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英語 高校生

黄色でマーカーを引いた部分の訳が分かりません 1文だけでもいいので教えていただけませんか🙇‍♀️💭

The First Experience with the Bombing in Hiroshima Yamaguchi saw a bomber flying high in the sky of Hiroshima. Something small dropped from the plane, and two white things appeared. "Parachutes," he thought. Mata Suddenly there was a flash like lightning. Yamaguchi was so used to air attacks that he reacted in no time. He put his hands to his head and covered his eyes with his fingers and his ears with his two thumbs. At the same time, he dropped to the ground. Teht もち上げる A terrible explosion came. It lifted him about two feet from the ground and was followed by a shaking of the earth. He felt a strong wind pass between his body and the road. Yamaguchi did not know if he was dazed because of the first shock that had lifted him or because of the blow when he fell to the hard だげき ground. He was not sure how long he lay dazed in the road. When he opened his eyes, however, it was so dark all around him that he couldn't see a thing. It was like the middle of the night in the heat of the day. When his eyes became used to the darkness, he found that it was all black because he was in a cloud of thick dust. (207 words) QAnswer T (true) or F (false). 1. Yamaguchi saw a bomber drop something small. 2. Yamaguchi was not used to air attacks. 3. The explosion threw Yamaguchi into a river. 1 didn't know how long he lay there. (

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英語 高校生

オレンジの線が引かれてるところの文構造がわかりません。文構造の解説をしてほしいです🙇🏻‍♀️🙇🏻‍♀️

5 Many linguists predict that at least half of the world's 6,000 or so languages will be 1-11 デッド dead or dying by the year 2050. Languages are becoming extinct at twice the rate of endangered mammals and four times the rate of endangered birds. If this trend 20 continues, the world of the future could be dominated by a dozen or fewer languages. Even higher rates of linguistic devastation are possible. Michael Krauss, director of 1-12 ディバステーション the Alaska Native Language Center, suggests that as many as 90 percent of languages could become moribund or extinct by 2100. According to Krauss, 20 percent to 40 percent of languages are already moribund, and only 5 percent to 10 percent are "safe" in the sense of being widely spoken or having official status. If people "become wise 10 and turn it around," Krauss says, the number of dead or dying languages could be more like 50 percent by 2100 and that's the best-case scenario. The definition of a healthy language is one that acquires new speakers, No matter 1-13 how many adults use the language, if it isn't passed to the next generation, its fate is already sealed. Although a language may continue to exist for a long time as a second 15 or ceremonial language, it is moribund as soon as children stop learning it. For example, out of twenty native Alaskan languages, only two are still being learned by children. Although language extinction is sad for the people involved,) why should the rest of us care? What effect will other people's language loss have on the future of people who speak English, for example? (A)Replacing à minor language with a more widespread one may even seem like a good thing, allowing people to communicate with each other more easily. But language diversity is as important as biological diversity. Andrew Woodfield, director of the Centre for Theories of Language and Learning 1-14 in Bristol, England, suggested in a 1995 seminar on language conservation that people do not yet know all the ways in which linguistic diversity is important. "The fact is, no s one knows exactly what riches are hidden inside the less-studied languages," he says. Woodfield compares one argument for conserving unstudied endangered plants (that they may be medically valuable with the argument for conserving endangered languages. "We have inductive evidence based on past studies of well-known languages that there will be riches, even though we do not know what they will be. (B) It seems paradoxical but it's true. By allowing languages to die out, the human race is destroying things it doesn't understand," he argues. Stephen Wurm, in his introduction to the Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger 1-

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