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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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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 中学生

答えを教えてください。 解説もつけてくれると嬉しいです。

【7】 次の英文を読んで、あとの問いに答えなさい。 My name is Judy Brown. IT (be) in Japan for ten days. I left San Francisco on July 10 by plane, and after nine hours I arrived at Narita. Emiko came to see me at the airport with her father. I was very happy when I saw her again, because she visited America and stayed at my home last year. On my first night in Japan, I stayed at a hotel in Tokyo. At the hotel, I thought I was in one of the ② (big) cities in America, because there were so many tall buildings and cars in the city. Now I am staying with Emiko's family, her grandparents, parents, brother and herself. Her house is in a small town near Kobe. They are very kind to me. Last Sunday her brother said, “How about ③ ( go) for a drive?" "All right, that'll be fun," Emiko answered, and we went out for a drive. We enjoyed ④ (drive) very much. In the evening, ⑤ I enjoyed a nice dinner with her family. It was cooked by her grandmother. She is too old to work as hard as young people but she can cook many kinds of Japanese food very well. Emiko often learns how to cook Japanese food from her grandmother. good / Emiko said to me, “I like my grandparents very much. ⑥ (many / teach us / they / things). They always say to me, ⑦ “Be kind to others." My grandfather knows a lot about the history of our country. He often tells me interesting stories about ⑧it. Every New Year's Day, my grandmother helps me when I put on my kimono. I make the bed for them every day." In America we don't usually live with grandfathers or grandmothers, but I have learned it is very good for young people to live with older people in the same house. (1) ①~④を正しい形に直すとき,下のア~エから適切なものをそれぞれ選び、記号で答え なさい。 I have being I biggest ① アhas been イ I have be ウ have been (2) ア biger イ bigger ウ bigest (3 ア goes イ went ウ gone I going ④ ア drives イ drove ウ driven I driving (2) 下線部 ⑤のようにありますが, dinner を準備したのは誰か日本語で答えなさい。 (3) Emiko は何人家族か数字で答えなさい。 (4) 下線部⑥の ( )内の語を意味が通るように並べ替えなさい。 ただし, 文頭の語も小 文字になっています。 (5) 下線部⑦の和訳として最も適切なものを下から選び, 記号で答えなさい。 ア 他人を信頼せよ イ 高齢者を大切にせよ ウ 他人に親切であれ 高齢者に優しくあれ (6) 下線部⑧が指すものを文中から5語で抜き出しなさい。 (7) 本文の内容に合致するものは○合致しないものは×を書きなさい。 ア Judy Brown has been in Japan for three weeks. イ Judy Brown stayed at a hotel in Tokyo on her first night in Japan. ウ Emiko often learns how to cook Japanese dishes from her grandmother. I In America people usually live with grandparents.

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英語 中学生

1.(1)②、(2)②、(3)①、(4)③④⑧⑩、(5)③④⑤、(6)③④、(7)①④⑥、(8)①②③⑥、(9)の解説をして欲しいです。3枚目が答えです

英語科 〔文 法〕 1 次の各文の( )に入る最も適当な語(旬) を1つ 選びなさい。 3 I don't want to be a person ( things. mi 7 who says 1 what speaks which talks I whose tells 英語 ) bad They followed the instructions they ( by their homeroom teacher. Both Ken and I ( ) junior high school ア was give 1 were gave ry were given I were giving ad (1) students two years ago. 7 is イ am ウ was I are were ⑤Could you tell me ( ) a ticket? ) My brother is very good at ( baseball. 7 play plays playing I played to play 3 This computer is ( ) than that one. good I expensive ④ I enjoyed ( イ better ウ best important o) movies in my room. 7 where I can get イ where can I get ) how to buying 300 [中京大中京〕 where to buying I (3) Sarah says she can't come () she finishes her homework. 7 when if unless I after 2 I bought two books (1 yudar yesterday. ア write writing ) in English watch I watching b⑤Did your sister ( 7 study I studyed watches watched to watch studys ) science yesterday? studies studied ⑥ I want ( ) your e-mail address. ア know knows knew I knowing * to know ⑦Have you ever ( ) letters in Chinese? ア write writes writing I wrote written ウ wrote I written 3 Please come to the library, Frank. I'll be there between two (w ) three. A7 and 1 for to エ or Hiroshi and his family enjoyed ( ) at Hakuba last weekend. ア ski ウ 1 skiing for skiing I to ski ⑤5 Ben has an aunt ( He goes and stays with her every winter. ア what イ who ) lives in Hawaii. whose I where [ たちばな〕 (4) She is very proud ( ) her bonsai and ⑧ When Lucy () going home on a public bus last Friday, she saw her cousin in Lad the bus. 7 is am ウ are I was * were ⑨Emily is very ( ) because she goes to college from Monday to Friday and works part-time at a bookstore on weekends. 7 short busy I tall * large small [菊華] ) since (2) The number of car accidents ( 1992. 7 decreasing イ are decreased Gloves showing it to visitors. ア with イ of ウ to I in 2 ( ) we go to the movie theater? イ What don't ウ How are I Why don't ア Let 3 The baby was named ( 7 before after I over * since ④Mary has few friends. ( always with a lot of friends. Instead of ウ As for on Where do ) his uncle. to ) John, he is According to エ After all have been decreasing ⑤He has two other children ( I has been decreasing 2 How about ( ) a taxi instead of 7 besides 1 among Even if ) Alan. below walking there? I'm tired. 7 to taking taking I above * beside 6 Take the JR Line to Nagoya, and change ( ) there. ウ to call I calling you -147-

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英語 高校生

投げやりです。すいません。英語皆無なので代行してください。

【必答問題 5 日常使う物のデザインをする際には標準化 (standardization) という方法がある。 という内容に続く次の英文を読んで、あとの問いに答えよ。(配点44) If we examine the history of advances in all technological fields, we see that some improvements come naturally through the technology itself, while others come through standardization. The early history of the automobile is a good example. The first cars were very difficult to operate. They required strength and skill beyond the abilities of many. Some problems were solved through automation. Other aspects of cars and driving were standardized through the long process of international standards committees: . On which side of the road to drive (constant within countries) country, but variable across On which side f the car the driver sits (depends upon which side of the road the car is driven) -The (2) of essential components: steering wheel, brake, clutch, and accelerator (the same, whether on the left- or right-hand side of the car) Standardization is one type of cultural constraint. With standardization, once you have learned to drive one car, you feel confident that you can drive any car, anyplace in the world. Standardization provides a major breakthrough in usability. I have enough friends on national and international standards committees to realize that the process f determining an internationally accepted standard is laborious. Even when all members agree on the merits of standardization, the task of selecting standards becomes a long, political issue. A small company can standardize its products without too much difficulty, but it is much more difficult for an industrial, national, or international body to agree to standards. There even exists a standardized procedure for establishing national and international standards. organizations works on standards. First, a set of national and international Then when a new standard is proposed, it must work its way through each organization's approval process. Standards are usually the result of a *compromise among the various competing positions, which can often be an inferior compromise. Sometimes the answer is to agree on (4 ). Look at the existence I both metric and *English units; of left-hand- and 18 right-hand-drive automobiles. There are several international standards for the *voltages and *frequencies of electricity, and several different kinds of electrical plugs and sockets- which cannot interchanged. With all these difficulties and with the continual advances in technology, are standards really necessary? Yes, they are. Take the everyday, clock. It's standardized. Consider how much trouble you would have telling time with a backward clock, where the hands revolved "counterclockwise." A few such clocks exist, primarily as humorous conversation pieces. When a clock truly violates standards, such as (the one in Figure 1, it is difficult to determine what time is being displayed. Why? The logic behind the time display is identical to that of conventional clocks: there are only two differences - the hands move in the opposite direction (counterclockwise) and the location of "12," usually at the top, has been moved. This clock is just as logical as the standard one. It. bothers us because we have standardized on a different scheme, on the very definition of the term clockwise. Without such standardization, clock reading would be more difficult: you'd always have to figure out the "mapping. E) compromise *metric メートル法の *English units イギリスの計量法(ヤードボンド法) *frequencies of electricity 電気の周波数 voltages E *mapping 対応づけ (2つのものの間の関係を意味する専門用語) 問1 下線部(1)の内容を、 同じ段落の自動車の例に基づいて30字以内の日本語で答えよ。た だし、句読点も字数に数える。 問2 本文中の空所 (2) に入る語として最も適当なものを、次のア~エのうちから一つ 選び 記号で答えよ。 7 color イ location ウ price I sight (239) 問3 第2パラグラフ (Standardization is one type of ...) について 次の Question に対す る Answer となるように、空所に入れるのに最も適当なものを,次のア~エのうちから一 つ選び、 記号で答えよ。 Question: What is "a major breakthrough in usability" provided by standardization? Answer Because of standardization, you ( device of the same kind all over the world. 7 can apply what you have learned to イ can make cannot produce I cannot use what you have learned when using 問7 下線部(5)が表す図 (Figure 1)として最も適当なものを、次のア~エのうちから一つ選 び記号で答えよ。 11 12 1 12 ) any machine or 10 2 10% 9 3 1 5 6 問4 下線部(3)の示す内容を, 40字程度の日本語で答えよ。 ただし, 句読点も字数に数える。 ウ 11 6 1 問5 次の文を第3パラグラフ (Ihave enough friends...) に入れるとき,本文中の①~ のうちのどの位置に入れるのが最も適当か、 次のア~エのうちから一つ選び, 記号 で答えよ。 9 3 Each step is complex, for if there are three ways of doing something, then there are sure to be strong proponents of each of the three ways, plus people who will argue that it is too early to standardize. 70 問8 最終パラグラフ (With all these difficulties...) の内容をもとに, 次の Question に2 語程度の英語一文で答えよ。 Question: According to the writer, why is the standardization of the everyday clo necessary? イ 2 ウ H O 問6 本文中の空所 (4) に入れるのに最も適当なものを、次のア~エのうちから一つ選び 記号で答えよ。 7 a single standard 1 several different standards ウ the same standard I too few standards <<-20-> <-21->

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英語 高校生

至急⚠️ 奇数の問題の答え合わせをしたいです。 なぜその答えになるのかも教えていただきたいです。 よろしくお願いします。

EXERCISE A >> 空所に入れるのに最も適切なものを選びなさい。 of gabilat S 01 It is difficult ( ) the English exam. ①in passing ge2 to passed 3 to pass 4 pass 〈福岡大〉 ni miwa S to talk 2 talking 02 The young woman had no one ( ) with about her future. 3 of talking to have talked (*) 03 Susan opened the box, ( 2 next 1 but ) to find it empty. 3 only 4 soon lig 〈立教大〉 04 His grandfather lived ( ) ninety-two and was the head of the company for many years. 1 being 3 for being 105 2 to be 4 till he would be BE <東海大 > er It was careless (b) him to forget to lock the door. top bolid W 1 for 2 of 3 with on 08 4 to a don <*> 06 My friends were warned ( ) the mountain in such bad weather. 3 of no climbing to climb 〈センター試験〉 Din climbing 2 not to climb 107 Half of the houses on the island are said ( ①having 2 to be being 3 to have ) damaged by the typhoon. 4 to have been() of warts 80 The boy turned on his father's computer, though he had been told ( 〈 青山学院大 〉 ). 08 1 not do it 2 not to 3 to do not 4 to not 09 The textbook is ( 9D ①easy enough ) for a college student to read. 2 so easy as 3 so easy that 4 such easy (***) The 10 Mr. Smith doesn't know ( 1 way to use 3 the way of use ) a computer and is afraid to touch one. 2 how he should to use 4 how to use <東京経済大 〉 11 I can't decide ( I to if ) go to Australia or New Zealand. 2 whether ③3 whether to 4 to whether <福岡大〉 12 To begin ( 1 from ), let's have a look at Chapter 5. 2 by 3 for 4 with 〈九州産業大〉 □13 To ( ) the truth, I still haven't finished my homework. 1 say 2 tell 3 speak 4 mention 〈大阪学院大 〉 05 95 不定詞

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