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英語 高校生

答えがないので教えてほしいです 途中まではあってるかわかりませんが 考えました(2枚目です) よろしくお願いします!

Vocabulary CD impróve (v) な集 to become better, or to make something better runway (n) ってうう avery long surface like a wide road, that aircraft leave from and come でう3 fáscinating (adj) down on extremely interesting mixture (n) 混信物a single substance made by mixing several substances together populátion (n) - the.number of people or animals living in a particular area, country, etc. résident (n)尾住看 someone who lives ina particular place éthnically (adv) éthnic (adj) R援 relating to a particular race, nation, tribe, etc. FAN-ス divérse (adj) very different from each other divérsity (n) 角藤性 a range of different people or things religion (n)京烈 belief in one or more gods, or a particular system of beliefs in one or more gods Vocabulary Quiz Check the meaning of the words above and put them into the blanks. Change forms if necessary. 1) Icannot stop reading his novels. They are so ( 2) Do some exercises in the textbook to ( )your math skills. What is the ( ) of Tokyo? 4) Pour .cake( ) into a pan and bake it for 45 minutes. 5) The city prides itself on its ethnic ( brenk e9も 6) The airplane braked hard when its wheels touched the ( プレーキ 7) Canada is a culturally ( ) nation. 8) Shinto isa( ) that is practiced only in Japan. 9) The ( ) of the city protested the high taxes. こうきす。 ) and historically related. 10) These two areas are (

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

a piece ofinformationは出来て、one of informationと出来ないのは何故ですか? 教科書とはあまり関係ないと思いますが、一応載せておきます。

When Words Won't Work picto gram pictáire work 働く(新務す3) 機能す3 *うまくいく Words are words and pictures are pictures. Mostof pur Tnformation comes from words. But we arè getting more and ~>pと more information from little pictures. "pictograms."なぜ「ますます働くの未私たちの情報』なのに、 三単現のTS」かかる ピクト22ムのが? (絵文字)受7ntormation」は不可算名調であり、単教扱いたかじ We call them G-1(2) Language 今段 of is G-1(3) あいさっをかわ、す important an means most ot~ ほとんどの~ communication. You exchange greetings. At schoo! 交換する。 ろしいさっ you listen to your teachers, have discussions, and sa piece of)informatin ひとつの小青段 ム可第名詞を教える時に イ保う(paper, sheetime G2 論 St home you Y enjoy talking with your classmates. do your homework. For all of these activities you 10 use language. Yet, there is another important means of yet = but の不可名詞 communication. Look around carefully, and G-3 will notice lots of pictograms. Take a look at the countable xn countable 定の急味 you を見る take a look at cf. look at ~ one of -(~の内の)1つ following. Even little kids may know them. 支持者 因 # と 緊急 15 The one on the left shows an emérgency exit. 中間、 The one in the middle shows a restroom. The one トイレ TF on the right shows an escalator. pictogram [piktagráèm] means [mi:nz] greeting Igri:tm] discussion [diskáfan] following [fáloum] emergency [má:rdgansi] exit [égzat] middle [mid] つ東化を表す *2.more and more More and more people are visiting Tokyo. →よく進子形と一緒に使れれる 12. look around Lookaround to be sure it's safe. restroom [réstrù:m] G-3 Iwill be 16 next month. G-2 We enjoyed playing baseball. Q-1 When do you use language at school ? Q-2 What other means of communication do we often use? 5

解決済み 回答数: 1
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.

未解決 回答数: 0