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数学 高校生

英語の長文ってどうやったら読めるようになりますか

1 次の英文を読んで、問 (1) ~ (5) に且本語で答えなさい。 Lobola is the African custom of paying fora bride. Although it is an old custom, not In fact, it is being debated in Botswana. everyone in African cultures is happy with it. Many people, including many women, support payment of lobola. They explain that in Tswana culture, a marriage means joining a family, not just marrying an individual. The idea of marrying into a family is very African. just the man.Through marriage, the young woman's family loses their daughter as she then becomes a part of her husband's family. Lobola is a way to show thanks. It is a form of generosity in African culture. In its traditional form, they also explain, the groom's family gave cattle to the bride's family. But it didn't matter whether the family owned cattle or not. A woman does not get married to A man only had to pay what he could afford if he had no cattle, he could give something else, even the smallest form of payment. The tradition of lobola was a matter of pride. Today, lobola is often given in cash. purchase of a bride. Lobola is meant to join two families together. They know that But its supporters say it is not about the some people abuse the custom. But they believe that the tradition should not be tossed out because it has many positive effects. Rather than get rid of it, many believe it should just be explained better. However, many others say this custom should be stopped. They think it has become commercialized. Families make lots of demands on the groom. They think this makes lobola look very bad. They argue that in Africa's past, a girl was an asset at home. and other household chores. She did the cooking When a family lost that child through marriage, it demanded payment. Today, they think that lobola has changed into a useless tradition. In this custom, a man is buying the right to control a woman. They say women are individuals with rights. In today's world, parents do not have to be paid for a bride because their male and female children are equal. They all work and make contributions to the household. They believe that paying lobola makes it seem like a man is buying a pair of shoes or a bicycle, instead of getting married. They also argue that it is often a financial burden for couples. It is too difficult for many people to pay the price asked. So, is lobola a rich tradition, bringing families together? Or is it an ugly custom of buying women? This debate continues in Botswana, as does the custom.

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英語 中学生

至急お願いします 解けるところだけでいいので教えてください

5 次の英文を読んで, 1, 2, 3, 4の問いに答えなさい。 o niw ninuh dond ni o ood t o What can we use to make *buildings? Some people will use *wood, and other people will use oh t *cement. Do you know we can use paper to make a building? In 1994, many people in *Africa *lost their houses in a *war. They started *cutting down trees to build their houses. A lot of trees were lost. A team from *the United Nations gave them *aluminum *tubes for their houses, but the people didn't use them. They *knew that aluminum tubes were expensive, so they *sold them. Then the team gave them paper tubes. The people in Africa started using paper tubes for their houses. They didn't sell them because paper tubes were not expensive. A Tmas bot undestand h Paper tubes are not expensive, and they are very strong, We can make and get them easily. They are B so we can *carry them easily. When we make a building with paper tubes, we don't need many *tools. These are good points of using paper tubes for buildings. There is another good point. When buildings are *dismantled, there is so much *waste. It is not used again, but paper tubes can be used again. There was a *church in Kobe. It was *destroyed by an earthquake in January, 1995. Eight months later, a new church was built. It *was made of a lot of paper tubes. Many people loved the.church. Ten years later, the church was dismantled and *moved to a city in *Taiwan. We can see the church there still now. nrld. Sho [注) *building(s) =D建物 *cement =セメント Africa =アフリカ *cut(ting) down=切り倒す *tube(s) =筒 *wood =木材 lose(失う)の過去形,過去分詞 *the United Nations =国際連合 *lost = *war =戦争 o1od *aluminum =アルミニウム *knew = know の過去形 *sold = sell(売る)の過去形 *carry =運ぶ *tool(s) =道具 *dismantle(d) =解体する *waste =ごみ *church =教会 *destroy(ed) =破壊する pet *be made of ~=~で作られる *move(d) =移動する *Taiwan =台湾 1 本文中の A に入るものとして,最も適切なものはどれか。 ア They stopped cutting down trees. イ They bought a lot of aluminum tubes. ウ They started using aluminum tubes. エ They started cutting down trees again. elish bonks Iwan hd moro dieult に入る語として,最も適切なものはどれか。 エ tall 2 本文中の B ア large d イ light わウ heavy 度も~しない Amer リカん 3 下線部の指す内容は何か。 具体的に日本語で書きなさい。 urpriscd know 4 本文の内容と一致するものはどれか。 ア People in Africa started cutting downalot of trees to sell them to other countries. イ People in Africa didn't use aluminum tubes for their houses because they were not expensive ウ We need many tools when we make a building with paper tubes. エ In 2005, the church in Kobe was dismantled and moved to Taiwan.

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英語 中学生

1〜4まで教えてください!

5| 次の英文を読んで、1,2, 3, 4の問いに答えなさい。 oraon 1omiw sainuh and ni o ood aot o d What can we use to make *buildings? Some people will use *wood, and other people will use *cement. Do you know we can use paper to make a building? In 1994, many people in *Africa *lost their houses in a *war, They started *cutting down trees to build their houses. A lot of trees were lost. A team from *the United Nations gave them *aluminum *tubes for their houses, but the people didn't use them. They *knew that aluminum tubes were expensive, so they *sold them. Then the team gave them paper tubes. The people in Africa started using paper tubes for their houses, They didn't sell them because paper tubes were not expensive. A okon may bot understand h Paper tubes are not expensive, and they are very strong, We can make and get them easily. They are B so we can *carry them easily. When we make a building with paper tubes, we don't need many *tools. These are good points of using paper tubes for buildings. There is another good point. When buildings are *dismantled, there is sO much *waste. It is not used again, but paper tubes can be used again. There was a *church in Kobe. It was *destroyed by an earthquake in January, 1995. Eight months later, a new church was built. It *was made of a lot of paper tubes. Many people loved the church. Ten years later, the church was dismantled and *moved to a city in *Taiwan. We can see the church there still now. Tnd Tnons [注) *building(s) =D建物 *wood =木材 *cement =セメント *Africa =アフリカ *lost = lose(失う)の過去形,過去分詞 *the United Nations =国際連合 *cut(ting) down =切り倒す *tube(s) =筒 *war =戦争 *aluminum =アルミニウム *sold = sell(売る)の過去形 *knew = know の過去形 *carry =運ぶ *tool(s) =道具 *dismantle(d) =解体する *waste =ごみ *church =教会 *destroy(ed) =破壊する *be made of ~=~で作られる *move(d) =移動する *Taiwan =台湾 1 本文中の に入るものとして, 最も適切なものはどれか。 A ア They stopped cutting down trees. イ They bought a lot of aluminum tubes. ウ They started using aluminum tubes. エ They started cutting down trees again. ah bonko Iwa to meult stoi に入る語として, 最も適切なものはどれか。 エ tall 2 本文中の B ア large イ light ウ heavy y not American アメ 3 下線部の指す内容は何か。 具体的に日本語で書きなさい。 Turprised oww kr 4 本文の内容と一致するものはどれか。 ア People in Africa started cutting downalot of trees to sell them to other countries. イ People in Africa didn't use aluminumtubes for their houses because they were not expensive. ウ We need many tools when we make a building with paper tubes. エ In 2005, the church in Kobe was dismantled and moved to Taiwan.

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英語 高校生

1、3、5は解けたのですがそれ以外が訳分からないので、教えてくれると嬉しいです!

取り組み日 再点 月 目標時間 STEP3 読解問題にアプローチ (2年7月改) 20分 The Latin word infans, from which “infant" comes, means "a person who is unable to speak" But all mothers know that communication begins long before actual speech. Babies “talk" to parents with their eyes, their expressions and their whole bodies, and parents respond to them in the same language. Human beings are different from other animals in our highly developed use of language and understanding. Ababy can hear conversations even while she is in her mother's womb. And then from the minute she is born she begins to feel the rhythms of her native language and gradually learns to recognize meaning. In South Africa, *the Bantu tribe celebrates the first time a child answers to her name witha special dinner. The best way to encourage your baby's language is to begin a two*way conversation. Mothers all over the world talk to their babies in a special language, known as "(ア)motherese" or “baby talk". Without learning how, we tend to use the simplest words, changing our grammar to make sentences shorter. Mothers talk of themselves in the third person, repeat things, and speak to their infants in a sing-song pitch. By looking at our babies while we are talking to them, we also teach them the facial expressions that come with speech. Babies start babbling from around three months, repeating easy sounds like “da", “ta", "ma", “ba" and “pa”. All around the world these first basic sounds are the roots of common names for other family members, most importantly “mother" and “father". For example, baba means “mother” among *the Gusii tribe of Kenya, while baban is “father" for *the Sambarivo people of Madagascar. The English word “daddy" is tata in Greek, tatasin Sanskrit and papa in French. Considering the amount of time she spends with her baby in the first months, a mother might expect her baby to say her name first. But this doesn't usually happen. Studies have shown that (イ)babies try to name their fathers before their mothers. Perhaps mothers want to hear their baby's first word as “daddy", in order to make a father feel more important and to add more meaning to his fatherhood. Or perhaps father, a familiar but often a little more distant person, is considered worth saying first. In Europe, the origins of the everyday words for “mother" are closely related to breastfeeding. Mom, Mam, Mummy - all these words come fronm the ancient Greek mamman, which means 17

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