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質問の種類

英語 中学生

解答がないので採点お願いします🙇🏻‍♀️

(1) Risa was a quiet junior high school student. She always enjoyed spending time in the school library, but she felt nervous when she had to speak in front of many people. This summer, however, something unexpected happened. An exchange student named Mike came from the United States to study at her school for two months. Mike was a tall, friendly boy who had never been to Japan before. (2) One day, her English teacher, Mr. Sato, said, "Risa, you are good at English. Would you please show Mike around the school this week?" Risa was very surprised. She had never spoken English with a native speaker, so she wanted to refuse. But Mr. Sato's kind smile made her unable to say no. "Okay, Mr. Sato," she replied. She knew she had to try. (3) Risa and Mike started spending time together. Risa found that Mike was really interested in Japanese traditional sweets, which are called wagashi. "My grandmother has made wagashi for over thirty years," Risa said. "She has a small shop near the station." Mike's eyes shone. "That's wonderful! Can we visit her shop? I want to see how wagashi are made." (4) The next Saturday, Risa took Mike to her grandmother's shop. Her grandmother, who was a master craftsman, kindly welcomed them. She showed them nerikiri, a type of wagashi that is easily ( )shaped into flowers or leaves. "These sweets are made from bean paste and sugar," she explained. Mike was surprised to know that such beautiful things were completely edible. "They are too beautiful to eat," Mike said, taking a picture of a sweet shaped like a morning glory. (5) Risa's grandmother showed Mike how to mix the ingredients and shape the sweets carefully. Mike was clumsy at first, but he learned quickly. Risa helped him and translated her grandmother's instructions into English. Thanks to the experience, Risa was able to speak English (イ) more confidently than before. She realized that teaching someone about her culture was a very enjoyable experience. She felt that the shy girl she had been was finally changing. 次の問いに答えなさい。 1. 本文第2段落の下線部 "unable to say no" と同じ意味になるように、空所に適する語を入れなさ い。 o She can't say no. 2. 本文第4段落の下線部 "were completely edible" を、能動態に書き換えるとき、空所に適する 語句を入れなさい。 (The chef) made completely edible. 3. 本文第5段落の下線部 "more confidently" が使われている文と比較級の意味が異なるものを、 ア~エの中から一つ選び、記号で答えなさい。 ア. Ken runs faster than Jim. イ. This bag is bigger than that one. ウ. The more I learn, the happier I am. エ This book is easier to read than the last one. 本文の内容に照らして、 次の問いに日本語で答えなさい。 1. 本文第2段落で、 理沙はなぜ英語の先生の頼みを 「断ることができなかった」 のですか。 佐藤先生が優しくんだから。 2. マイクが 「美しすぎて食べられない」と発言した時、 理沙の祖母はマイクに何を伝えましたか。 4段落) これらの和菓子はあんこと砂糖でできているとうこと 本文第5段落の下線部 (イ) had been が指しているのは、どのような理沙の状態ですか。 日本語 的に説明しなさい。 (イ) She felt that the shy girl she had been was finally changing. exchange student 交換留学生 refuse: 断る traditional: 伝統的な master craftsman 名人、職人 bean paste あんこ edible: 食べられる clumsy: 不器用な confidently: 自信を持って 次の下線部の日本語の意味に最も近いものを、アエの中から一つ選び、 記号で答えなさい。 (ア) shaped (第4段落) ウ ア. 色を付けられた イ. 洗われたウ. 形作られたエ. 割られた 静かで図書館で過ごすことを楽が、みんなの前で話術に緊張するという状態。 本文第4段落にある、 次の文を最も自然な日本語に訳しなさい。 • Mike was surprised to know that such beautiful things were completely edible. マイクはそのような美しいものが完全に食べられることに驚きました。

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

答えあってますでしょうか🥲🥲

26. Be confident. You don't have to feel inferior ( ) anyone in the contest. 1 to 2 in 3 than 27. I prefer talking with Mary over the telephone ( 1 in 2 of 3 on A is inferior to B BよりAが劣っている <東北福祉大〉 ④against ) writing her a letter. prefer A to B BよりもAを好む 〈関西外国語大〉 ④to 28. The dinner we had at Betty's is one of the best we have ( The fet B b S have ever done ) had. Sが今まで~した<近畿大〉 4 often 中で最も…な名詞) 1 already (2 ever 29. This city is the third ( ①largest ③ never ) in France. the third 2 large IB 30 3 larger 4 to large 30. When the president was seated, the waiter offered him the]( much the 1 much ならOK 2 very 31. I think he is ( ⑩by far 2 many 3 by far by far the more ならOK ..M 〈神奈川工科大 > the very B 最上級 ) best wine. 最上級の強調 〈名古屋工業大〉 )[the most talented baseball player today. by far the ±AB 3 as far as → 最上級の強風和光大〉 4 very 32. Professor Jones is stricter than (r() teacher in our department. Dany other 16 比較 A is te than any other 単数名詞 Aは他のどんな名詞 ④ one another よりも~だ〈南山大〉 is tt Than A AZY~360]) 127211 2 2 other 3 each other 33. ( ) in Japan is greater than he. No other ①No more politician No other politician 7. 3 No less politician No another politician Lotally 〈福岡大〉 34. "How is New York different from other cities?" A is te than anywhere else "Well, I think it is so much more exciting than ( ) else." 他のどんな場所よりも ①any other place 2 anywhere ~ Tell 3 nowhere wherever <学習院大 >

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

以前画像3枚目の様に修飾限定予告のthatというものを習ったので今回もその形なのかと思い、それらのと入れずに訳してしまったのですがこのthoseの識別は文脈判断ということでしょうか? 教えて頂きたいです。よろしくお願いいたします。

実理 K The starting point for today's *meritocracy, of course, is the idea that intelligence exists and can be measured, like weight or strength or fluency in French. The most obvious difference between intelligence and these other traits is that all the others are presumably changeable. If someone weighs too much, he can go on a その人 →Heyで受けるのが一般的 5 diet; if he's weak, he can lift weights; if he wants to learn French, he can take a course. But in principle he can't change his intelligence. There is another important difference 原則として MV between intelligence and other traits. Height and weight and speed and strength and サフィス体例 関係性が強い文がくる even conversational fluency are real things; there's no doubt about what's being 間違いなん measured. Intelligence is a much murkier concept. Some people are generally (2) m2 Vogue 10 smarter than others, and some are obviously talented in specific ways; they're chess 天才 S masters, math *prodigies. But can the factors that make one person seem quicker than another be measured precisely, like height and weight? Can we confidently say that one person is 10 percent smarter than another, in the same way we can say he's 10 へんて、いつだっ S percent faster in the hundred-yard dash? And can we be confident that two thirds of 櫂へん 言いかえ 15 all people have IQs within one standard deviation of the norm that is, between 90 ように and 110 - - as we can be sure that two thirds of all people have heights within one standard deviation of the norm for height? Yes, they can, and yes, we can. besure least, are the answers that the IQ part of the meritocracy rests on. Those, at (3)-

解決済み 回答数: 2
英語 高校生

fについてです 解説が載っていなかったため質問しています、。 なぜ、③を選ぶことができるのでしょうか?

Long-s doctrin holds that we are protected from fungi not just by layered immune defenses but ( e ) we are mammals*, with core temperatures higher than fungi prefer. The cooler outer surfaces of our bodies are at risk of minor assaults-think of athlete's foot*, yeast infections, ringworm*-but in people with healthy immune systems, invasive* infections have been ( f ). That may have left us overconfident. "We have an enormous (g) spot," says Arturo Casadevall, a physician and molecular microbiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Walk into the street and ask people what are they afraid of, and they'll tell you they're afraid of bacteria, they're afraid of viruses, but they don't fear dying of fungi." Ironically, it is our successes that made us vulnerable*. Fungi exploit damaged immune systems, but before the mid-20th century people with impaired immunity didn't live very long. Since then, medicine has gotten very good at keeping such people (h), even though their immune systems are compromised by illness or cancer treatment or age. It has also developed an array of therapies that deliberately suppress immunity, to keep transplant recipients healthy and treat autoimmune* disorders such as lupus* and rheumatoid arthritis*. ( i ) vast numbers of people are living now who are especially vulnerable to fungi. Not all of our vulnerability is the fault of medicine preserving life so successfully. Other ( j ) actions have opened more doors between the fungal world and our own. We clear land for crops and settlement and perturb* what were stable balances between fungi and their hosts. We carry goods and animals across the world, and fungi hitchhike on them. We drench crops in fungicides* and enhance the resistance of organisms residing nearby. (s) ELSE

解決済み 回答数: 1
地理 中学生

夏休みの宿題って書いてあるんですけど、これ自分の学校の物じゃないんです。でも復習のためにやっているんですけど答えが分からないので誰か教えてくれませんか

神戸について知ろう! 【問題】 次の文の( )にあてはまる語句を語群から選び、 こたえなさい。 ■兵庫県の基本情報 人口は約 (① 万人で全国7位。 近畿地方では大阪府に次いで2位)。 北に長い県域を持ち、 近畿地方の府県で最大の面積を持つ。 には (② )、南は (3 いる県である。 の2つの海に接し 州で2つの海に接している県は、 両端である青森県と山口県 除けば兵庫県のみ。 三庫県を青森県から山口県まで陸路で縦断しようとすると、 ず通ることになる。 気候面では北側は (4 但馬 丹波 磨 淡路 摂津 (阪神) 摂津 (神戸) )が多く、南側は乾燥した晴天が続くなど、 他府県に類を見ない自然環境を有している。こ うした特色ある風土から多彩な農林水産業が営まれ、生産量で全国順位の上位を占める農林水産物が多く存在している。 ■食について 農産物では山田錦 (酒米) (1位)、丹波黒 (黒大豆) (1位)、 たまねぎ、 いちじく、 カーネーション 震災について 平成7年1月17日午前5時46分、淡路島北部を震源地とするマグニチュード (12 この地震によって神戸市、西宮市、芦屋市、宝塚市、および淡路島北部の一部が震度 (13 各地で甚大な被害が発生しました。 この大地震は 「 ( 14 取って「(15 の地震が発生しました。 の激しい揺れに襲われ、 地震」といい、災害名としては被災地域の名称を 大震災」と呼ばれています。 実にそれは、6400名を超える死者と、4万人以上の負傷者、お よび約25万棟(世帯としては約46万世帯)の家屋被害などをもたらし、被害総額はおよそ10兆円に達し、日本が経験 した戦後最大規模の自然災害でした。 伝統工芸品について 兵庫県には次のような伝統的工芸品があります。 産物では (⑤ (1位)、 ハタハタ (1位) (⑥ どがある。 また、 (7 (1位)、 ズワイガニ (1位)、 ノリ養殖、 タコ類、 イカナゴ 明石鯛などは全国的にも有名なブランド。 県では、兵庫県産の農林水産物およびこれらを主原料として県内で製造された加工食品の本来の美味しさをPRし、 )」を定め、安全・安心で個性・特長がある食 ■に対する不安感や不信感を取り除くため、「( ) (17 豊岡杞柳細工(とよおかきりゅうざ ⑨ )」として認証している。 県認証食品は、具体的な認証審査の基準により「(⑩ )」と「(1 2種類があり、「⑩ 」は生産方法・品質・地域性等に個性や特長があり、法令の遵守・生産管理体制等の整備が図れて ると県が確認した商品。 一方、「 」はひょうご推奨ブランドの認証基準に加えて、 出荷記録等の整備や残留農薬等に ■てより厳しい基準をクリアした、 安全性・安心感の高い食品である。 ひょうご 推奨ブランド HYOGO RECOMMENDED AND ひょうご 心ブランド HYOGO CONFIDENT BRAND ⑧) ) 播州毛鉤(ばんしゅうけばり) (語群) 播州そろばん ひょうご食品認証制度 出石焼 シラス ひょうご安心ブランド 兵庫県南部 ホタルイカ 兵庫県認証食品 播州三木打刃物 丹波焼 ひょうご推奨ブランド 阪神・淡路 神戸ビーフ 7 7.3 日本海 降水量 瀬戸内海 540

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