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英語 高校生

一枚目の写真の回答がわからないです全て 教えてください

bkao bib yotth 日 A Reading for main ideas: Choose the best answer. 1. What is the main idea of the passage? The development of the role of caddies. ⑤ The fighting spirit necessary for athletes. © The friendship between a golfer and a caddy. Yabluos od b tol i 6haahgot 2. Bruce Edwards changed cxthetoag the way people saw caddies b his career from a golfer to a caddy greoya0 Sregnig © golf courses so that golfers could play safely B Reading for details : Fill in the blanks with the words in the box below. There are som unnecessary words. Then divide the paragraphs into the following sections. There was a very (1. ) caddy called Bruce Edwards. 1 After Bruce (2. ) from high school, he started to work for Tom Watson as a caddy. 2 Caddies used to just carry the golf bag for golfers, but Bruce always (3. 3 condition of the course. ) the Bruce was also not afraid to (4. )with the golfer. 4 After many (b. ), Watson wanted to play less, so Bruce decided to work for Greg Norman. 5 6 Bruce missed Watson, and he decided to return to Watson after three years、 (6. 7 After they started to play together again, Bruce began to have some (7. ) problems. 8 Bruce was (8. ) with ALS, but he continued to caddy for Watson. Both Watson and Bruce (9. ) at the US Open. 9 10 Watson and Bruce knew this could be their last time together in the (10. Watson asked for (11. 11 (12. ) to do more research on ALS, and Bruce was very ) for having someone like Watson with him. Paragraph Organization Introduction Words en aih g) Becoming Watson's caddy ( Separation and reunion Deadly diagnosis The last chance together in the spotlight ( diagnosed / disagree / examined funding / special/ sorrow separation / health / spotlight thankful / graduated victories / weaker / appeared へ へ Epilogue へ

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英語 高校生

この英文の()に入る言葉が全然分かりません。 分かるところだけでも大丈夫なので説明してほしいです!

|1| The conversation begins with a British professor talking to a Japanese professor about a lesson he had conducted with his Japanese students. He explains how one of his students ( ① ) him by referring to one of the colors of traffic lights as blue 及する 指角する ( 2 ) of green. The Japanese professor points out that in the Japanese language some objects that are usually thought of as green in many languages are ((3 ) using a Japanese word for blue. The British professor then describes similar ( ④ ) in other languages and cultures, such as that of the Berinmo in Papua New Guinea. They also discuss how Japanese and other languages also have ( ⑤ ) words for light blue and blue. 特称もべろ 2| This leads to a discussion about whether Japanese people are( ⑥ ) different things when they look at objects, or whether they are just ( ⑦ ) different terms to describe them. The British professor then brings up a study that investigated how bilingual speakers of Greek and English ( ③ ) different shades of blue. He notes that the conclusion of the study was that those people who spent more time in the UK were ( 9 ) likely to describe the shades of light blue and blue as very different from each other. 3 The Japanese professor continues the conversation by bringing up a second study that further examines the idea that language can( 10 ) the way we think. This study involved Japanese and English speakers and found that the Japanese speakers judged shades of light blue and blue to be further apart. Both professors conclude the discussion by noting the ( ① ) in interpreting the results of these studies, with the Japanese professor observing that language could be influencing thought or that other ( 2 ) factors could be at work. (D) separate (B) cultural (F) effect (A) assessed (C) characteristics (G) society (H) in contrast (E) less (K) disagreeing (O) surprised (S) designed (W) seeing (L) more (1) using (J) instead (N) mistakes (P) dificulty (M) felt (T) critical (X) increasing (Q) need (R) affect (U) reinforce (V) referred )6(W) へ の( )の( C ) ⑤ ( の( 9

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英語 高校生

文章が何を言っているか掴めません。できれば部分的でもいいのでSVなどを振ってくれると嬉しいです

向想 く1 >次の英文を読んで、下の設問に答えよ。 Perhaps the single biggest mistaké we make when we say 'No' is to start from 'No'. , We derive our ‘No' from what we are against- the other's demand or behavior. A positive ‘No' calls on us to do the exact opposite and base our ‘No' on what we are for. Instead of starting from ‘'No', start from ‘Yes'. Root your ‘No' in a deeper 'Yes' -a Yes' to your core interests and to what truly matters. Nowhere didI learn this more clearly than from a relative of mine who suffered from a serious addiction to alcohol that nearly cost him and others their lives in a car accident. He tried many times to give up the habit but always failed. Then at the age of sixty, just when all hope seemed lost, he found in himself the will to say ‘'No' and stop drinking. The secret? “"When my first grandchild was born," he says, “I wanted more than anything to live long enough to see him grow up. It was his birth that motivated me to get treatment and stop drinking. Since then, for over fifteen years now, I have not touched a drop." His 'Yes' to being present for his grandchildren - to be able to play with them and see them grow - motivated his powerful ‘No' to alcohol. His story serves to illustrate an everyday paradoxical truth: the power of your ‘No' comes directly from the power of your 'Yes'. 1our Yes is the underlying purpose for which you are saying 'No', The first step in the method is to uncover the Yes' that lies behind your'No'.(1)The deeper you go into vour core motivation, the more powerful your Yes' will be and thus the more powerful your 'No'. aht ha Tt is ourselves. It is our 1*em ;TL

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