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英語 中学生

このような英文を読むのに8分ぐらいかかってしまいます。筆記は30分しかないので、2、3分で読めるようになりたいです。 早く読めるコツを教えてください。

4 Read the passage and choose the answer which best completes each sentence (1) 1)~(4). We all know that any person has a dream while they are sleeping. We also know that it is difficult to remember dreams after we wake up. Most dreams are soon forgotten and they disappear like small bubbles in water. In addition, they often cannot be remembered at all after they are forgotten. Even if you can remember a dream soon after you wake up, perhaps you cannot remember it any more after getting out from your bed to make some coffee. Maybe you have had such an experience. Then, have you ever noticed that you were having a dream while you were sleeping? / Some people have had such an experience. It is called a lucid dream, and some scientists in the world do research on it. Actually, there are even research groups which focus on it. Why do they do research on lucid dreams? For one thing, there may be advantages for us. We will be able to avoid nightmares and make our dreams happier or more exciting if we can notice we are having dreams and we can control them like a pilot. Today, scientists do not know enough about lucid dreams and how to control them, so there are still many things to be done in the research. But it may be possible for everyone to have lucid dreams if science in the area improves more. Actually, that is one of goals that some scientists are trying to reach. According to a survey, over 75% of the respondents answered that they experienced a lucid dream at least once in their lives. Also, many reports about lucid dream experiences were given in history. We can find early reports on them in books from ancient cultures. For example, an ancient Greek doctor already tried to use lucid dreams as a kind of therapy over two thousand years ago. And controlling our dreams in our own ways was one of the important topics among early Buddhists in Asia.

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

関西学院大学の英語の問題です。 定期テストの初見問題で出た問題なのですがBの(2)の線で引いた問題(空欄補充・画像1枚目の13行目の真ん中辺りにあるgeneration (2) generationの問題です。)の答えがなぜ(エ)afterなのかが分かりません。 どなたか教... 続きを読む

次の英文を読み、 下記の設問 (A~D) に答えなさい。 In the last few decades, people all over the world have been told that humankind is on the path to equality, and that globalization and new technologies will help us get there sooner) In reality, the twenty- first century might create the most unequal societies in history. Though globalization and the Internet bridge the gap between countries, they threaten to enlarge the gap between classes, and just as humankind seems about to achieve global unification, the species itself might divide into different biological types. Inequality goes back to the Stone Age. Thirty thousand years ago, hunter-gatherer tribes buried some members in grand graves filled with thousands of ivory beads, bracelets, jewels and art objects, while other members had to (7)settle for a mere hole in the ground. ( 1), ancient hunter-gatherer tribes were still more egalitarian* than any succeeding human society, because they had very little property. Property is a condition for long-term inequality. Following the Agricultural Revolution, property multiplied, and with it inequality. As humans gained ownership of land, animals, plants and tools, hierarchical** societies emerged, in which small elites monopolized wealth and power for generation (2) generation. Hierarchy, then, came to be recognized not just as the model, but also as the ideal. How can there be order without a clear hierarchy between elites and ordinary people, between men and women, or between parents and children? Authorities all over the world patiently explained that just as in the human body not all parts are equal, so also in human society equality will bring nothing (3) disorder. In the late modern era, however, equality became an ideal in almost all human societies. It was mainly due to the Industrial Revolution, which made the masses more important than ever before. Industrial economies relied on masses of common workers, (4) industrial armies relied on masses of common soldiers. Governments invested heavily in the health, education and welfare of the masses, because they needed millions of healthy workers to operate the production lines and millions of loyal soldiers to fight in the wars. with ti own no (3) of sup horizo partic again A. Consequently, the history of the twentieth century revolved around the ( 5 ) of inequality between classes, races and genders. Though the world of the year 2000 still had its share of hierarchies, it was かなり nevertheless a much more equal place than the world of 1900. In the first years of the twenty-first century people expected that the egalitarian process would continue and even speed up. In particular, they hoped that globalization would spread economic growth throughout the world, and that as a result people in India and Egypt would come to enjoy the same opportunities and privileges as people in Finland and Canada. An entire generation grew up on this hope. Now it seems that this hope might not be fulfilled. Globalization has certainly profited large portions of humanity, but there are signs of growing inequality both between and within societies. Some groups increasingly monopolize the fruits of globalization, while billions are left behind. Already today, the richest hundred people together own more than the poorest four billion. This could get (6) worse. The rise of Al (Artificial Intelligence) might eliminate the economic value and political power of most humans. At the same time, improvements in biotechnology might make it possible to translate economic inequality into biological inequality. Soon the super rich might be able to buy life itself. If new treatments for extending life and for upgrading physical and intellectual abilities prove to be expensive, a huge biological gap might open up between the rich and the poor. By 2100, the rich might be more talented, more creative and more intelligent than the less advantaged. Once a real gap in ability opens between the rich and the poor, it will become almost impossible to close it. If the rich use their superior abilities to enrich themselves further, and if more money can buy them more efficient bodies and brains, B B V

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

これの答えはあってますか? あと、4-3の答え知りたいです🙇🏻‍♀️

8 Edo: A Sustainable Society 次の表の空欄を埋めなさい。 policy resource 日本語 政策 ~を扱う 資源 resource 2 下線部の発音が左の語と同じものを1つ選び、記号に○を付けなさい。 1. treat 1. respect ウ.material ウ.role 2. policy ウ. hate 3. mentality respect modesty satisfaction ア. those ア. waste ③ 3 次の語の最も強く読まれる部分の記号に○を付けなさい。 1. val-u-a-ble 2. men-tal-i-ty アイ ア ウエ modesty satisfaction 3. re-spect アイ 日本語の意味に合うように, ( に適切な語を入れなさい。 1. 私の家には寝室が4部屋あります。 さらに、広い庭があります。 My house has four bedrooms. ( IW LESSON & Part4 Edo: A Sustainable Society garden. 2.教育は社会において重要な役割を果たしています。 Education ( plays ) an important (role ) in society. 3. 彼は水と食料を買うのに必要なだけのお金を持っていました。 He had ( )( 日本語 ~を尊重する 謙そん 満足 )(addition), it has a large 5 日本語の意味に合うように,( 内の語(句) を並べかえなさい。 1. 私たちの犬は家族の一員として扱われています。 Our dog (as/treated/is/afamily member ). Our dog is treated as a family member 2.その古時計は長い間使われていたようです。 money to buy water and food. The old clock (seems/used/ have/to/been) for a long time. The old clock_Selus to have been used Parte for a long time.

未解決 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

なぜcanでは無いのですか?お願いします

words 1 /skin/ sékfon/ /tifu:/ míərm/ ases 1 ger A be necessary for you to give up any in in the near future. research studies G-A 2 Today, an incredible number been carried out all over the world this field. Scientists a working very hard and competing with one another to come u with faster and safer ways to create tissues such as skin from 3 At this point, one of the leading scientists in this area is D the patient's own body cells. a medica Yamanaka Shinya of Kyoto University. He was first doctor who treated back injuries, broken limbs, damaged joints and such. One day, he saw a woman with a serious disease in her joints. He was so shocked when he saw her swollen scientist. He misshapen joints that he decided to become a went into a basic study in order to find good ways to treat those ords 2 mpí:t/ ses 2 ther rds 3 crí:t/ Səri/ fm/ ant/ on/ on/ s 3 ch iPS Cells 1 If you have badly burned or red your skin, the doct may have to take a section of g skin from your back a Thanks to a growing however, it may no long medi sew it onto the injured area. technology called tissue engineeri: A w Wor sed R 6 The i and injuri damaged were ot 5 doctor very s into i they we 7 Dr 10 tissue cells u meth day t in th 15 Tho patients suffering from serious diseases and injuries. 4 One way to create tissue is to use egg cells, which have the ability to grow into any tissue in the body such as hair or muscle. This method, however, has produced a lot of debate. Many think it is wrong to treat live eggs as objects and then “kill them, even though the purpose is to treat patients. In addition people fear that this method could lead to human cloning. 5 For years, Dr. Yamanaka and his research team worked hard to find a different way to create tissue. Then, in 2007. they finally succeeded in creating heart muscle tissue from skin cells taken from a person's face. They first added four kinds of genes to the skin cells to put them back into their initial state, a state similar to egg cells. Then they made those cells grow into heart muscle tissue. The four genes they found are now called "Yamanaka Factors," and the initialized cells that can grow into any of the 200 cell types are called iPS cells. ma 20 on 18 th r 25時

解決済み 回答数: 1