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英語 高校生

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| 以下の本文を読んで、後の問いに答えなさい。 eve where chocolate comes from? Chocolate is made from cacao beans. (の平均して), and more than 70 percent are from Ghana. In West Africa, cacao farmers are verv poor because their cacao beans are sonv low prices. Therefore, many parents cannot send their children to school. Also, often make their children work on cacao farms to help them. (Oによれば) UNICEF, ( ④の数) such children is about 50,000. Moreover, しn children working on the farms do heavy physical labor. twenty-kilogram baskets full of cacao beans on their heads all day long. A(6解決法) to this ( ®間題 ) is the fair trade system. This ( ©新しい) systeIn Is based on partnership between producers and companies that buy their cacao beans. It guarantees a minimum price for the beans, so the trading conditions are better 101 poor famers. This ( ®許す ) them to receive a higher income and improve their lives. (O結果として), their children do not need to work on the farms and can go to school. (O消費者)also play an important ( ①役割 ) in the fair trade system. It offers them a way to reduce ( ®銭困) through everyday shopping. Fair trade products are usually labeled with a fair trade mark. and sometimes even at convenience stores. shopping can make a difference. When you buy chocolate next time, you should give a little more thought to its bitter truth. For example, they carry Therefore, you can find them easily at shops, Your wise choices through everyday

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英語 高校生

英文2文目のbut以下がbut S Vとなっているのかと思って訳してしまいました。(butは等位接続詞であって、but SVはあまりよくないと聞くけどたまにそういう文見るから今回もそうなのかと思ってしまいました。) 訳は取れていたのですが解説のbutが等位接続詞をしている... 続きを読む

こo 司が必要とするものも今より るどんなごみも、自然界に吸収され、すぐにすっかりお おわれてしまった。今日、この調和のとれた関係は、人間に先見の明がなく、 計 少なか 画性に乏しいことのために、また人間の不注意と欲望のために、脅かされている。 Boston has a claim(to be the cradle of American life, It is a big, vital, beautiful city, but one torn by the racial tensions (of "busing" and the racial 斎習 39 次の英文の下線部を訳しなさい。。 (解説·解答→別冊: p.23) いる * こ were 2つ violence of everyday life. (大阪経済大) P園 :語句 claim 固権利/ the cradle 固発祥地/ be torn by N 「N に悩む」/ racial 照 人種間の/ busing 圏(人種差別をなくす目的で)児童をバス通学させること り 79 39 演習 39(問題→本冊:p.79) o山 es Boston has a claim to be the cradle of American life. It is a big, vital, beautiful city, but one torn by the racial tensions of “busing” and the racial violence of everyday life. 【全文訳】ボストンはアメリカでの生活の発祥地と言っていい。それは大きく活気のあ る美しい都市だが,「政策的に児童をバス通学させること」から生じる人種間の緊張 と日常生活の人種間の暴力に悩む都市でもある。 【解説】第1文の has a claim (to be ~ 「~である権利を有する」 は can be called ~ bos v(受)C to 30B 020 V 「~と呼ばれ得る」とほぼ同じで,「~に値する」と訳してもよい。第2文の and が ポイント。and の直後が the racial violence なので, and の前のほうに同じ雰囲気 を持った the ~を探す。 the racial tensions .. が前置詞 byの目的語なら, the racial violence も同様に by の目的語となる。また第2 文前半の1but が結ぶものは one(= (a/an + 単数名詞〉なので, a(city) と a (big, ) city である。 tensions of “busing" の of は caused(過分) by ~ 「~に起因する」 の意味。 the racial tensions … city, by は tensions と violence の共通の前置詞 It is but one torn by and the racial violence

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英語 高校生

こういう英語の挿入問題?がめちゃくちゃ苦手なのですが、入試まであと2週間しかないです。 解けるようになるコツ教えてください。

14 次のそれぞれの問いに答えよ。 4 I 次のパラグラフを完成させるために, 空所 (1) ~ (4) の中に入る最も適切な文を下の(A)~ (D) よ 6 り一つ選び,その記号をマークせよ。 For most Americans, sushi isa symbol for Japanese food. /There are nearly 4,000 sushi restaurants across the United States today,/and its market is over $2 billion,/ (*1り In fact, many Americans then thought the idea of consuming raw fish shocking. It took a boom in immigration from Japan to turn sushi into an everyday “American" food. ( (2)/But by the 1960s, this had had started to change、("3 り And in 1966, a Japanese businessman brought a sushi chef and his wife from Japan, and together they opened a sushi bar inside a Japanese restaurant in the Little Tokyo district of Los Angeles. The restaurant was popular, but only with Japanese immigrants. (レ4 Y As a result, more and more sushi bars popped up outside of the little Tokyo, and Hollywood began to embrace sushi throughout the 1970s. 【出典】A Brief History of Sushi in the United States by Sarah Lohman, Mental Floss, Inc., March 3,2017, https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/92861/brief- history-sushi- united-states (A) A food journalist and restaurant critic writing for The New York Times dining section during that decade was attracted by Japanese restaurants in the city, and declared Japanese fooda trend in New York. (B) In the 1950s many Americans were somewhat resistant to Japanese food and culture, “the 'because they had lived through World War II and still perceived Japan as enemy." (C)Bupfifty years ago, most Americans had never heard of sushi; if they ate Japanese food at all, it was more likely to be sukiyaki or tempura. (D) However, as more sushi bars opened in Little Tokyo, young Japanese chefs( who were tired of the conservative culture of sushi making in Japan, heard about this trend and came to America to look for new opportunities.

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