学年

教科

質問の種類

数学 高校生

私はいまニュージーランドに留学している今年度上智大学を受験予定の高校2年生です。上智大学の経営学科の帰国生入試には和訳問題があるのですが、どれも自分には難しく、現地の先生にアドバイスしていただいてもいまいちわかりません。どなたか、回答を教えていただければと思います。 下線... 続きを読む

Why - and why now? Because of the shift in the Experience Economy. Goods and services are no longer enough; what consumer want today are experience - memorable events that engage them in an inherently personal way. As paid-for experiences proliferate, people now decide where and when to spend their money and time - the currency of experiences - as much if not more than they deliberate on what and how to buy (the purview of goods and services). (1) But in a world increasingly filled with deliberately and sensationally staged experiences - an increasingly unreal world - consumers choose to buy or not buy based on how real they perceive an offering to be. Business today, therefore, is all about being real. Original. Genuine. Sincere. Authentic. In any industry where experiences come to the fore, issues of authenticity follow closely behind. Think of Disneyland. No place before or since its opening in 1955 has provoked more debate on authenticity within modern culture, nor has any other business sparked more controversy on the effect of commercial activity on the reality of modern living than the Walt Disney Company. (2) Or think coffee. Starbucks earns several dollars for every cup of coffee, over and above the few cents the beans are worth, precisely because it has learned to stage a distinctive coffee-drinking experience centered on the ambience of each place and the theatre of making each cup. Perhaps no other company in the world more earnestly and steadfastly seeks to render authenticity ー resolutely shaping how real consumers perceive it to be. The task has become harder and harder, however, as Starbucks has grown from one shop in Seattle to over 13,000 venues around the world, for nothing kills authenticity like ubiquity. The success of Starbucks no longer depends on its operational prowess or taste superiority; it lies solely in sustaining coffee drinkers' perception of the Starbucks experience as authentic. (3) Now that the Experience Economy has reached full flower - supplanting the Service Economy as it had in turn overtaken the Industrial Economy, which itself had replace the Agrarian Economy - such issues of authenticity now bear down on not only all experience offerings but across all of the economyY.

回答募集中 回答数: 0
英語 高校生

この春高校生になる者です。 問題の「そのことはおまえに百獣の王を目覚めさせないように教えることになるだろう!」がイマイチ理解できません。 どなたか分かりやすく教えていただけると嬉しいです。(一枚目は一応本文です)

目標時間: 15分 /56点 Reading [読解問題に取り組む ] 前のページに出てきた単語·熟語は赤色にしています。 わからなかったら, 前のページに戻りましょう。 文法のページでは, アミかけの英文を使って, 未来表現を確認します。 次の英文を読んで~7の問いに答えましょう。 CD1 8 One day a lion was sleeping. A mouse ran over his face and woke him up,/ The da That will teach l1on was angry,/ He caught the mouse and said, “Ill eat you up. you not to wake up the king of the animals!” But the mouse cried, “Please don't eat me. I didn't want to wake you up/ I'm very sorry, / Please let me go. /You will be glad some day, If you (B,do this for me, I 。 will do something for you. ララ Ine hon laughed at the mouse. /“A little animal like you?/ How can you help a big, strong animal like me?" But he also thought, “This mouse really is very small, He's too small for dinner./ He's even t00 small for a snack." So he let the mouse go,/ A few days later, some hunters came and caught the lion. They tied him to a 10 tree with strong ropes! Then they left him and went to the village. /They wanted to keep the lion and sell him to the zoo./But they needed more men. 5 The lion roared and roared/ He was very angry, but he couldn't move. The mouse heard the roaring and ran to him/ “Now you will see what I can do for you," he said. Little by little, the mouse cut 15 through the ropes with his teeth./ Soon the lion was free. [出典)JEFFRIES, LINDA; MIKULECKY, BEATRICE S., BASIC READING POWER 1 STUDENT BOOK, 3rd Ed., ©2010. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education, Inc.., New York, New York. ライオンは,補まえたネズミをどうしたでしtうか?

未解決 回答数: 2