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英語 高校生

空所アについてです。わたしは①を選んだのですが、不正解でした。解説によると、「manyではwhatが導く名詞節全体を修飾できないから」らしいのですが、いまいちピンときません。何故manyじゃだめなのですか?教えてください。

Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 3 H GXJ FIX [人間] 290 words 空所が多めの文は前後のつながりを丁寧に追うこと。 次の英文を読んで, 設問に答えなさい。 出題大学 広島経済大学 制限時間10分 6 p.21 The composer Mozart is famous for showing a talent for music when he was just a small child. However, ( 7 ) Mozart produced in his early years is not considered to be particularly outstanding. He didn't produce his first true masterpiece* until he was 21; pretty s young to be sure, but Mozart ( 1 ) already been composing for years by this time. 10 The figure of 10,000 hours has been suggested as the amount (1 of serious practice or study needed to truly master a skill. That is nearly two hours a day, every day, for 14 years. Natural ability is, of course, an important factor in success, but even someone as talented as Mozart couldn't become a "great" composer until he had put in* 10,000 hours of hard work. The same can be said of golfer Tiger Woods and computer genius Bill Gates. Most people in developed countries can expect to have a healthy life of at least 70 years, or 613,608 hours. Although that seems like a ot of hours, most people spend about a third of them asleep. Take way all the hours we "lose" moving from place to place, eating, etc., well as the time spent at work or school, and the amount of free me we have starts to look quite limited.

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英語 中学生

至急 問1教えてください!

3 次の英文を読んで、後の各問に答えよ。 Hiroshi is a junior high school student. One day in an English class, his teacher said, "We have many kinds of new technology around us. Computers, the Internet, and AI are good examples. Do you know any people who use them well? In our next project, I want you to introduce one person in class." So at home that night, Hiroshi asked his mother, and she said to him, "Your grandmother, Toshiko, uses new technology well." A few days later, Hiroshi talked with Toshiko on the Internet about the project. She said, "Well, you know I am a fruit farmer. I didn't use technology very much in the past. But now, I use it every day. There are many benefits of using new technology. I collect information about the weather from websites. I can understand my fruit's growth by keeping records and can share that information with researchers and farmers who live in other parts of Japan. Then I can get good ideas from them and make my fruit bigger and better. Now I don't need to give water to my fruit trees because AI technology can do 2 that job. Also, it is easy for me to sell more fruit by using the Internet. In these ways, new technology has changed my way of working and made it better. On my website, I show other farmers how to use new technology which helps us grow better fruit." Hiroshi decided to talk about her to his classmates. A month later, Hiroshi made a speech in front of his classmates. After the speech, his classmate, Asuka, said, “In your speech, I like the story of your grandmother's website. She shows her ideas about using new technology for agriculture. I hope people will be interested in her website. If they see it, they will learn her ways to grow fruit. Then, they will be influenced by her and start working like her. I really respect her." Hiroshi was very happy to hear that. He said to Asuka, "Using new technology in effective ways has been changing the lives of many people. I want to learn about this more and create a better society in the future." 受羽課題 プロジェクト

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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

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英語 高校生

英語長文についてです。大問に、下線部➁のthisが示す内容を日本語で書け、とあるのですが、初見のとき、その問題を見た私は一通り考えて一番最初の文のthat以下を訳したもの(殆どの日本の学生は英語で会話できないということ)をこたえました。実際それは当たっていたのですが、見返し... 続きを読む

② 次の英文を読んで,下の各問いに答えなさい。 It is a well-known fact that most Japanese students cannot converse (1) English. This is sometimes because they have nothing to say and are poor conversationalists even in Japanese: in order to talk, one must usually have something to talk about! But often their lack of fluency in English is the result of a kind of false modesty: they are unwilling to "show off" their knowledge of English in front 5 (3) other Japanese. Or they simply fear to make mistakes, and this fear prevents them (4) expressing themselves fluently. It is a fear frequently expressed in the unnecessary apology: "Please excuse my bad English" or "I wish I could speak better English." Also, when I am with a group of Japanese students for the first time - perhaps we have met casually on the street or on a train-and one boy in the group starts trying to speak to me in English, his brave efforts are nearly always met 10 with laughter from his friends who probably know less English than he does. (1) (①) (③) (④)に入る適当な語を次の中から1つずつ選び、記号

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