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英語 中学生

文章の内容があまり理解できません。 ざっくりで良いので内容を解説して欲しいです🙇🏻‍♀️

About 50 years ago, I lived in Los Angeles, California. My father took care of my younger sister and me. We played baseball every weekend. My sister and I loved baseball. I knew that my father had a "hero. His name was Ken Smith. He played for a team in *St. Louis. Its name was the Red Birds. My father said that Ken was the greatest player of all *major league baseball players at that time. I also became a big fan of Ken Smith, so I wanted to be like Ken Smith very much. That summer was special because my father *took my sister and me to St. Louis. We went there and came home by *plane. We were going to meet Ken Smith. I almost couldn't believe that. My father's best friend had a big *company in St. Louis, and he knew some of the very important people of the Red Birds. He also knew Ken Smith well. We stayed at my grandmother's house in St. Louis, She said to me, "Jack, I have something special for you." That was a ball with an *autograph by Smith. An *injured player of the Red Birds was in the hospital, and my grandmother worked there. She told him my story, and he got Smith's autograph on the ball. She knew that A but she gave the ball to me. I was sorry for my father, but I was very happy. I liked Ken Smith more. The next day was an exciting day for us. My father's friend helped us, and we could meet Ken Smith before the game. I thought Smith would be kind and big, and I was right. Then I showed him the ball from my grandmother. We talked about it. He asked me about the way to practice baseball, and I talked to him *proudly. *In front of Ken, I felt that I needed to do so. I wanted to be a great baseball player. He *understood. That night we watched a night game of the Red Birds. During the game, I *held my ball, and looked at it many times. A man talked to me. "New ball?" he asked. "Yes, with an autograph," I said and smiled. "Who?" he asked. "Ken Smith," I said proudly. "Really? I don't believe you." "Here, look." "Wow! I'll get it for 20 *dollars right now!" "No, give my ball back to me, please," I said. "You've got a very special thing. Take good care of it!" he said. I knew that the ball was a *treasure for me. The next day, 3I felt it took a long time to get back to Los Angeles. I was excited and I told my friends about my experience with Ken Smith in St. Louis. No one believed me, but I thought that I would never forget my happy feelings then. About 20 years later, my father died. Before the *funeral, I *remembered that he once *asked us to put his *baseball cards and a *baseball in his *casket. I wanted to use my baseball with Ken's autograph for him. My sister also liked my idea. The ball was with my father. A few years later, my sister *got married. Before *wedding finished, my sister started a story. She was a *flight attendant and *flew with the baseball players of Los Angeles Blue Sky and the manager Tom Baylor. Then she told him the story of my old baseball. He understood her story very well. Baylor was a friend of Ken Smith and *promised her to get another ball with Ken's autograph for me. Ken *was very impressed by her story, and sent a baseball with his autograph to Baylor. The ball was then sent to my sister. When she finished the story, I looked up and saw that she was holding a ball. "I have B threw it to me. I remembered that summer and my grandmother. I felt like a child again when I was going home. she said and

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英語 高校生

英語長文についてです。大問に、下線部➁のthisが示す内容を日本語で書け、とあるのですが、初見のとき、その問題を見た私は一通り考えて一番最初の文のthat以下を訳したもの(殆どの日本の学生は英語で会話できないということ)をこたえました。実際それは当たっていたのですが、見返し... 続きを読む

② 次の英文を読んで,下の各問いに答えなさい。 It is a well-known fact that most Japanese students cannot converse (1) English. This is sometimes because they have nothing to say and are poor conversationalists even in Japanese: in order to talk, one must usually have something to talk about! But often their lack of fluency in English is the result of a kind of false modesty: they are unwilling to "show off" their knowledge of English in front 5 (3) other Japanese. Or they simply fear to make mistakes, and this fear prevents them (4) expressing themselves fluently. It is a fear frequently expressed in the unnecessary apology: "Please excuse my bad English" or "I wish I could speak better English." Also, when I am with a group of Japanese students for the first time - perhaps we have met casually on the street or on a train-and one boy in the group starts trying to speak to me in English, his brave efforts are nearly always met 10 with laughter from his friends who probably know less English than he does. (1) (①) (③) (④)に入る適当な語を次の中から1つずつ選び、記号

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英語 高校生

高校生 定期試験 問題文 今日あった試験の単語抜き取り問題です。 6.bombs 7.Pavilion 8.canvas 9.livestock 10.Guernica と答えたのですが、採点してほしいです…… 特に10はtragedyと答えてる人が多くて不安です

1. 次の文を読んで、問題に答えなさい。 Okamoto Taro, a Japanese artist, visited the Spanish Pavilion of the 1937 Paris Exposition. When he saw the painting Guernica, he (1)couldn't take his eyes off it. It was painted in black and white. But he felt like it was painted (2). (3) that the painting drew him into its world instantly. This big piece of work, 3.5 m 4 7.8 m, was painted 4 Pablo Picasso, a Spanish artist. (5) Picasso ( 6 ) to France in his (7), he painted it in Paris. He was 56 years old then, but he worked hard and completed it (8) within a month or so. This painting fascinated those who saw it at the Exposition. It became one of Picasso's best- known works among his over 10,000 paintings. Picasso was originally asked to paint something for the Exposition by the Spanish Republican government. However, he had not decided what to paint until he read a shocking newspaper article. According to the article, Guernica, a small town in Spain, was bombed by the Nazis on April 26, 1937. (9) In those days, the Nazis supported General Francisco Franco. He had been ( 10 ) to overthrow the Spanish government. ☆ The bombing started around 4 o'clock in the afternoon. People and livestock at a busy market (11) there ran (12) about, trying to escape from the attack. Many buildings, including a train station, hotels, and restaurants, were demolished. The bombing lasted about three hours, and 50 tons of bombs were dropped. Three-fourths of the town was destroyed, and several hundred people were killed. Picasso was shocked because the bombing was a cruel attack against the public in his home country. In order to protest against it, he decided to make a painting of the bombing. He struggled to paint the tragedy of the bombing. He drew a number of sketches trying to show the sorrow of the people in Guernica. Even after he started painting on a big canvas, he kept changing his ideas. 2133

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