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英語 高校生

問2がいまいちわかりません。 教えてください

古e-Srudy Worksheer (英文解釈・構文理解一読む技能) 了esson 5 7apan's Secrec Fiealcjh Food Part IS&2 内 』 衣ere are some Jines from a textbook for American clementary school studcns: "Sea me do Wavereal toys but they play with seaweed. Thcy catch iin heir mouths. Yucki Don't hey have いい any sehsx gaste2! GPubished in the 19905, this rextbook shows us what many Americans thoughbt No56り gs statede howewer hes changed im the pasr 20 yeamr For example, many Americens noW 5Dー。 2 < っ HG De eea yegeteblcs msrcad of he word "seaweed" Moreover not onjy Americans but ) ,貞 5 over the world are eating more and more seaweed. Why? Some scientists belicve 本seaweedis one of the secrers of the Japanese population's great health and long life of seaweed abour 30 years ago. Sea Yegerables are high in viramins and minerals. This is because lseawater contains a lot of 人 gutrients andJsea vegerables absorb theml In fact, they have ten to twe ts nty times as many vitamins B %を9 and m語erals as Jand vegerables > ョ 乱 了 問 mo Vi AdK areimportantfor your bodies. 7g4zzecontains far more viraminA一good 28 Ham even carrots. Kozz2gis high in vitamin K. This viramin heals wounds. /G 似た 9 5記Vgg6B/es are a great source of minerals as well. They are full of calcium. It is good for ur muscles, teerh, and bones. (210) OAmenean des 5 students pubtished atextbookin 1990s and hey ahows whatthey hugheGt seaweeQ en any Americans mericans published a texbook in 1990s and hey shows their thovgNts GEseeyeed then DAtextbookw kwas published in 1990s and many Americans shows what he onshe efsesweed ten 9 pub 〔 hed in 1990 and itshows many Amedcans thoughe ctsesweed en 2 ド線部②の具体的な内容を mで表現しなさい。 - _Uervse ft Seweel ek。lelk | 問4 下線部のVitamin A and K の性質を、それぞれ: Vitamin A 9N AA _N Viamin K 陳語 どのような性質を持っているのか理解しよう。 よー Y と1 て竹く。基つ意味は多岐

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英語 高校生

星マークの付いている文(Are there limits beyond which offensive or hateful speech deserves to be suppressed by state power?)のところの訳(2枚目星マーク)が意訳なのか、どうし... 続きを読む

| | Read the PaSsage and answer the questions below. In the summer of 1990, a group of teenagers in the city of St Paul, Minnesota, burned a cross in front of the house of an African-American family. The teenagers were arrested and charged with violating a St. Paul law called the “Bias-motivated Crime Ordinance.” The law made which one knows or has reasonable grounds to know arouses anger, alarm or ツ it iegal to place “on public or private property a symbol .… resentment in others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion or gender.” The teenagers challenged the legal basis of their arrest。 and in 1992、 the US Supreme Court declared the St. Paul aw an unconstitutional violation of freedom of speech. A European court would almost certainly have decided the case differently. Domestic national courts in Europe, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, are far more likely than their American counterparts to | 16 | “extreme speech"- speech that offends personal dignity on the basis of factors such as race ethnicity。 religion and sexual orientation. HateG crime prohibitions are familiar throughout Europe - laws that would not stand a chance of being accepted as constitutional in the United States. The differences between American and European approaches to the law raise pressing questions about the nature and limits of expressive freedom in democratic nations. What role, if any, should the law play in democracies in policing speech? there imits beyond which offensive or hateful speech deserves to be suppressed by state power? Do efforts to punish extreme speech produce a healthier democracy? ② One way to determine the extent to which free speech should be guaranteed would be to take into consideration the cultural and historical 2 ン 。 に

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