Bye Bye Plastics Scene 1 1 Sisters Melati and Isabel were 10 and 12 years old when they were by a lesson in school in Bali about significant people such as Nelson Lady Diana, and Mahatma Gandhi. They returned home and wondered inspired Mandela, G-1 in 2013 and has now grown into a well-known international movement which "What can we do as children in Bali, NOW, to make a difference?" That was まさに the very beginning of their campaign called "Bye Bye Plastic Bags." It started Scene 2 the gove thanked agreed to 6 In 201 5 but the thought collected says NO to plastic bags. 連結形(well+過去分詞) 平方メートル 2 Bali is known by locals as an island of gods and a green paradise. People in Bali, however, produce 680 cubic meters of plastic garbage a day. Amazingly, this is about the size of a 14-story building, but less than 5% gets recycled. 未満 階 thrown The rest ends up in drains, rivers, and the ocean, or it is just burned or be動詞+過去 away. Such plastic pollution is now damaging the whole island. より動作を強調 remaine and try Scene 4 7 On ban or or pla →理由(既知情報) Tuow 3 Since they were driven by a love of their home and its nature, Melati and Isabel started Bye Bye Plastic Bags in October 2013. Their aim was to put a ban on the use and sale of single-use plastic bags in Bali to stop plastic pollution. Their first efforts focused on giving out non-plastic bags, such as net bags, newspaper bags, and 100% organic material bags, to local shops. They also began to teach locals and let them know about the pollution problems. 取り組み G-2 4 In order to educate all the island on the dangerous effects of single-use plastic bags, Melati and Isabel thought that government policies needed to change. They decided that they should collect one million signatures so that officials would not ignore them. To collect that many signatures, they came up with a great idea: collecting signatures at the very busy Bali International Airport. They went there and talked with officials, but these people wouldn't let them do so at first. The sisters talked again and again, and finally they were allowed to collect signatures there. As a result of this great campaign, they were invited to talk about it on TV programs and also at the United Nations. G-2 Scene 3 pollut 8 M 15 teena of w ed just 9 ar

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