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英語 高校生

1枚目右ページの2行目、a patexted technology involving bacteria cleans the water, はinvolving bacteriaがa patented technologyを現在分詞の形で修飾していて、cleansが文の... 続きを読む

They are part of an experiment that Sogo, chief operating officer at FRD Japan, hopes will one day allow cost-effective inland farming of salmon Tokyo, gray salmon in a tank make quick movements, fighting for food. sea, but businessman Tetsuro Sogo is looking inland to raise one of the country's most loved sushi fish: salmon.\ In a mountainous area near Japan may be an island nation surrounded by the richness of the A You are preparing for agroup presentation on fish farming for your elan thought we needed a new way to produce more salmon," he explained. The company's process has two stages. First, tap water is converted 58 第2回 実戦問題 59 第6問 (配点 24) a シフト You have found the article below. 文字サイズ マトリー ジャンプ salmon farming. and enable Japanese to buy the homegrown fish for their sushi. “"We'll able to easily get high quality salmon wherever we are,” Sogo said The majority of the salmon consumed worldwide is farmed, not wila technology exports)." and the aquaculture market is dominated by Norway, which produces 1.3 million tonsa year. Farming at sea, the most common way to raise the fish, is complicated. The sea must be the right temperature, colder than 20 degrees Celsius, and only areas without strong waves and currents are tons of sushi-ready salmon. suitable - normally inlets or bays. Inland farming of salmon is often an impractical, expensive venture requiring lots of water and electricity to keep tanks clean. That hasn't stopped demand from exploding since the 1980s, with the United States, Russia, Europe, and Japan all fussing about the fish's rich pink flesh, according to the World Wildlife Fund. “Supply is not catching up with the growing demand," said Sogo, speaking at his test focility in Saitama, 50 km (31 miles) from the sea. Dressed in a suit like 35 明1 According to the article, what is NOT true about samon farmine? 0 Itis not easy to make profit by inland farming. の More than halfof the salmon consumed in the world comes from farming. Norway is leading the world market. a typical “salaryman" corefully monitors the fish as though he is wWatching his own children ““We - except fora pair of white rubber bonts _ Sogo O Strong waves are necessary to keep the water clean. 「第2回

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英語 高校生

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When I waa just a little girl, I realized that my grandmother was a witch. ( 1)that time, was reading atories about Snow White and Sleeping Beauty and (ア) (nbout/1/that'a/witchen /learned/ where) My grandma was good to talk to. In many waya ahe waa your typical grandmother ahe atudied tai chi, and made pottery and quilta. But if ahe wants to fool me(2 ) believing ahe ia not a witch, ahe ahould get rid of her black cat. Only she can touch Satan,and that devil eat's green eyes are really Bcary. Anyway, over the yeara I got into the habit of going( 3 )to mee Grandma after school and telling her all my troubles, I never let her know that I knew her secret and ahe didn't sny anything(4)。 But when I was in my second year in high achool, I ran into a problem. It required a little magie to set right, so I thought I'd aak her straight out. “Grandma, are you a witch? 1 said. "Of course," she said. "I thought you knew." "Do you know how to cast apella and make potiona?" "wDepends," ahe said. "What's on your mind? Is ita love potion you need? "Tell me all about it, Amy" “Well," I said, "you know it's my Year 10 Formal in November, and nobody haa aaked me yet. Id really like to go with Stevo. You know him. He's always lived next door to us. But he goes out with all the popular girla at school and thinka ( 5 ) me as just hia siater." My grandma thought a minute then went into her bedroom. She came back and put a little bottle of red liquid in my hand. “This will fix him," she said. “How can I get him to take it?" “Oh, you're the one ( あ ) has to take it. Three sips are all you'll need. When will you see him next?" “He's coming to my house tomorrow after school." “When he comes, ask him in and take a sip of the magic potion. Then take your shoes8 off and go outside, and jump up and down the path for a minute or so on that pogo stick I gave you." “He'll think I'm crazy. I can't do that." “Do you want him to take you to the Formal or not?After that, come inside and take another aip. Then let that lovely hair of yours out of that ponytail, brush it for two minutes, and put a flower in your hair. After that sit on the floor and take the third sip." “Will that work? Hell think I'm crazy." “Just think positive," said my grandma, "And by the way, don't wear that old pair of jeana and that baggy shirt" Next day I was waiting for Stevo after school. I had on my new akirt and my new blouse. Iopened the door, still not sure if I'd be able to go through ( 6 )the plan. “Where are you off to?" he asked. "Anyway I can't atay long." “It'e OK,"I said looking at my watch. "Tve got plenty of time." And before I knew it I'd taken the first sip. It (4) (the medicine/abit/1/ike /used/tasted) to take when I wasa little ldd. “You sick or something?" he said. 1 just gave him my new Mona Lisa smile and kicked off my ahoes. "Juat a sec," I said. I picked n the pogo stick from the corner, went out the front door, and jumped up and down the path for a while. I saw Stevo looking out the window at me with ama puzzled expression. Iwent back inside and he said, "You all right?"

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英語 高校生

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The authoe w wsu In the beginning I wrote my diary on the backs of paper place mats. My friend and 答問題) 口次の英文は、筆者が20歳の頃に書き始めた日記についての話である。英文を読んで、あ le I were hitchhiking at the time. I was mailing regular letters and posteards to my friends back home, but because I had no fixed address, no one could answer them との間いに答えよ。 (配点 40) d And so I began writing to myself. Those first several years are hard to reread, not Seven is trulya wonderful age. For two days. That's the length of time my friend because they're boring-a diary is fully licensed to be boring- but because the writne is so horribly *affected. Pam and her son, Tyler, who is in the second grade, normally visit. He's at the stage (注)*conviction =確信 *repository =宝庫 where whatever I do, he wants to do. This includes wearing button-down shirts; singing * devotion =専念, 献身 *affected =気取った the same song until everyone begs you to stop; and carrying a small reporter's notebook. I gave him one the last time he came to the house and, imitating me, he stuck it in his pocket alongside a pen. That afternoon my friend drove us to a nearby town. There was 番号で答えよ。 an issue of the local paper in the backseat of the car, and reading it on our way there, I 2 1 came upon a headline that read, "Dangerous Olives Could Be on Sale." “Hmm, I said, and I copied it into my littlenotebook. l Tyler did the same but with less *conviction. "Why are we doing this again?" “It's for your diary," I explained. “You write things down during the day, then v tomorrow morning you expand on them." 4 “But why?" he asked. “What's the point?" ャ 3 That's a question I've asked myself every day since September 5, 1977. I hadn't known on September 4 that the following afternoon I would start keeping a diary, or that it would consume me for the next thirty-five years and counting. It wasn't something Td been putting off, but once I began, I knew that I had to keep doing it. I knew as wel that what I was writing was not a journal but an old-fashioned, secret diary. Often the terms are used in almost the same way, though I've never understood o 問2 下線部(ア)の内容を具体的に日本語で説明せよ。 why. Both have the word "day" at their root, but a journal, in my opinion, is a d hio hi d *repository of ideas - your brain on the page. A diary, by contrast, is your heart. As for “journaling," a verb that appeared at around the same time as “scrapbooking," that just means you're strange and have way to0 much time on your hands. ontdo bd al o ed sw ai o A few things have changed since that first entry in 1977, but I've never hesitated in ld eo o botele d my "devotion, skipping, on average, maybe one or two days a year. It's not that I think v e sd olaon my life is important. Perhaps it just feeds into my compulsive nature, the need to do the e d ba l exact same thing at the exact same time every morning. Some diary sessions are longer than others, but the length has more to do with my mood than with what's going on. 間3 次の英文は、筆者の日記に対する考えをまとめたものである。英文の空所( O), (の)に入れるのに最も適当なものを,それぞれ下の1~4のうちから一つずつ選び、 問5 下線部(イ)の理由について、当時の筆者の行動とともに次のようにまとめたい。次の空 所に35字程度の日本語を補い。文を完成させよ。ただし、旬読点も字数に数える。 番号で答えよ。ただし、同じ番号を二度用いてはならない。 当時,筆者は( "Journal" and "diary," both come from the same word originally, but the former is a warehouse of ideas or( の )on the page, while the latter is( の 1 your brain 2 your heart 3 your letters 4 your terms 3odw d 開4 次の Question に対するAnswer となるように、空所に入れるのに適当な内容を、英語で 補え。 Ouestion:Why has the author written in his diary almost every day since 1977? Answer He has never hesitated to keep a diary because he might feel uneasy if he 問6 次の英文は本文全体の内容をまとめたものである。空所(①. ) ~ ( ① ) に入れ るのに最も適当なものを,それぞれ下の1~4のうちから一つずつ選び、番号で答えよ。 thinks a child of age seven will ( ①)anything adults do. When the uthor did something, his friend's son, Tyler, would do the same thing. However, Tyler had a(の) about why the author kept a diary. The author has been keeping his Taiary for a long time. The contents of the first several years, however, are too affected for him to ( @ ) again. の 1 ak 2 Copy の 1 bellef 3 keep 2 confidence 4 1 『ead 3 eにTel 2 ing 4 question 3 underutand Write

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