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英語 高校生

以下の写真はソフィー・ハウの「世界をより良くするための教訓」という文章の一部なのですが、オレンジで線を引いた部分をどのように訳せば良いか分からないため、教えてください。 hold someone to accountで「~に責任を問う」ということから、「そのゴールは私によ... 続きを読む

Wales is a small but progressive country, the only country in the world to have legislated to protect the interests of future generations, the only country to have appointed someone independent to oversee this. Across the world, our systems of government, of politics, of economics have tended to act in the short term. And often, the decisions that are taken discount the interests of future generations and the planet. But in Wales, we're trying to change that by passing a law which requires not just our government but all of our main public institutions to demonstrate how they're acting for the long-term and how the decisions they take don't harm the interests of those yet to be born. And so as a mum of five and the world's only future generations commissioner, I want to share with you today some of the lessons we've learned about how we're trying to leave the world better than we found it. First of all, you must involve people in setting long-term goals. Ask them: What's the Wales or the world you want to leave behind to your children and your grandchildren? We held a national conversation -- the Wales We Want -- and people told us, "We want a low- carbon economy. We want you to help us keep people well rather than just treat them when they're ill. We want connected communities and a more equal Wales." And our government legislated to set seven national well-being goals to achieve that. Each institution has to demonstrate how they're meeting those goals, and they're held to account by me. You have to focus on the interconnections between different aspects of well-being. You need to talk often about why it's just as important to public health as it is to the environment to tackle high levels of air pollution, why diversity in the workforce is just as important to economic prosperity as it is to addressing inequality. Our institutions have a legal duty to act beyond their immediate remit to recognize those connections, work with unusual suspects. And so we're seeing hospitals in Wales working with the National Botanic Gardens to create spaces for nature on their sites. We're seeing offices in our environmental agency helping to find solutions to tackle childhood

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英語 高校生

答え合っているか確認よろしくお願いします🙇‍♂️

●次の英文を読んで,設問に答えなさい。 Back in the 1960s/futurists predicted that the biggest problem/for Americans/in the year 2000/ would, be managing /all their free time. What happened? People in the U.S. /have all the timesaviig tools/they could want: jet travel,cell phones,microwave ovens/personal computers/and faxes. Yet/they work more,/not less, Unstructured time a day just to spend time with is hard to find:Obviously, (1) the futurists' idea was the opposite. In reality/ friendsor family the. Pore technology a society has, the less free time it has. Americans ín most cities feel/that time is scarce,that there is never enough of it. According to a social psychologist/ Robert Levine/we are experiencing (2) “a time famine." We are hungry/for time. People use/ their cell phones to stay/in touch with work when they are shopping for dinner or at the beach on the weekend. They have computersand fax machines at home so that they can be productive át any time of day or night. Everyone has 24 hours a day, of コ-ス (3) What Americans say they do not have is time to spendwith people/who are important to Course. 強,壁す them. In a recent survey, nearly three-quarters of the respondents said they needed more time oin3 with family and friends/and less stress, in order to feel satisfied.e A recent Harris 'poll*/showed' that American leisure time decreased almost 40 percent, within the past 20 years/but (4) that is only half the story. During that time, Americans' consumption increased/by 45 percent. When people buy more/they have to work more so they can pay/for the things they buy. (5One question on the poll askedif people agreed with the comment,/“Most of us Eighty-two percent/6f the respondents said yes. buy and/consume far more than)we need." るかに多い、 There is (6)good news. Many people in the United States/are trying to take back their time. Some people are choosing to have fewer possessions/and work less. Some people are changing priorities and making time for family and friends. Others are turning off their cell phones and taking time for leisure activities/ walking alonga beach at sunset, hiking up a hill to see the sunrise, taking a child/to the park/for the afternoon. Americans are discovering/that they want these things back/and they are the kinds of things/that only time can buy.

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