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英語 高校生

100 times moreは何と比較しているか教えください

of the hottest environmental issues abroad is bottled 1 When thinking about the environment, the Japanese should take time to reconsider their lifestyles. Today, one bottled [bá:tld] ds Ales os issue(s) [ju:(z)] industry[indastri] water. Not only does the bottled water industry cost tne deal [di:1] planet a great deal in energy and materials, it has beCome a symbol of First World excess. 5 excess [iksés] ironic [airá:nik] wealthy[welli] willing[wilig) 2 It is ironic that, although consumers in wealthy Countries have safe drinking water, they are willing to pay up to 100 times more for bottled water because of clever packaging and attractive names. All the development that o has brought drinkable tap water to everyone in Japan packaging [pékidzig) drinkable [drigkabl] tap [tep] seems somehow wasted. Why people prefer to buy small amounts of water in PET bottles remains a mystery.. 1ル 3 The bottled water industry makes large profits while mystery[místri] profit(s) [prá:fat(s)] refrigerated [rifridsarèitid] shelves [felvz] <shelf consuming, large amounts of energy. Vending machines 15 and refrigerated store shelves run 24 hours a day. PET bottles require costly disposal. Bottled water is an costly [ks:stli disposal [dispóuzl developed (divelapt] ecological [:kalá:dgikl] impact [impackt] example of how industries in developed countries increase consumer choice while ignoring the ecological impact of their actions. dran 20 oftesup 00 01 mov alte obesup boog 9. 100 times moreとは, 何と比較してですか。 ggy 6. *First World 11. *tap water btorio m yd moe 4. Not only does the bottled ~, (but) it has : not onlyが文頭に来た倒置 13. PET [pét] ポリエチレンテレフタレート 18. developed country → develonin

未解決 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

①〜④の動詞を適当な形にして、根拠を教えてください。 自分で解いてみたのですが、よく分かりません。

PARIS -- "Ekiben," or lunch boxes Dserve in train stations, have begun making their way into the stomachs of travelers in Paris, France, after the first ekiben shop in the country appeared in Lyon train station on March 1 The shop was launched by Nihon Restaurant Enterprise (NRE), which is contracted to sell ekiben by the JR East. のKnow in France by the name "bento"(the Japanese term for a boxed lunch), the meals have become popular in the country because they are healthy and economical. Because theFrench are not accustomed to ③eat rice together with side dishes, however, the meals have been put together with French tastes in mind such as the use of lighter-than-usual flavorings. Customers 4 see buying ekiben at the Lyon train station in Paris, France, on March 1, 2016. (Mainichi) NRE President Katsumi Asai said during the opening ceremony, "The culture of the ekiben is deeply rooted in Japanese food culture. It dates back 130 years in history. and now there are over 2,000 types of ekiben" He added, "We have kept up this tradition of ekiben. At the same time, we keep in mind the cuisine-related preferences of the French people." Mikhail Lannoy, the assistant master of the Lyon train station said that "it is beautiful to see colorful foods packed together in a single box."

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英語 高校生

BとDを教えてほしいです

Suppose you were asked to participate in a blind taste-test of five different brands of strawberry jam. After tasting all of the jams, but before being asked to rate their quality, you spend a couple of minutes ( I 1 ) down your reasons for liking and disliking each jam. Then you rate each one on a scale from 1 to 9. How accurate would your ratings be, assuming we judged accuracy by comparing your ratings with those given bya panel of experts assembled by Consumer Reports magazine? When psychologists Timothy Wilson and Jonathan Schooler conducted this experiment with college students as their subjects, they found that the ratings the students gave to the jams had almost no resemblance to , those given by the experts. 2 They should have been able to tell which ones were good and which ones were not the jams varied widely in quality and included those ranked 1st, 11th, 24th, 32nd, and 44th best out of 45 that Consumer Reports had reviewed. Did the students have no taste for jam? Did their preferences differ from the experts'? Not at all. In a separate condition of the experiment, rather than writing the reasons they liked and disliked each jam, each subject wrote about something entirely ( 4 ): their reasons for choosing their college major. The subjects then rated the jams, and despite not having thought about them at all after tasting them, they made ratings that were much closer to those of the experts.

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