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英語 高校生

これといてください。至急です お願いします 英語分かるかた

2010 解答用紙を6/1(木)に提出 解説は英語でします。 【1】 次の英文を読んで、後の設問に答えよ。 (配点 50) A few years ago, a certain famous university in Japan asked a unique question as its entrance examination in English. The question was this: Write a reply in English to a junior high school student who doesn't like studying. He says he has no intention of going abroad, so he doesn't think he needs to study English. Nor does he want to get a job in which the knowledge of math or science is required. He, therefore, insists that he cannot understand the reason he is forced every day to study subjects he is not interested in. As an entrance examination, it's not very difficult to write an answer to this question. (2) you take it seriously, however, it touches on such a profound aspect of human nature that it is worth thinking about. Fundamentally, why do you have to study? What is learning for? Would you still like to study even if there were no schools or examinations in the world? In my opinion, it is possible to answer such questions from a practical and essential point of view. First, it is not rare for anyone to find changes in their own preferences or desires over time. Sometimes we find ourselves possessing no interest in what we thought to be precious before. Sometimes we are surprised to realize that what we thought to be of little value is so important. So it is quite hard, especially for young people, to predict actually what one will want in the future, say, ten years from now. That's why it is highly desirable for students to prepare for their future by increasing their knowledge and improving their intelligence. Whatever job one may get, it is quite (4) that knowledge or intelligence gets in the way. This can be demonstrated partly by many adults confessing that they should have studied harder. ( 5 ), it's only while one is young that one has a good memory and can absorb and retain a vivid impression of what one has learned. Next, I would like to talk about a more subtle viewpoint. Essentially, no human beings can be satisfied with what they already have, and everyone has, at 1921 the bottom of their heart, the desire for a better existence. Please do not interpret (67 INT this only in terms of materialism or religious belief. Of course, food, clothing. and housing are important. Still, ( 7 ). Also, in the present age, it is difficulí to feel there is anything in the belief that God will come to help you have a better existence some day. Even if all of your basic needs are met, without one important thing, you cannot feel that your life is meaningful. This one thing is the ambition to improve yourself. When you learn something you didn't know before, you will surely feel the satisfaction that no other element in life can give. In this sense, learning will enable you to broaden your world, giving you the joy of knowing. In short, learning is an important way to make your own life richer. (A) 下線 (1) (3) を和訳せよ。 (B) 空所 (2) ( 5 )に入れるのに最も適切なものを、それぞれ次のア~エ の中から1つずつ選び、 その記号を記せ。 (2) 7 Because If (5) 7 For example In conclusion Though In addition What is worse (C) 空所 (4) に入れるのに最も適切な 同じ段落の中から抜き出して、 解答欄に記入せよ。 下線部)が表す内容を、 本文に即して70字以内の日本語で説明せよ。 1931 1. Unless

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英語 高校生

これの100字要約日本語でしていただけませんか?

5 19 A concerted drive to reduce obesity in one Australian town resulted in a whole generation of slimmer, faster, and healthier children, researchers reported yesterday. They said that the program, a simple mixture of persuasion and (A)incentives, was astonishingly successful. It led to 2,000 children gaining less weight, watching far less television, taze (and playing more sports. The "Be Active, Eat Well" project, conducted by Deakin University in the small town of Colac, 150 km southwest of Melbourne, ended with Colac's children weighing an average of one kilogram less than the norm for Australian children of their age. Their waistlines were an ウェスト average of cm smaller - 2 cm for boys and 4 cm for girls. Professor Boyd Swinburn from Deakin University in Melbourne said yesterday that the Colac experiment had proved to be "astonishingly successful." It was the first such program in the world to report significant reductions in waistline and weight. Professor Swinburn said: "Most people would think individual weight loss of one kilogram is not much, but here we're talking about shifting the weight of a couple of thousand kids, and 15 that's actually quite (B) phenomenal. In fact, across a population, that is absolutely huge." The experiment began three years ago when the university researchers descended on Colac's population of about 10,000 people, urging parents, teachers, doctors, and local fast-food outlets to support changes for all children aged between 4 and 12. The program included opening up more after-school activity centers for children and introducing 20 brightly colored lunch packs that contained a pitta salad wrap*¹ and fruit tub2. Parents were encouraged to (c) monitor strictly the amount of time their children watched television or walk or cycle to They were asked to encourage their children spent on computers. (3) school rather than drive them. While the researchers had hoped to cut television viewing by 10 percent, the final results 25 reported children's television viewing had dropped by 21 percent and soft drink consumption by 70 percent. There was an increase of almost 70 percent in the number of children participating in after-school sports. 10 7. ★★★ 参照チェックノート p.38 414 words 56 早稲田大学 Even the town's fish and chip shop owner switched from using animal fats to sunflower oil. He reduced the saturated fats3 in chips from 49 percent to 9.1 percent. The other fast-food outlets 30 also switched from animal fats, leading to a cut in saturated fats consumed in the town of 55 kg a week. Adults then began to follow their children's example, and the local self-defense academy went from 16 members to 75. pitta satu 1 (A (

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英語 高校生

進研WINSTEP 短期集中 高2 英語vol.2の Unit4 step3の解答持ってる方いませんか💦 教えて欲しいです🙏🏻

10 STEP 3 読解問題にアプローチ iOC 目標 完了表現に注意して読もう。 月 (2年11月改) 目標時間 20 分 S 筆者が小学1年生の時の出来事。 学校で足が痛み、先生たちが靴を脱ぐよう促すが、筆者はどうしても脱 ごうとしない。 POINTE Mr. Stewart lifted me onto his desk. “Let me take a look.” He was just about to take the shoe off when I saw the hole. I grabbed the shoe and pulled it on and held it. The stinging hurt more, the tighter I held onto the shoe. POINTCO "Why won't you let us take off your shoe ?" Mr. Stewart asked as he looked from me to 5 Miss Bell and back at me in puzzlement. Miss Womble, the fifth-grade teacher, came into the office. “Can I help? I know her; she lives next door to me." “I suspect ants are in her shoes and stinging *the living daylights out of her, but she won't let us take off her shoes,” said Miss Bell. POINT Miss Womble was a great neighbor. She had even played *Annie-over with us on occasion. She put both hands on my shaking shoulders and looked into my worried, red eyes. "Oh, yes," she said, as if remembering a fact. "I had a bite from one of those ants. Did you know they are sock eaters ? By the time I got my shoe off, that ant had eaten almost the entire bottom off my sock.” She nodded her head up and down as she looked at the other two adults. 15 “Must be sock-eater ants.” POINT POINT >> They returned the nod, as if they also had been bitten by sock-eating ants. “Let me see here.” She freed my heel from the shoe. “Just what I thought. Those sock ants have eaten part of her sock.” POINT Miss Bell opened the medicine cabinet, got a cotton ball, and *saturated it with alcohol. 20 Miss Womble slipped off my shoe and sock and shook both of them over the gray trash bucket. Two red ants fell into the waiting container. A stray one ran for the wall, but Mr. Stewart's shoe stopped him. My *swollen foot throbbed. My stomach hurt. My head ached. Stroking the alcohol ball across the angry bites, Miss Womble lifted her head and smiled at me. “I think she's going to be okay now," she said, as she looked toward the two adults. The bell rang, ending the break period. “It's class time,” Mr. Stewart said, as he and Miss Bell hurried to their jobs. (イ) The alcohol felt cool on the stings. POINT “You were a pretty brave girl to take that many bites. I think you should leave this shoe and sock off for a while." She helped me off the desk. “Wait for me after school, and we'll walk home together.” POINT Pride can be a wonderful, terrible thing. I knew that Miss Womble had saved my pride ith (ウ) her sock-eating ant story. (エ) She had seen that Ⅰ would rather be stung to death POINT POINTO POINT ■an let others see my poverty. This kind, understanding teacher had taught me a lesson of > POINT >> mpassion that I have tried to use in my thirty-seven years of teaching. itd) an (481W) =the living daylights out of her = とてもひどく Annie-over = ゲームの一種 *saturate = ~を浸す *swollen = 腫れた - From Cup of Comfort for Teachers by Colleen Sell Copyright © 2004, by Simon & Schuster, Inc. [formerly F+W Media, Inc.J. Used with permission of the publisher. 単語を調べよう! Check your vocabulary! □ be (just) about to不定詞 ( ■ take off ~( □ suspect □angry 形 ( ( □ in puzzlement ( ) □ by the time ~ ) □ compassion 名 ( [問1] 下線部 (ア)について, この疑問文から伝わるMr. Stewart (スチュアート先生)の心情を次の文のよ うに表したい。英文の空所に入れるのに最も適当なものを下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (3点) He is ( ). 2 confused 2 まあ、こんなものか。 4 わあ、 かっこいい。 |TOTAL 1 angry 3 excited 4 happy [問2] 下線部(イ)の状況で、筆者が心の中で発した言葉として考えられるものとして, 最も適当なもの を、下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (3点) 1 ああ、よかった。 傷の痛みがひんやりと気持ちよく 感じられている状況から推測して みよう。 3 もう. いた~い。 [3] 下線部 (ウ)とはどのようなものか、 次のようにまとめたい。 下の2つの問い (①,②)に答えよ。 Womble (ウォンブル) 先生の(a) 気持ちから (b)_ ウォンブル先生がどんな 気持ちから何を話したの かを読み取る。 ① 空所(a)に入る日本語を答えよ。 ( 3点) [5] 筆者は現在、何をしている人と考えられるか。 英語で答えよ。 (3点) ② 空所(b)に入れるのに最も適当なものを下の1~4のうちから1つ選べ。 (2点) 1 思い出した史実 2 思いついた理論 3 つくりあげた話 4 生み出した冗談 [問4] 下線部 (エ)を日本語になおせ。 (7点) (2) 並べ替え あなたのお写真をじっくり拝見させてください。 (4点) 〔good/let/a/look/at/ your picture / take / me 〕. ) ) - 直後の文で述べられているスチュ アート先生の様子に着目。 (3) 和文英訳 けさ 私の車がどうしても始動しなかった。 (3点) 過去完了 had seen に気をつけて → 訳そう。 POINT REVIEW< STEP0~2の英文を参考に解いてみよう! (1) 英文和訳 They had been married for six years when they had their first child. (3点) 本文全体の流れを把握したうえで 最後の文を見てみよう。 RE

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