Grade

Subject

Type of questions

English Senior High

「,well behind 」の部分の構造、意味を教えてください。

[Review] Back in the late sixties, thinkers on both sides of the Atlantic were troubled by problems which may seem strange to us today: they were worried that the leisure age which they believed was fast approaching would leave people with too much time on their hands. They were worried that the work ethic was losing its grip on a new rebellious generation and they pondered how they would motivate people to work. They needn't have worried. The much-predicted "leisure age" promised by technology has not materialized. In fact, quite the reverse: people are working harder than ever. There is less leisure time and, most surprising of all, the very workers with the greatest bargaining power are choosing to work the hardest. The problem is the burnout of white- collar Britain. For over a century, the average number of hours spent working over a lifetime slowly declined in Britain. The historian James Arrowsmith has calculated that in 1856 our ancestors put in 124,000 hours over a 40-year working life and, by 1981, it was 69,000. There it remained for a decade, but in the early nineties it began to increase again. On average full-time British workers now put in 80,224 hours over their working life, and that figure rises to 92,000 for those on a 50-hour week, which is common among the self- employed, the skilled, and professional and managerial workers. Many are working the kind of hours that would have been familiar to factory workers in the middle of the 19th century. The only difference is that now it's the bosses who are more likely to be putting in the hours than those on the shop floor. Britain has followed a US model of all work, no play, in contrast to continental Europe. Full-time workers in Britain now work the longest hours in Europe an average of 43.6 hours per week compared with an EU average of 40.3. Even more marked is the difference in holidays between Britain and continental Europe; the UK has, on average, 28 days a year, well behind France with 47, Italy with 44 and Germany with 41. Add the difference in weekly hours and holidays and it amounts to the British working almost eight weeks a year more than their European counterparts. -

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

高校1年論理表現のbe clear grammar bookの lesson10が全く分かりません。よければ教えて欲しいです🙏後、これ以降のページの答えも教えて欲しいです🙏

EXERCISES 不定詞① (名詞用法) 日本語に合うように,( (1) その試合に勝つことはほぼ不可能だろう。 ) ( (2) ケンの夢はアメリカで事業を始めることだ。 Ken's dream is (444) (7 (3) 適した仕事を見つけることが重要だ。 It is important ( )( 2 下の )に適語を入れなさい。 ) the match will be almost impossible. (4) インドで大学に入るのは難しいですか。 Is ( ) difficult ( (1) Mami promised ) ( (5) 彼は夜ひとりで外出するのは危険だとわかった。 He found ( ) dangerous (2) I want ( (3) We're planning ( (4) It is expensive ( (5) It was necessary ( (6) It's not easy ( ) a business in the U.S. ) out at night alone. ]内から動詞を1回ずつ選び、 適切な形にして, 英文を完成させなさい。 ) care of the cat. ) a suitable occupation. ) enter college in India? ) ( ) ( ) to that school. ) a welcome party. ) in Hong Kong. ) the homework on time. ) a company. ) ( [finish / live/ hold/go/take / run] 3 与えられた状況に合うように ( )内の語句を並べかえ, 全文を書きなさい。 (1) 状況 駅から徒歩3分のところに引っ越したユキ。 つくづく思うのは...。 It is (live / convenient / the station / to / near). (2) 状況 彼は夜型の生活から朝型に変えようとしたが・・・。 ( it / hard / was / change / to) his daily schedule. (3) 状況 卒業後の進路を聞かれて, あなたはこう言いました。 I (to/to/go/ decided / Taiwan) to study after graduation. (4)状況 レイカはプロのピアノ奏者になるために、本格的に学びたいと思っています。 Reika's (is / music / wish / study / to) in Germany. (1) 私の~(人)は将来、・・・することを希望している。 [hope ] My AB 41 AB []内の語を参考にして~・・・に自由に語句を入れ, オリジナルの英文をつくりなさい。 (2) 私の夢・目標)は…..することである。 [ is ] My A B in the future.

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0
English Senior High

チャレンジ(6)について質問です。  そのDVDを見終わったら の部分を when you finished watching it と、しては駄目なのでしょうか。 なぜここで現在完了形が使われるのでしょうか

STEP 2 次の日本文に合うように、( )に適語を入れなきい。 father comes home. (②)次のドイツを訪れれば、彼女はそこへ5回行ったことになるだろう。 She ( been there five times Lyrice visits Germany next spring. (3) 私は次の6月で日本に住んで5年になる。 years next June. 終えるまで待ってください。 Please wait untill ( ) to bed by the time my Q2 次の日本文に合うように、 in Japan for five (1) 明日までには雨はやむだろう。 (stopped/it/by tomorrowroom_/wili ). (2) もう1冊本を読めば、私は今10のことになる。 I ( this month/ will/if/have read/1/ten books) read another book. (3) 私の祖母が亡くなって、来年で16年になる。 My grandmother ( dead/for/been/have/16 years/will) next year. Challenge 次の日本語を英語に直しなさい。 (1) あなたは今までに流れ星を見たことがありますか。 (shooting stari. (2) ケビン(Kevin)は日本にどのくらい住んでいますか。 (3) サキは今朝からずっとピアノの練習をしている。 (4) 私は彼から聞くまでにすでに試合の結果を知っていた。 彼らは明日の今ごろはパリ(Paris)に到着しているでしょう。 (6) そのDVDを見終わったら、私に貸してください。

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

チャレンジ(5)について質問です。 この文の答えは写真のようになっているのですが、 They will been arriving in Paris the time tomorrow. のように、未来進行形でかくのは駄目でしょうか。

STEP 2 次の日本文に合うように、( )に適語を入れなきい。 father comes home. (②)次のドイツを訪れれば、彼女はそこへ5回行ったことになるだろう。 She ( been there five times Lyrice visits Germany next spring. (3) 私は次の6月で日本に住んで5年になる。 years next June. 終えるまで待ってください。 Please wait untill ( ) to bed by the time my Q2 次の日本文に合うように、 in Japan for five (1) 明日までには雨はやむだろう。 (stopped/it/by tomorrowroom_/wili ). (2) もう1冊本を読めば、私は今10のことになる。 I ( this month/ will/if/have read/1/ten books) read another book. (3) 私の祖母が亡くなって、来年で16年になる。 My grandmother ( dead/for/been/have/16 years/will) next year. Challenge 次の日本語を英語に直しなさい。 (1) あなたは今までに流れ星を見たことがありますか。 (shooting stari. (2) ケビン(Kevin)は日本にどのくらい住んでいますか。 (3) サキは今朝からずっとピアノの練習をしている。 (4) 私は彼から聞くまでにすでに試合の結果を知っていた。 彼らは明日の今ごろはパリ(Paris)に到着しているでしょう。 (6) そのDVDを見終わったら、私に貸してください。

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0
English Senior High

並べ替えの問題がわかりません🥲教えてくださいお願いします🙇‍♀️

rmativ nt Each of us carries just over 20,000 genes that encode everything from the keratin in our hair down to the muscle fibers in our toes. It's no great (1) (own / came / where / from / our / mystery / genes): our parents bequeathed them to us. And our parents, in turn, got their s genes from their parents. But where along that genealogical line did each of those 20,000 protein-coding genes get its start? That question has hung over the science of genetics (2) (ago / dawn / century / since / a / ever / its). "It's a basic question of life: how evolution generates 1 novelty," said Diethard Tautz of the Max Planck Institute for 10 Evolutionary Biology in Plön, Germany. New studies are now bringing the answer into focus. Some of our genes are immensely old, perhaps (3) (to / way / back / dating / all the / the) earliest chapters of life on earth. But a surprising number of genes emerged more recently. many in just the past few million years. The youngest evolved after our 15 own species broke off from our cousins, the apes. Scientists (4) (being / finding / into / are / genes / come / new) at an unexpectedly fast clip. And once they evolve, they can quickly take on essential functions. Investigating how new genes (5) (understand / help / become / scientists / important / may / so) the role they may play in diseases like cancer. [1] Read the passage and rearrange the seven words in (1) - (5) in the correct order. Then choose from 1-4 the option that contains the third and fifth words. (1) 13rd: our (2) (3) (4) (5) 5th: genes 3rd: ago 5th: since 3rd: back 5th: the 2 3rd: where 5th: came 2 3rd: its 5th: ever 23rd: the 5th: back 2 3rd: genes 5th: into 1 3rd: genes 5th: being 1 3rd: may 5th: scientists 3 3rd: scientists 5th: understand 3 3rd: genes 5th: from 3 3rd: its 5th: a 3 3rd: way 5th: back 3 3rd: finding 5th: genes 23rd: important 5th: help 43rd: help 3rd: own 5th: came 3rd: came 5th: dawn 43rd: the 5th: the 4 3rd: new 5th: come 5th: understand may may understand thep (早稲田大) wystery. ne TOL Recome Sc

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0
English Senior High

赤丸をつけたところが分かりません。ちなみに、【】は副詞句・副詞節、()は形容詞句・形容詞節、〈〉は名詞句・名詞節です。 1つ目の赤マルは、なぜthat以下が副詞節なのか(自分は名詞節だと思った) 2つ目はの赤マルは、何のofか

[At the turn of the twentieth century, a remarkable horse (named Hans) was paraded [through Germany] [by his owner Wilhelm von S M Osten, a horse trainer and high-school mathematics teacher. Not only could "Clever Hans" understand complex questions (put to him 同格のカンマ 「すなわち」 V S in plain German) 構文図解 M M O 過去分詞の名詞修 [If Tuesday falls on the eighth of the month M - but he could answer them by 0 M M what date is the following Friday?" not only A but (also) B S C S tapping out the correct number] [with his hoof]. [Using this simple V M with 「~を使って」 分詞構文「~して」 M response], it appeared [that Hans could add, subtract, multiply, and S V M add, subtract, multiply, divide divide, tell the time, understand the calendar, and both read and add ~ divide, tell the time, understand the calendar, both words spell words]. Suspicious, the German board (of education) appointed S M M V Being 省略の分詞構文 a commission, (including circus trainers, veterinarians, teachers, and 0 「~を含んだ」 M circus trainers, veterinarians, teachers, psychologists psychologists), to investigate the situation. Surprisingly, they to do C M S concluded [in 1904] <that no trick was involved>. This did not satisfy V V M S O 名詞節のthat the board, and the case was passed [to psychologist Oskar Pfungst) O S V M [for experimental investigation]. [Braving both the horse's and M 名詞節のthat observer of human behavior >. M owner's notoriously bad tempers], Pfungst finally was able to 分詞構文 「~して」 S M V demonstrate <that Hans was no mathematician, but rather a fine not[no] A but (rather) B[ATTB 20 t を使っ 教育

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0
English Senior High

考えても分かりません。解答お願いします

20 Unit 1 - History - Gutenberg is famous for inventing printing, but he didn't really invent it. He invented a better way of printing. [2] For hundreds of years people used blocks of wood* to print. They used a knife to cut words backward in the block of wood. Then they covered the block with ink and pressed it onto paper. When they pulled the paper from the inky blocks, the words appeared on the 金属 5 paper in the right direction. In Korea and China, people printed with metal type* instead of 右向き wood. (2)Either way, printing was difficult and very slow. It took several years to make one copy of a book. [3] Books were very expensive and rare. Only ( 3a ) people could buy them, and ( 3b ) 10 people could not read. But, as ( 3c -) people learned to read, books became more popular. So people wanted to find a quicker, better and less expensive way to print books. One of these people was Johannes Gutenberg. opsugas.l Y tinU 9003 iinil 4 Gutenberg was born in Mainz, Germany, around 1400. He was good at working with metal, but probably had no idea how people printed in China. His idea was to make a piece Clarey operan 15 of metal type for each letter of the alphabet and use the letters (4)over and over. (5)He could put the type together to make words and arrange words to make pages. With ink on the type, he could press paper on them to print a page. A "printing press" machine could make hundreds of copies of a single page quickly. After that page, he could rearrange the same letters to make other words and print other pages. LISSH Si nou 5 It took Gutenberg a long time to make the type for each letter of the alphabet. When he finished the type, he didn't have enough money to make the printing press. He borrowed money from a man named Johann Fust. After many years, Gutenberg's printing press was Legione ready. Gutenberg printed his first book, the Bible, around 1455. 6 There are only twenty-one complete copies of the original Bible. They are some of the 25 most expensive books in the world. In 1987, part of a Gutenberg Bible sold for $5.3 million. 7 Today people remember Johannes Gutenberg. The city of Mainz has a statue of him and a museum. His original printing press is in the museum. (6)They print several pages a day to show that it is in good condition. earoviaU 012mu 394 words/#IN block of wood: type: vrigsypola 01 sind 7 an Oupside down & 下線部 (6) を日本 7. 本文の内容に合わ Many people & Gutenberg g Gutenberg Olt was a long Though Gu cost a lot of Hannes Rotest

Waiting for Answers Answers: 0