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英語 高校生

英文一段落3文目featuring family mealsのfeaturingとはどういう意味でしょうか?? 調べてみたのですが上手く合いそうな訳が出てきませんでした どなたか教えて下さると幸いです。

第4問 次の問い (A.B)に答えよ。 (配点 40) 次の文章はある説明文の一部である。この文章と表を読み, 下の問い(問1~ に入れるのに最も適当なものを、 それぞれ下の0~ A 4)の 33 36 のうちから一つずつ選べ。 Art may reflect the ways people lived. \Researchers have discussed how One study was conducted to art portrays clothing and social settings. determine if this idea could be extended to paintings featuring family meals. The results of this study might help illustrate why certain kinds of foods were painted. (The researchers examined 140 paintings of family meals painted from the years 1500 to 2000. These came from five countries: the United States, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands. The researchers examined each painting for the presence of 91 foods, with absence coded as 0 and presence coded as 1. For example, when one or more onions appeared in a painting, the researchers coded it as 1. Then they calculated the percentage of the paintings from these countries that included each food. Table 1 shows the percentage of paintings with selected foods. The researchers discussed several findings. First, some paintings from these countries included foods the researchers had expected. Shellfish were most common in the Netherlands' (Dutch) paintings, which was anticipated as nearly half of its border touches the sea. Sécopd, some paintings did not include foods the researchers had expected. Shellfish and fish each appeared in less than 12% of the paintings from the United States, France, and Italy although large portions of these countries border oceans or seas. Chicken, a common food, seldom appeared in the paintings. Thipd, some paintings included foods the researchers had not expected. For example, among German paintings, 20% of them included shellfish although only 6% of the country touches the sea. Also, lemons were most common in paintings from the Netherlands, even though they do not grow there naturally. - 18 - (2610-18)

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英語 高校生

この問題が分かりません教えてください

Lesson 19 , od ne mi m om a get their support. 5 He himself was through far-reaching reforms. He abolished slavery, introduced a *bureaucracv and 298628 ig piaum. ofh al nao o litmo of the 2010s, donated about 90% of his salary to charities which helped poor people. The he was often described as the world's *humblest head of state. Not all leaders are like them. Unfortunately, some leaders only care about their statis 15 When their popularity declines, they often try to shift the criticism onto others so as to maintain their power. The class system during the Edo period aimed at dividing people into classes and giving them contentment by encouraging them to look down on the lower classes. Hitler managed to win people's support by setting *Jews up as their enemies. It is quite difficult to satisfy everybody and unite a nation. Nevertheless, good leaders smo ons Tanolaom nd listen to people's voices, including critical ones, to make better policies for the welfare of 20 naw asng-1agie all the people from the perspective of national interests. So when you are qualified to vote, collect as much information as possible about candidates and political parties. It will help Coo b you judge whether they are willing to create a better society or are just trying to ake 25 advantage of their status for their own benefits. Your single vote can make a big differèIto to our future. oiauM 9oitasrf o eysW ) 363 words

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英語 高校生

赤い枠の単語を必要があれば品詞を変えて埋めるのですが、よく分からないので教えてください。

Vocabulary Practice A. Completion. Complete the paragraphs below using the correct form of the words in the box. One word is extra. hazardous discard pile substance notify infrastructure Reuse and recycle: these well-known ideas for dealing with trash are being employed to handle e-waste such as old computers, cell phones, and televisions. Many companies send used electronic items from the United States and the European Union to developing nations. They claim to be recycling, and also helping the developing world modernize its Customers shop for used televisions at a secondhand electronics market in Lagos, Nigeria. - However, the reality may be quite different. The Basel Action Network of Seattle, Washington, recently reported that three-quarters of the supposedly reusable electronics shipped to Lagos, Nigeria, are in fact broken. Consequently, 2.. roads. Often it's picked apart by the desperately poor, who come in contact with toxic 4. 5. Richard Guttierez of the Basel Action Nerwork believes companies in developed nations pay lip service' to recycling while actually disposing of their e-waste as cheaply as possible, leaving the developing world to deal with the problems it causes. of e-waste end up being 3.. - along rivers and -Such as lead-in the broken equipment. Lead is known to be especially to the health of growing children.

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