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英語 中学生

(1)の答えがchoosing、(2)の答えがウ、(5)の答えがアで、それぞれなんでその答えになるのかと、 5⃣の本文を上から4行、4行、5行、4行、3行、2行で分けた時それぞれに題名を付けるとしたらどうなりますか? 教えて欲しいですm(_ _)m

5 次の英文を読んで, あとの問いに答えなさい。 <川越東改> Origami is the Japanese art of folding paper. To do origami, the artist starts with a square piece of paper. Some people like to use special origami paper that is two colors. The front of the paper is one color, and the back of the paper is another color. Other people like to use origami paper that has patterns on it. After ①(choose) your paper, you can find many instructions for folding the paper into different things. Many people enjoy (make) origami flowers, animals, or things ( 3 ). For all of these things, there are a few kinds of folds that you need to use. For example, sometimes you need to fold the paper in half. Sometimes, the paper must be folded from corner to corner. If you follow the directions carefully, you can create a beautiful paper flower or animal. However, origami is more than folding paper. First, origami is an important part of Japanese life. For example, nature is important in Japan. In Japan, people care about the seasons, weather, water, or other things in nature. Origami is also a part of nature. That is why the most popular origami shapes are things like animals. Birds, fish, flowers, and stars are all popular shapes. It is a quiet activity, and can calm the mind and body. People who do origami like the activity as much as the art. They like it because origami demands a lot of attention. When people think hard about creating something, they forget about their problems. This allows them ④ to calm down. ⑤ Origami is also good for teaching children. They also learn to work carefully. Also, origami has squares and triangles. These shapes are important in all kinds of learning. Origami helps children to learn about these shapes. Maybe you can try to do origami yourself. You only need some paper and a book of instructions. You can find instructions for many origami shapes on the Internet. instruction direction (1)①,②の( )内の語を適する形にかえなさい。 (2) 30( に適するものを, ア~エから1つ選びなさい。 (3) (4) 7 to paint with 1 to talk with 1 (2) making. to play with I to help with (イ) ④に適するものを,ア~エから1つ選びなさい。 Origami is also easy to learn. 1 Origami is also good for your imagination. Origami is also difficult to learn. I Origami is also good for your mind. ⑤にはA~Cの文が入ります。 自然な流れの文章になる配列を, ア~エから1つ選びなさい。 A Children must follow these steps exactly. B First, origami has many steps. C This way, children can learn to follow instructions. ア A-B-C イ A-C-B B-A-C I B-C-A (5)本文の内容にあうものを, ア~エから1つ選びなさい。 If you follow some instructions for paper folds, you can enjoy many different origami shapes. Learning origami gives us a good chance to help animals on the earth. You may feel tired if you try hard to do origami carefully. I The most important thing for children's education is origami. (土)

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英語 高校生

英文がわからないです心の優しい方、英文の解き方を教えて欲しいです🙇‍♀️

35 15 20 signatures in business. However, no one used fingerprints in crime work until the late In ancient times, people used fingerprints to identify people. They also used them as 1880s. Three men, working in three different areas of the world, made this possible. (1) The first man who collected a large number of fingerprints was William Herschel. He worked for the British government in India. He took fingerprints when people (7) official papers. For many years, he collected the same people's fingerprints several times. He made an important discovery. Fingerprints do not change over time. At about the same time, a Scottish doctor in Japan began to study fingerprints. Henry Faulds was looking at ancient Japanese pottery* one day when he noticed small It occurred to him that the lines were 2,000-year-old fingerprints. Faulds wondered, "Are fingerprints unique to each person?" He began to take fingerprints of all his friends, co-workers, and students at his medical school. Each print was (). He also wondered, "Can you change your fingerprints?” shaved the fingerprints off his fingers with a razor to find out. Would they grow back lines on the pots. (2) He the same? They did. One day, there was a theft in Faulds's medical school. Some alcohol was missing. Faulds found fingerprints on the bottle. He compared the fingerprints to the ones in his records, and he found a match. The thief was one of his medical students. By examining fingerprints, Faulds solved the crime. Both Herschel and Faulds collected fingerprints, but there was a problem. It was very difficult to use their collections to identify a specific fingerprint. Francis Galton in England made it easier. He noticed common patterns in fingerprints. He used these to help classify fingerprints. These features, called "Galton details," made it easier for police to search through fingerprint records. The system is still in use today. When 25 police find a fingerprint, they look at the Galton details. Then they search for other fingerprints with similar features. (4) Like Faulds, Galton believed that each person had a unique fingerprint. According to Galton, the chance of two people with the same fingerprint was 1 in 64 billion. Even the fingerprints of identical twins are ( ). Fingerprints were the perfect tool to 30 identify criminals. For mo than 100 years, no one found two people with the same prints. Then, in 2004, terrorists (I) a crime in Madrid, Spain. Police in Madrid found a fingerprint. They used computers to search databases of fingerprint records all over the world. Three fingerprint experts agreed that a man on the West Coast of the United States was one of the criminals. Police arrested him, but the experts were wrong. The man was innocent. Another man was (). Amazingly, the two men who were 6,000 5 10 136 Lesson 日本大学 470 words 22 (3) 23 024 25 26

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英語 中学生

どこを抜き出して答えればいいのか分からないので答えをお願いします🙇‍♀️もし出来れば解説もお願いします🙏

次の英文を読み、以下の問いに答えなさい。 Cow. Chicken. Grass. Which two are in the same group? Your answer depends on where you were born and raised. T fedt af gnofed For a long time, *research psychologists have had an idea that East Asians and Westerners think about the world in different ways. There was not enough scientific *evidence to support this idea until recently. In the past 15 years, however, researchers have learned a lot about different thinking styles and the cultural differences that produce them. The story begins in 1972, when *Liang-Hwang Chiu, a professor of *educational psychology at *Indiana University, tested more than 200 Chinese and 300 American children. He showed some cards to each child. Each card had pictures of three things. One card, for example, showed a cow, a chicken, and grass. Chiu asked the children to say which two things were in the same group. Most of the American children picked the chicken and cow. They explained the reason by saying that "both are animals." Most of the Chinese children, however, put the cow and grass together because "cows eat grass." solib - People didn't think Chiu's study was very important in the years after its *publication because $*psychological scientists at that time paid little attention to cultural differences. In the 1990s, however, *cross-cultural psychology became 2"hot" and Chiu's findings were paid attention to again. 3 Researchers at the University of Michigan did Chiu's study again by testing college students from China, Taiwan, and the United States. Without using pictures, the researchers gave the students with and asked them to say which two three words shampoo, hair, and conditioner, for example 20 were in the same group. The Americans were more likely than the Chinese to say that shampoo and conditioner go together because they're both hair care goods. The Chinese were more likely to say that shampoo and hair go together because "shampoo washes and cleans hair." Why do East Asians and Westerners think differently? Most researchers believe the answer can be Taplapo 77 Step A Step B Step C

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英語 中学生

②に「used」が入ります。 〜されるだから過去分詞になるのは分かるのですが、be動詞は要らないのでしょうか??

Tlearned about Katsushika Hokusai. in them and began to draw the same patterns. After that, I also found an interesting book about drawings. It was written by Katsushika Hokusai, a very famous artist who made many wanted to show her other patterns drawn with some circles. When I was looking for n the Internet, I found some beautiful patterns and showed them to her. She got interested winter vacation, she began to draw circles on a piece of paper with a compass. ; she learned how to drawa circle with a compass at school. One day in Hello, everyone. Do you like to draw pictures? I am a member of the art cub, and I like to do that. I have a sister and she is nine years old now. 大阪府(一般入学者選抜) (2018年)-19 Last Jear; beautiful pattern with a combination of circles and 。fower. When she showed it to me, she looked happy. So, I trying to draw a She was it looked a pattern (模様) On them 2 a Japanese prints ukayoe. Today, I will talk about the book and some other things that D。 vou know that Katsushika Hokusai used rulers and ompasses when he drew some pictures? According to him, it is nOssible to draw pictures of everything with rulers and compasses. In the book I found, ways to draw things with rulers and compasses are shown. Please look at this picture. It shows two drawings in the book. The right one is a drawing of ョ bird. The left one shows the outline of the bird. We can see drawings in the book written by Katsushika Hokusai ome words beside those drawings. Although I cannot read them, ら ャ てうをく

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英語 高校生

本文の(4)の所(赤丸の所)にはinstead ,nevertheless,otherwise ,thereforeのいずれかが入るのですが答えは何となくinsteadかなと思っているのですがどうでしょうか?

aim。 ThiS account is based on the assumption ee peo 由 alk in difterent 二e ve etme ctly the “ they dont ahwayS USe the same EIU d to as Style- cn is usually referre 次の問いに答えなざい。 NN 円 以下の英文を読んで。 eaivesin (0) ) og6e We often position OUTS 8 People do not ahwayS talk 地 rds the Same W39 of variation in SDe6 jinds of interaction. they dontt ahVayS DrOnOUnCG Wol grammatical fornS. This kind 。 shiftng 還、、、 っOne or the theoried_explaining this yariati 開隊Th jnto account who they are talking to_and iter thelr eech style accor 。誠 Coneept of audience design/provides an erplanaGOn 0 孤記計eDy 5Pceken change the way they talk depending on the situation and context they arC talking ple are mainly seeking to thers, and one WaY that speakers yhich means by changing their they happen to be show unity and approval in their dealings with oi can do this is through “linguistic convergence." patterns of speech to fi more closely with those of the perSon にーー talking to [ Tm some situations, speakers may Choose not to ag but (⑳⑩ ) to either 4 maintain their own variety or move to a more extreme variety Of theim dialect in order to emphasize the diference between themselves and the person or people they are

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英語 高校生

英語の問題を教えてほしいです💦 赤で囲ってある部分の( )内の並びかえと和訳がわかりません! よろしくお願いします!!🙇‍♀️

ー HEFant Worker8 are unsknlled theinumberlof highly educated and experienced migrants has been steadily rising. (ぁ)They represent a 10 wide spectrum of occupations ー from computer programmers to awyers, doctors, and teachers.| They move largely within a relatively small community of developed nations (⑬(being / destinations / preferred / with) Europe, Asia, and increasingly the wealthy Middle Eastern countries. 1 According to an analysis of the World Bank, (のthe number of college-educated 1s migrants in developed Western countries rose almost 70%6 between 1990 and 2000. By contrast。 the mumber of those without a university degree rose by only 81% over the same period. Analysts agree that tougher entry requirements for unskiled workers are the major reason behind this difference. *(⑮)Over the course of our history we have come to take it for granted that 20 migration in the world is dominated by movements of people hoping to escape poverty and oppression," commented a senior offcial at a research institute. “Now these patterns are much more complex and multi-directional' he added. Tndeed, surveys iustrate that in todays global village' (6)a wide range of factors isi r. Sure, some are after a may account for ones decieion to mOVe acrOSS the borde < EBIRIIII昌昌時EE

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英語 高校生

回答を作っていただけませんか???

TPidgim Emgish Wiar happcms win people necd to communicate but have no cemmon angnagef Youmay ja aken par in coavertions sak as tBiS er perhaps youve witmeswed on fmm a ore comfortablc distance. They gesturc. they talk with their hands and feet. and 一 somewhat surprisingly 一 they speak. as well. That is surprising becasse they really cannot hope tbat amyopc w山 undcrstand much morc than their moodLif hr or she camt undcrstand thr languagr_ But they go ahead and speak anyway. and we can understand bits and pieces of what they say by paying clow attcnGon to thc rrst of the communicstem A がggiz is a simplihied form of language dcvclopcd by speakkcrs who otherwise share no omon languamw This means oi course that pidgins begin in mmultiingual* stuations 一 where ai least two. and more likcly seweral languagcs cocxist. ( ) ). pidgins spring up in rading rmters or in areas umdcr industriabzation (including agricultursl industmahzation. tbat plantanion) They develop bere because the opportuniies for trade and work attractlarge mambers or people with diEernt native tongues Thc term pidgin dcvlopcd from apidgin pronumciatiop of busness: busncss Engish became pidgin English・ A pidgin in the technical snsc is a sort oflanguage scrving the meeds of a community. Thus a pidgn is not simply thc brokcn Engiish of a waiter in a ipreign restaurant (who spcaks his native language with his co-worikers). por is it an idiots verson ofa language. or a kind of inevitable deterioration* in tbe bands of barbarians*。 ( づ )。 robably the morc intelieeat and ambidoms people in s culpure who master the cpcrsy and couragw needed for the move to an industrial or market amea Somc pcopks gcl that pidgins smc wag becatsc cf the Best snd os way they py with hc structural patterns of their basc language。 In a scnsr.the charge is correct pidgins have no respect for the grammars of tbeir base angrages But 下i doesnt make pidgins wrong since he radical simphification we find in pidgins servcs a worthwisls gpal- communicahon。 Because ofits simple structure a pidgin is easier to learn than other languagcs_ By providing a means of communication in a community. it fac抽tates tbe integration* of newcomers who would have a much more dificult time larning a standard Europcan language_ Tinaly. mdgins rc a reahty whosc cxistcpce is pot bject to dkbate。 Tbcr re dozeps of dgins. many of which show no signs of dying out Since tey arisc sponiapeously wherever people need to talk. pidgins probably represcnt the primative communication system out of which our more respected modern languages dcveloped。 This fact alonc makes them wel orth our attenton aped tom umeaer rax 3 cawos pe 23rの4 ne Os Se tee Dame e Leezaet ras ea PT ーッー

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