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英語 中学生

1問でも、良いので教えて下さると嬉しいです🙇‍♀️💦

4 big, old tree stands by qa road neqr +he cify of Hiroshima. Through +he years, iけ has seen nany 1hings. One summer night, The ree heard a lullaby A mother was singing To her liftle girl under The Tree. They looked happy, and The song sounded swee+. But +he Tree remembered soinehing sad」 "Yes. 1T wos some seventy years ago. 1 heard a lullaby That night, oo." On +he morning of +hat day, a big bomb fell on the ciTy of Hiroshimo. ①Aany people los+ Their lives, and many o+hers were injured. They had burns all over Their bodies. was very sad when T sow ②+hose people. Tt wos a very ho day. Some of +he people fell down near ne. T said +o hem, *Come qand resT in my shade. Youll be all right soon." Nigh+ came. Some people were already dead. T heard a weak voice. T+ was a lullaby. A young girl wos singing To a liTtle boy. "Aommy!| Aommy!"+he boy cried. *Don+ cry, +he girl said. "Aommy is here." Then she began +o sing again. ⑧ She was very weak。 bu she ried +o be a mother to he poorlittleboy. She held him in her artns like a real mofher. "Aommy," +he boy wos s員 crying. *Be a good boy," said +he girl "Youll be all right.* She held +he boy tmore +ightly and began to sing qgoin. ア 4ffer_q while, he boy s+opped crying and quieTly died. But he little mother did not stop singing. T+ was a sd lullaby. The girl's voice became weaker and weaker. Aorning caime aqnd +he sun rose, but The girl never inoved again. (278 words)

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英語 高校生

教えてください

則 の英文を読んで, 下の設問に答えよ。 Hf you have just gone through a Swing door in a public place shop、do you generally hold the door open for the next person behind yo even though a stranger? Most British people do so automaticallY。 and according to my observation most Japanese do not. /// Tn Britain we think of a stranger in the street, or in 4 shop, as a fellow human beingtowhomweshouldbe[l 1 ]. Looking at Japanese behavior in public places, hoWever, it seems that they think of strangerSs aS 2 who must be pushed aside if one is in a hurry. Again、 in a train、Japanese YOung men sometimes SDYaWl acroOSS SeatS. Noonedaresto[ 3 ]. Tn Britain it is very rare: Tdonotsay that it cannot happen、but it is 旧erethereisno[ 4 ]forposters such as the "Spreading Peacocト which was widely displayed in Japan a Ittle time back. ! magnificent peacock sitting in an electric car、SDreading itS t: next seats and inconveniencing the people on each side. Tn an electric train in Britain、 some people are standing because the carriage is full, those sitting yill always adjust their position、so that they take up as ittle[ 5 ]as possible. In this way they create Some SDare FOOm。 and a few of the standing ones can now sit down. In such cases、Japanese tend to disregard the[ 6 ]ofothers. Afew yearS ago 1 saw in a full electric train in Tokyo an elderly man standing、 and a young man SDrawled acrOSS two SeatS jast in front of him. The latter could easily have just sat wp straight, and made room for the old man to sit down, but he dd not move. The elderly man Was holding himself upright. andTcould see by the Way his chin was drawn in that ne might have been a soldier. Finally he said to the youngster: “You should make a room for an elderly man. The young man replied angrily、“"1T am a paSSenger and You are a DaSSenger. 1 am in this seat and I will stay here.′ Phe _elderly man said something [ 7 ]to him、and the other jumped up iR a fr 3 and caught him by the arm. The train was just coming intoa station, and th

未解決 回答数: 1