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英語 高校生

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速度 DIALOG エイミーと拓が教室で話しています。 QR EE A: Why do you practice so hard? T: We have an important game next Sunday. A: You play soccer a lot these days. T: Yeah! We practice hard both on weekdays and on weekends. A: Amy T: Taku JAOS エイミー 最近サッカーの練習に 熱が入っているね。 番で合拓! 平日も週末も必死にサッカーの 練習をしているんだ。 エイミー: どうしてそんなに一生懸命 サッカーの練習をしているの? 大切な試合が来週の日曜に あるんだ。 EXERCISES Lesson 1 ます。 もっとも適する語を下から選び、形を変えて空所に入れましょう。 1. This table_has 2. There three legs. このテーブルには脚が3本あります。 (Hints 否定文、疑問文の作り方 千鶴の注意 be動詞 often a rainbow after rain. 雨のあとはよく虹が出ます。 I am not tired. 3. School starts in April and ends 日本では学校は4月に始まり, 3月に終わります。 in March in Japan. (Are you tired? be / have / end DIVen2]aH W BOY Bow 2 日本語の意味に合うように,( )内の語を並べかえましょう。 verT 919W LOY English! ●一般動詞 I don't speak Chinese. Ryo doesn't know Yuki. Do you like baseball? Does Yuki have a dog? 1. How ( are / English / many / teachers / there) in your school? many teachers are There あなたの学校には英語の先生は何人いますか。 1094 120l axew owl not hoy we ni enew 2. This school(have / does/apool/not).does have apol feey beit yiev ow not 3. In Japan, (chopsticks/use/ usually/ people) when they eat. この学校にはプールがありません。 日本では、食事のときはたいていはしを使います。 ommu People usually use chopsti Wy use short 3 右の絵の場面に合うように, 空所に入る語を考えましょう。 There are fifty states in the U.S. 現在の部活動や興味・関心があることについて、発表しましょう。Yo ►Useful Words & Expressions pp.78-A, 79-F, 80-G, 82-P PERFORM 例 Now I'm a member of the tennis team. I like tennis very much. I want to practice tennis hard to be a good player.

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TOEIC・英語 大学生・専門学校生・社会人

青くしてある文の文構造と訳し方を教えていただきたいです🙇‍♀️ また、mainstream America の語順に違和感を感じていて、(American mainstream とした方が正しくない?と思ってしまいます、、)それも解説いただきたいです。

Neil Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil. Georgie And I'm Georgie. Neil If I told you I'd been for a walk to see Big Ben and Buckingham Palace, you'd know straight away I was in London. Georgie But what if my walk went past cafes selling mozzarella and ricotta where I smelled freshly made cannolis and focaccia... Where would I be then? Neil Focaccia and mozzarella... you'd be in Italy, right? Georgie Yes, Italy, or 'Little Italy' to be exact - the neighbourhood in some cities where Italian communities settled and made their home. Neil These Italian arrivals opened shops and cafes selling food to their own communities. Soon dishes like spaghetti and meatballs attracted the attention of local people, and gradually Italian food became famous around the world. In this programme, we'll be taking a walk through two Little Italys, one in Argentina, the other in New York, and, as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well. But before that, I have a question for you, Georgie. According to a recent YouGov poll, which Italian food is most popular with British diners? Is it: a) pizza? b) lasagne? or c) garlic bread? Georgie I think it must be pizza. Neil Okay, Georgie, I'll reveal the answer at the end of the programme. One country Italians moved to was Argentina. In 1898, Giuseppe Banchero arrived in the neighbourhood of La Boca, the Little Italy of Buenos Aires, where many Italian immigrants started restaurants. Here, Hugo Banchero, grandson of Giuseppe, tells his story to Veronica Smink, reporter for BBC World Service programme, The Food Chain: Hugo Banchero Well, my grandfather came from Italy, from Genoa, from Liguria. He was born in the centre of Genoa and arrived here in 1898 at the age of seven and a half, and this pizzeria where we are was founded on March 28, 1972. We have been here for 91 years. Veronica Smink So what culinary traditions did they bring with them? Hugo Banchero Well, our culinary tradition is pizza, and we incorporated the faina from Genoa, which is a pizza with chickpea flour... Georgie In 1898, Giuseppe founded his pizzeria - a restaurant selling pizza. When a business is founded, it's established someone starts it, or sets it up. Neil Giuseppe brought the culinary traditions from his home in Liguria in northern Italy, including regional pizzas like faina and fugazzetta. The adjective culinary describes anything connected with cooking. Georgie But probably the best-known Little Italy in the world is an area of Manhattan's Lower East side in New York. Ninety percent of Italian immigrants who arrived in the US at the turn of the century came through this neighbourhood. Neil De Palos, one of the original shops selling Italian food in Little Italy, has been serving customers for 113 years. Here, Lou De Palo, co-owner and great-grandson of the original owner, Salvino, explains more about his family history to BBC World Service programme, The Food Chain: Lou De Palo 1925... when my grandmother, Concetta, and my grandfather, Luigi, got married, they open their own shop... it's the shop we continue today being the fourth generation working alongside my sister, Maria, my brother, Sal, and our children, the fifth generation. Our business has expanded; expanded to present the full food culture of the 20 regions of Italy. Little Italy is the stepping stone of the Italian immigrant. This is where many of the Italians first came through Ellis Island, and then settled here, and then eventually moved into mainstream America throughout the rest of the country. Georgie Lou De Palo is the fourth generation of his family to run the shop, and his children will be the fifth. Phrases like fourth or fifth generation describe the children of people whose parents immigrated to a particular country.

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