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英語 高校生

急ぎです🙏🏻🙏🏻高2の英語の問題です。1枚目を参考に2枚目の質問に答える問題なのですが、書き方や文法があっているか教えて頂きたいです。

Strongest! | Lesson 1 Part 1 challenge [elinds] の “I know a successful player, 1) who's been trying to achieve. a Roger Federer [rá()dgar fedarar] wheelchair [hwi:ltfear] rank [repk] greater challenge than mine.” Roger Federer, one of the world's 5 best tennis players, showed great major (形) [mérd3ar] 第 official [afjal] ア respect to a Japanese tennis player. His name is Shingo Kunieda. He Paralympics [paèralimpiks] Roger Federer is one of the top wheelchair tennis players, and has tournament [ttarnamant, t3:r-] except [ksépt] bounce [báuns] G-1) been ranked first in the world for many years. 2) Wheelchair tennis is one of the major wheelchair 10 sports in the world. It has the status of an official accurately [ékjaratli] の technique [tekni:k]の sport in the Paralympics, and has as many tournament G-1 games as regular tennis does. Its rules are almost pay [pé] the same as those of regular tennis, except for one 15 thing. The players can let the ball bounce up to two !)TRIVIA times before returning it. Wheelchair tennis requires technique「技術」 専門技術·技法,および スポーツ·芸術などの技術· テクニックを表す。 一方、 skill は熟練した技術·能 カ·手腕などを表す。 players to have the skills to control the wheelchair quickly and accurately, as well as the techniques of tennis. Players also need to pay careful attention 20 to their body condition while they are playing. *. uie sanme as A His cellphone is the same as mine. 14. except for A Except for one mistake, you report is excellent. 15. up to A You can borrow up to three books in this library. 19. pay attention

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英語 高校生

英文2段落目3文目のfor fairy talesのforは使ってという意味で使われているんでしょうか。、? また、第4段落5文目が上手く訳せません、、、 これは過去完了でしょうか??それとも、彼女は持っていた、1番初めのwrittenとdrawnをみたいにただの過去形で... 続きを読む

Your group is preparing a poster presentation entitled "The Woman Who 第5問(配点 15) c 15e uW y bos AS neighb A (20d dos Tot nongo in b s saoodt time a Wanti Created Peter Rabbit "using information from the magazine article below nob land her e Ved Pig ト popular character, Peter Rabbit. She brought her characters to life in b witty stories with finely detailed watercolors. a Br herit The daughter of wealthy parents, Helen Beatrix Potter was born on July 28, 1866 in South Kensington, London. She was educated at home and developed a love of literature and art. She used to practice her craft bv making illustrations for fairy tales like Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty. Also drawn to nature, she and her younger brother Walter kept many pets mice, rabbits, even bats and a hedgehog and she loved her family's long holidays in the Scottish countryside and the Lake District, a mountainous area in northwest England. in 19 The As a child and teenager, Potter made great sketches of her pets, as well as of trees and plants. She also kept a diary in which she recorded her Qpinions about cultural and political ideas and events. She wrote in a secret bs nsgst Peri 1866- Code that was not broken until fifteen years after her death. In the 1890s, Potter began selling her drawings.Potter's work was used for Christmas and New Year cards and an illustration of poetry. She was pleased by this success and decided to publish her own illustrated stories for children. In 1901, after the manuscript. was rejected by several publishers, she self-published her first book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit, She had first written and drawn a version of the story in a letter to the. sick child of her former private teacher.、The child was so delighted with it that Potter felt other children would be, too. She was right. The story of naughty Peter, who always gets into trouble because he does not follow his sisters' example and obey his mother's rules, was very popular. 、In 1902, the publisher Frederick Warne & Company printed a commercial edition, and it went on to become one of the most famous children's books of all time 1 Over the next twenty years, Potter wrote and illustrated twenty-two more books with that publisher, her early_observations of the animals and plants of her childhood often making their way into the stories. Potter's The Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle, published in 1905, for example, includes - 22 -

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英語 高校生

答えが無くて分からないので教えて欲しいです

SIMなし合 22:01 Cop 【1】次の英文を読んで, 設問 1~12に答えなさい。 なお, *印の語(句)には文末に注 がついています。 Modern examinations of working conditions in British and U.S. industry in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries concentrate mainly on the experiences, Complaints, and overall difficulties of working-class laborers. The first complaint that a majority of industrial workers had was that their workdays* were too long. The average (ア) of hours in a shift varied from industry to industry, from place to place, and from era to era. Workers in British and American textile mills* in the early to middle 1800s generally worked twelve to fifteen hours, six days a week, ( イ) only Sundays off. Their average workweek* was seventy-eight hours. In contrast were the hours of workers who labored in American steel mills in the late 1800s. The length of their shifts was determined by the fact that the blast furnaces* they tended almost always operated twenty-four hours a day. Thus, (oit became customary* for steel mills to have two twelve-hour shifts. However, many of the steel workers labored seven days a week. (a)That gave them a workweek of sighty-four hours. Moreover, sometimes they had to work extra hours on top of this demanding schedule. (オ )the minor differences in the length of workweeks from one industry to another, the average worker put in twelve-to fourteen-hour days at least six days a week, This harsh schedule remained more ( カ) less standard well into the twentieth century. It was not until 1920 that a fifty-hour workweek was introduced in the United States. Anda forty-hour week did not become the rule in most industries until 1938. Low wages was another common complaint of industrial workers. In 1851, the average wage earned by American industrial workers in general was seven to ten dollars per week. That same year New York's Daily Tribune* reported that a worker's family of five required just over ten dollars a week just for basics such as rent, food, and fuel. Most ordinary workers could not afford many simple comforts that middle-class workers enjoyed. (o This miserable situation lasted in America for decades and improved only slowly. As late as 1912, a study found that only 15

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