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TOEIC・英語 大学生・専門学校生・社会人

テストの過去問に解答がなく、答えがわからないので英語得意な方教えていただきたいです🤲明日がテストなので早めに解答をいただけるとありがたいです🙇‍♀️

Ⅱ 次の英文を読み, 問に答えよ。 2.2.2. Consumer test それぞれ異なる容量の1つのキューブ (10) Consumers were recruited among workers from the Instituto de Agroquímica y Tecnología de Alimen- tos, Valencia, Spain. Thirty persons, 22-60 years old, approximately half female, half male, who consumed apples frequently, were used for the study. Consumers received one cube from each different storage time fol-following lowing a balanced complete block experimental design. For each sample they had to score global acceptability of the product using a nine-box) scale labeled on the left with “dislike very much', in the middle with indiffer- ent" and on the right with "like very much". They also answered the question “Would you normally consume this product?" with a yes or a no (Hough et al., 2003; Gámbaro et al., 2004a,b). ロロロ B 問1. 本文中に記載されている試験方法は, 何を何するかどうかを問うものである。 "( A ) ( )する場合の試験” と答える場合に, (A) と(B)に当てはまる単語を英語で答えよ。 問2. 何人のパネルに試験しているのかを答えよ。 問3.ここで示されている食品の官能評価法をもっとパネルが評価しやすく回答しやす いようにするには, どうしたらよいか答えよ。 問4. パネルの男女比はどの程度であると述べているか答えよ。 5. この英文に書かれている内容に沿った官能評価シートを作成せよ。 以上

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英語 中学生

これを読んで問題を解いてください。よろしくお願いします

「クリック コンテンツ CAN-DO エネルギー問題に関する説明文を読んで、 概要を理解し, 自分の考えや意見を述べることができる。 Pre-reading What does "power" in this title mean? New Words ○ electricity [ilèktrísati] 電力 |cut [kåt] ← cut [kôt]...を切る, ・・・の供給をとめる じゅうでん charge [tfa:rdz] ・・・を充電する ✓ smartphone (s) [smártfôun(z)] スマートフォン ○ oil [5il] 石油 ○ coal [kóul] 石炭 ○ natural gas [nætfaral gés] 天然ガス ひかく ○ relatively [rélativli] 比較的 ✓ release [rilí:s] ・・・を放出する ■ dangerous [déindzaras] 危険な ✓ chemical(s) [kémikal(z)] 化学物質 health [hél0] 健康 fossil fuel(s) [fásl fjù:al(z)] 化石燃料 carbon dioxide [ka:rban daiáksaid] 二酸化炭素 ○ run out of ・・・ を使い果たす If the electricity were cut for one week, what would happen to our lives? The lights would be off. Trains コンテンツ would stop. We could not charge our smartphones. We depend on electricity to power most of our daily activities. How can we make the electricity we need for our future? 5 2 Japan uses a lot of oil, coal, and natural gas to make electricity. These resources are called “fossil fuels.” Fossil fuels have some good points. They are relatively cheap, and they can be used for many things. However, scientists say that we may run out of fossil 10 fuels in 100 years. There are other problems, too. Fossil fuels release carbon dioxide and other dangerous chemicals. They increase global warming and damage our health. [123 words] In-reading 1 What do we depend on to power our daily activities? 2 What do fossil fuels release? ●日本の一次エネルギー国内供給の割合 まいぞう ●世界のエネルギー資源の可採年数と確認可採埋蔵量 エネルギーなど 7.8 Other renewable energy, etc その他の再生可能 Natural gas 石油 51年 天然ガス 53年 石炭 153年 Oil 石油 187兆m3 39.7 天然ガス Water power 23.8 水力 3.3 1兆7,067億 バーレル Coal 石炭 25.4 資源エネルギー庁 (2016) 106 one hundred and six TIT 11,393億トン 日本原子力文化財団 (2016)

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英語 高校生

(5)についてeat the foodsではダメですか?

erdeen me we w break ma 東京医科歯科大 One reason may be breakfast's nutritional value-partly because cereal is Tarified with vitamins. In one study on the breakfast babits of 1.600 young people Julete, vitamin C, iron and calcium, was better in those who had breakfast in the U, researchers found that the fire and micronutrient intale, including of regularly. There have been sämiäer finelings in Australia, Brazil, Canada and the Breakfast is also associated with improved brain function, including concentration and language. A review of 54 studies found that eating breakfast can improve memory, though the effects on other brain functions were inconclusive. However, one of the review's researchers, Mary Beth Spitznagel says there is "reasonable" evidence breakfast does improve concentration-there just needs to be more research. "Looking at studies that tested concentration, the number of studies showing a benefit was exactly the same as the number that found no benefit," she says. "And no studies found that eating breakfast was bad for concentration." What's most important, some argue, is what we eat for breakfast. High-protein breakfasts have been found particularly effective in reducing food fravings and consumption later in the day, according to research by the Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. While cereal remains a firm favourite among breakfast consumers in the UK and US, a recent Which? investigation into the sugar content of 'adult' breakfast cereals found that some cereals contain more than three quarters of the recommended daily amount of free sugars in each portion, and sugar was the second or third highest ingredient in seven out of 10 flaked cereals. 5)PV But some research suggests if we're going to eat sugary foods, it's best to do it early. One study found that changing levels of the appetite hormone leptin in the body throughout the day coincide with having our lowest threshold for sweet food in the morning, while scientists from Tel Aviv University have found that hunger is best regulated in the morning. They recruited 200 obese adults to take part in a 16-week-long diet, where half added dessert to their breakfast, and half didn't. Those who added dessert lost an average of 40 lbs (18 kg) more-however, the study was unable to show the long-term effects.

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英語 高校生

日本語訳をお願いしたいです!!お願いします

次の英文を読んで、設問に答えなさい。 Everybody wants to eat delicious and safe food. However, exposure to different cultures reveals 2 how people's attitudes towards food safety and taste are not all innate or biological. Assumptions and practices regarding the preparation and presentation of food highlight the influence of culture on what and how people eat. For example, in one culture, some kinds of fresh ingredients might be considered edible (a), that is, without any kind of preparation like washing, peeling or heating. Yet in another culture, the same foodstuff may require some kind of preparation before it can be eaten. It is often difficult for people from the same culture to view such activities and beliefs objectively, and so witnessing the food practices of other cultures can be surprising. Sashimi is a great example of this. While sashimi may be the result of several steps of preparation from cleaning and cutting, to a particular style of presentation - heating is not one of these steps. (2)Japanese consumers take it for granted Cultures, the conventional belief may be that real and fish require some sort of cooking, such as baking or frying, (3) in order (b) them to be considered edible. In these cultures, sashimi is not thought of as raw, delicious and safe to eat, but rather as uncooked, and therefore possibly unsafe to eat, regardless of how it may taste. Fresh chicken eggs are another raw foodstuff commonly eaten in Japan — as a topping for rice, or as a dipping sauce for sukiyaki, for example but most people in the UK or the USA believe that chicken eggs require some kind of heating before they are fit for human consumption. However, the ways in which people from other cultural backgrounds eat certain foods might be considered equally unconventional by many Japanese. For example, few Japanese would eat the skin of apples or grapes. In this case, the difference involved in the preparation of the food is not the use of heat, but the removal of part of the foodstuff. People in much of the world eat apples and grapes without peeling them. A European might think, What could be more healthy and delicious than picking an apple from the tree and eating it?' But this way of thinking is not shared by a large number of Japanese. (4) It is clear that different cultures have different conventions regarding the preparation of particular foods, and different beliefs about what is considered delicious. However, there is no question that some common food preparation practices - or sometimes a lack of certain food preparation processes - are unsafe from a scientific point of view. However delicious they may be, raw meat and fish can contain the eggs of harmful parasites like tapeworms, which are often undetectable. If chicken eggs are not properly stored, and are left unconsumed for a long time, they can easily produce bacteria like salmonella. The poisoning caused by salmonella does not usually require hospitalization, but it can be very dangerous for young children and elderly people. In addition, while eating the skin of apples and grapes may be a good source of dietary fiber, one also runs the risk of consuming insecticides, the poisons that are used to protect many non-organically farmed fruits from insects. So, while there may be 'no accounting for taste' beyond culture, safety is a different issue, and (5) we should always be aware of the risks involved with culturally accepted methods of food production and consumption. 問1 下線部 (1)で,空欄 ( a )に入る最も適切な語句を, (A)~(D)から選び, 記号で答えなさい。 (A) as is clear (B) as is fresh (C) as they are (D) as unclean 問2 問3 問4 問5 下線部(2)を日本語に訳しなさい。 下線部 (3)の空欄(b)に入る語(1語) を書きなさい。 下線部(4) を日本語に訳しなさい。 下線部 (5)の理由として最も適切なものを, (A)~(D) から選び,記号で答えなさい。 (A) Eating raw chicken eggs or unpeeled fruits can be dangerous in certain conditions because of harmful bacteria or pesticides. (B) Eating unpeeled apples or grapes may cause weight gain. (C) Only young children and elderly people are vulnerable to particular bacteria. (D) Beliefs about what is considered delicious actually come from better understanding of food preparation. 問6 本文の内容と一致するものを, (A)~(G)から3つ選び,記号で答えなさい。 (A) By food preparation processes, the author exclusively means the use of heat. (B) Culturally established ways of consuming food may conflict with scientific principles of food safety. (C) In some food cultures outside Japan, fish in its raw state is not categorized as an edible foodstuff. (D) People having little contact with other cultures tend to view their own food-related conventions as natural and standard. (E) Repeated exercise is required for the mastery of any food preparation. (F) Instinct alone determines what and how people eat. (G) All cultures around the world consider it natural to eat unpeeled fruit.

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