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English Senior High

下から2行目のto seeのtoは結果を表すtoでしょうか?

目標時間 ■2分19秒 音声 noitqmurenos baya 1 Social norms are unwritten rules that govern the way that people behave within a society or group. These norms provide stability in the long run, preventing the society from decaying into chaos, and ensuring that even monumental change happens slowly. But they also 5 strongly influence individuals to conform to society. For instance, one study in the 1950s showed this very clearly. New students at a university were randomly assigned to live among either conservative students or liberal students. The researchers observed that these new students gradually adapted their values and beliefs over time to fit the 10 norms of their surroundings. 2 Other studies have shown that people followed group norms even when they had direct evidence that contradicted the norm. For example, in one study, people were asked to estimate the length of a line drawn on a piece of paper. People's estimates followed a group norm Soini insmye daug goland that the group 15 even in cases when people could see with their own eyes was wrong. 301 10 aniq 3 Social norms often stifle creativity in groups. To the extent that creativity is the result of "thinking outside the box," groups do not normally reward creative individuals, but instead ignore them or 20 even push them out of the group completely. This often works to the businesses who strive to attract creative talent to detriment of many their organization only to see them become unproductive under the pressure of conformance to norms. To O do (233 words) bonaq otaqisins 125 St.

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English Senior High

答えあっていますでしょうか🥲🥲

30. Lucy was ( ) of her expensive rings. robbed 31. She got angry and ( cleared 32. His influenza ( ①1 pretended stolen rob A of B AからBを取り除く 3 received 4 sold 〈北里大〉 ) the apartment of all the furniture and articles belonging to him. moved took clear A of B. (***) ③ removed AからBを取り除く ) him from attending classes. prevent A from doing 30+Þ‹†”3 2 prevented ③ presented ④presumed 〈大東文化大 〉 33. Rain or wind never stopped me (o) going to school. Stop A from doing AR 13. 1 with 2 over 3 of 4 from 34. Put the pizza at the bottom of the oven to keep the cheese ( ) burning. 1 by 2 into ③fro ③ from 〈立正大 〉 4 on Aバルさせない keep A from doing (****A) 〈 淑徳大〉 35. The shop didn't have the CDs I was looking for, so I didn't (A) any. rent A 売る×Aを(有料で借りる ①lend x ②2 rent 3 borrow 4 sell 無料× 36. My pen is out of ink. Can I ( rent ) yours? borrowAAを(無料で)借りる hire x3 lend borrow broad 私たちは決して彼に私たちのDVDを貸すのをためられない、なぜなら彼は常にそれらを数日以内に返すから 37. We never hesitate to ( him our DVDs because he always returns them within a few days. 1 rent 2 borrow 38. My parents helped me a lot ( 1 sum 2 with ②wi lend ) my work. 3 under lend AB ④let AlBを貸す < 東京工科大 〉 help A with B ABEf127 some < 駒澤大 >

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English Senior High

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)-

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