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English Senior High

2枚目の画像の赤線部分の 「A man that had his life enter the twists and turns that occur in all our lives, but in his case, the road stopped much too ... Read More

次の英文を読んで, a~ f の 2 ]内の語(句) を正しく並べ替え, 本文中の 【 (1) 】 ~ 【(6) 】の適切な場所に入れなさい。 (a,bなどの記号は書かず,並べ替えた英文を記入するこ と) My first real job. Thirteen years since high school in training, in hospitals, in books. All of a sudden at 8 a.m. tomorrow morning I would suddenly become Dr. Dhillon. Time to heal and fix. I began my first real posting as a rural physician in a small town in rural Saskatchewan. A beautiful little hospital, staff happy to see a young doctor in town, and the welcoming red and green of the local Co-op sign. The day began innocuously enough: morning rounds at the hospital, learning about all the patients who had been handed over to my care for the next two weeks; trying to decipher other physicians' illegible writing and promising to never let mine get that bad, and failing quickly at that. C "Hello, good morning. My name is Dr. Dhillon and 【 (1) little while until your doctor is back." With a vague idea of what was actually happening inside each patient's body, and not a clue what was happening in their minds, I popped in from room to room as 【 (2) 】 of things to check and recheck after the morning ward round was done.//Thankfully, the nurses were there to handle any miscues and give me a vital, two-to-three-sentence summary of the patient and any concerns before entering into their realm with a quick knock on a half-opened door. When I got to the last patient I was to see that morning, I found his door was closed. It was at the back corner of the hospital. It was darker. "This is Gary, he's dying." The nurse's tone of voice lowered, naturally, to the level we use when discussing death, just in case death was nearby and would hear and come hither to hasten the process. "Metastatic, it was too late when he came in. Really sad story. He's still so young." She continued. I gently knocked, lighter, more gently 【 (3) 】 a gall-bladder attack whom I had just chatted to. "Hello Gary, how are you this morning?" is what I said. "Hello, who are you?" he asked. "My name is Paul and I'll be your doctor until your normal doctor comes back." I couldn't bear to say I was Dr. Dhillon. What was I going to doctor in his case? "I'm leaving on Tuesday. Next week. To be closer to home," he said. "That's great, so that's something to look forward to then." Inside, I wondered, Was that

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English Senior High

なぜcanでは無いのですか?お願いします

words 1 /skin/ sékfon/ /tifu:/ míərm/ ases 1 ger A be necessary for you to give up any in in the near future. research studies G-A 2 Today, an incredible number been carried out all over the world this field. Scientists a working very hard and competing with one another to come u with faster and safer ways to create tissues such as skin from 3 At this point, one of the leading scientists in this area is D the patient's own body cells. a medica Yamanaka Shinya of Kyoto University. He was first doctor who treated back injuries, broken limbs, damaged joints and such. One day, he saw a woman with a serious disease in her joints. He was so shocked when he saw her swollen scientist. He misshapen joints that he decided to become a went into a basic study in order to find good ways to treat those ords 2 mpí:t/ ses 2 ther rds 3 crí:t/ Səri/ fm/ ant/ on/ on/ s 3 ch iPS Cells 1 If you have badly burned or red your skin, the doct may have to take a section of g skin from your back a Thanks to a growing however, it may no long medi sew it onto the injured area. technology called tissue engineeri: A w Wor sed R 6 The i and injuri damaged were ot 5 doctor very s into i they we 7 Dr 10 tissue cells u meth day t in th 15 Tho patients suffering from serious diseases and injuries. 4 One way to create tissue is to use egg cells, which have the ability to grow into any tissue in the body such as hair or muscle. This method, however, has produced a lot of debate. Many think it is wrong to treat live eggs as objects and then “kill them, even though the purpose is to treat patients. In addition people fear that this method could lead to human cloning. 5 For years, Dr. Yamanaka and his research team worked hard to find a different way to create tissue. Then, in 2007. they finally succeeded in creating heart muscle tissue from skin cells taken from a person's face. They first added four kinds of genes to the skin cells to put them back into their initial state, a state similar to egg cells. Then they made those cells grow into heart muscle tissue. The four genes they found are now called "Yamanaka Factors," and the initialized cells that can grow into any of the 200 cell types are called iPS cells. ma 20 on 18 th r 25時

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

高3英語です! 答えがあっているかと、空欄の答えを教えていただきたいです! 1枚目の下の導入問題と2枚目も問題を お願いします、!

|42 Lesson 15 関係詞の研究 (1) 4 144 | 45 what A is 「現在のA」 His great curiosity about all sciences has made him what he is. あらゆる科学に対する彼の強い好奇心が、 現在の彼を作った。 現在 what A is 1 「現在のA(の姿 人柄)」 | 過去: what A was (what A used to be) which ... 43 what A is like 「Aがどのような物 (/人) か This book tells you what a black hole is like. この本を読めばブラックホールがどのようなものかわかります。 発展 what it is like to do 「~するとはどのようなことか」 Few people know what it is like to win the Nobel Physics Prize. (ノーベル物理学賞を受賞するとはどういうことなのかを知る人は少ない。) it の内容をto不定詞で後から示す構文。 「~, そしてそれは….」 章のテーマ: 科学 23213 「過去のA(の姿 人柄)」 【発展】 what we call ... 「いわゆる…..」 This is what we call DNA. これがいわゆるDNAです。 発展 what is + 比較級 「さらに ~なことには Mendel's theory was not understood, and what was worse, he died before he was proved to be right. (メンデルの理論は理解されず、さらに悪いことに、 彼の正しさが証明される前に亡くなってしまった。) ] 内の日本語を英語にしなさい。 構文80 p.114 唯一、特定のもの<カンマで切る> そしてそれは... Japanese scientists created the blue LED, which led to the Nobel Prize. 日本人科学者が青色発光ダイオードを開発し, それがノーベル賞につながった。 構文80p.118 1x = what is called など 構文80 p.116 1. what we call 45 私たちは富士山を見たのですが, [それは] 高さで有名です。 We saw Mt. Fuji, [ which 46 [そういうわけで] 私はこの本を母のプレゼントに選んだのです。 That is why 構文80 p.120 146 That is why TELU ZLOTH y it is re Blood contains iron. That is why it is red. 血液には鉄分が含まれる。 そういうわけで赤いのだ。 発展 That is how ~ 「そのようにして~」 Cells copy themselves. That's how they develop into complex organisms. 細胞は自己複製する。 そうやって複雑な生命体へと発達する。) when 「そしてその時・・・」 where 「そしてそこで...」 lubrobd am 160 W WODY TO By ladw moi gniabot 「そういうわけで~」 構文80 p.122 関係副詞の継続用法 【発展】 導入問題 上の例文を参考に [ 42 母が [現在の私] を作りました。 Mother has made me I what me is 190T 43 この本を読めば [その問題がどのようなものか] わかります。 This book tells you I what problem is like 44 これは [いわゆる] 健康食品です。 This is [ EXER A 1. 彼 Hi Hi 2. 現 In I hos DI 428 3. ]. It ] health food. ] famous for its height. F 4. 5 ] I chose this book for my mother's present.

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