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English Senior High

4の解き方がわかりません。 例えば(a)で、続く文であくびを謝っていることも全て把握した上で、挨拶なのでpolitelyかと考えたのですが、なぜ誤りなのか教えていただきたいです。

13 Lucy is a British schoolgirl who lives in Oxford. She is talking to her father, Fred, in the kitchen of their home. Read the conversation below and answer the following questions. Lucy: (a) Good morning, Dad. Oh, sorry for yawning. What are you doing with that microwave oven? It looks heavy. Do you need a hand with moving it? Fred: I think I'll be OK, Lucy. I'm just going to put it in the car and take it to the city dump. Lucy: Couldn't you send it away to be repaired? Fred: It's ten years old and well out of warranty now, so I very much doubt that the manufacturer would do it. They probably don't even carry the spare parts anymore. Lucy: That's a shame. Oh, I know what! Why not take it to the Repair Café near my school? Fred: What's that? I've never heard of it. Lucy: It's brilliant! We visited it as part of our environmental science course recently. It's a meeting place where people can get together to mend broken items cooperatively. And have a chat and a cup of coffee! Fred: I'm all ears. Tell me more. Lucy: Well, the first Repair Café was started by a Dutch woman called Martine Postma in Amsterdam in 2009. (1) 彼女は,使い捨て文化で環境が破壊されて, ゴミの量が地球規模で増えることを心配してたん . She wanted to find a local solution to this global problem. Fred: That's what they call "thinking globally, acting locally," isn't it? Lucy: Exactly. She also wanted to address the decline in community spirit amongst urban dwellers and do something about people's loss of practical skills and ingenuity. Fred: And the idea (2) caught on? Lucy: Very much so. The concept has grown into a global movement. The one in Oxford started about four years ago. Fred: Impressive! What kind of things do they repair? Lucy: Oh, all sorts. Electrical appliances, clothes, furniture, crockery, bicycles, and even toys. Fred: How successful are they at repairing things? Lucy: Well, of course, they cannot guarantee to fix every item brought to them, but they have a fairly good success rate. One study found that on average 60 to 70 percent of items were repaired. The rate is higher for some items such as bicycles and clothes but lower for things like laptop computers. Fred: I can understand that. Just between you and me, I think some electronics manufacturers deliberately make products in such a way that you cannot disassemble them and repair them unless you have specialized tools and equipment. Lucy: Yes, and that's where Repair Cafés can help. But these cafés are not just about repairing things for people. They are places where we can meet others, share ideas, and be inspired. The volunteer repairers are very keen to involve the visitors in thinking about the repair and actually carrying out the repair themselves. They also encourage people to think about living together in more sustainable communities. Fred: I suppose you could say they are about repairing our minds, not just our things. Lucy: Quite so, although often the two are very closely related. Many people attach (3)sentimental value to old things that might, for example, be part of their family history. Fred: I see what you mean. It almost sounds too good to be true. (a)Is there a catch? For example, how much does it cost? Lucy: Advice and help from the repairers is free, but people who use the café are invited to make a donation. That money is used to cover the costs involved in running the café. If specific spare parts are needed, the repairers will advise you on how to obtain them. Fred: Well, that's marvelous! (e)Then I'll take this old microwave there. Are they open today? Lucy: Yes, and I'll come with you. I've got a pair of jeans that are badly in need of some attention. QUESTIONS 1. Translate the underlined part after (1) into English. 2. What does the underlined phrase after (2) mean? Select the most appropriate expression from the list below. (A) became popular (B) hit a dead end (C) occurred to you (D) played a significant role (E) worked in practice 3. The underlined phrase after (3) means the value of an object which is derived from personal or emotional association rather than its material worth. Give ONE object that has "sentimental value" for you and explain why it has such value. Your answer should be between 15 and 20 English words in length. (Indicate the number of words you have written at the end of your answer.)

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English Senior High

回答を教えてください

Lesson 8 Avatar Robots Section 1 ◎区切りごとに意味をとりながら、 音読しよう。 Thisat lawtChasmin 18108m que deboyen diw addon Bin en ni asijilideaib OriHime is a new type of robot. // The robot functions as an avatar/ for people in remote places. // If they use OriHime, / they can talk with express variou s various feelings/ other people / near the robot. // @Users can also by controlling the robot's head and hands hands freely. // amo abrito hitornicht people can control the robot wisio 5 OriHime is 23 centimeters tall / and has a camera, / a microphone, / Ⓒ and a speaker inside. // It can be controlled / with a computer / through the Internet. // Even physically disabled fo ton Luteen ei ami physically disabled people / can control the robot / esitlumtib redio eved odw 980dt 101 Luigled oal // with a special eye tracking system of ben msx 10 we r®Orihime was developed for people / who cannot be in a certain place / 11310M for various reasons. // It can be seen in classrooms, / business meetings,/ family events, and many other situations. //ed emiHiO,08IA 90вlq 単語・熟語を確認しよう 意味を辞書で調べて書き入れよう。 brewoyblandit as libnaid 9) microphone on avatar, gavollabw onthedy 名 [máikrǝfoun] yo, dice insa physically [fizikli] izikli ideoY 910ted tout bultwies asty drement TUS 視線入力装置 (眼や指先しか動かせな 11) eye tracking system To The caい人のための意思伝達装置)h others 12) tracking [trákin] the Nep 13) system [sístəm]_ebrow) MW 1) Orihime red on blu オリヒメ (分身ロボットの名前) prt 2) avatar [ævətà:r] 3) robot [róubat] 4) function [fánkfn] 5) remote [rimóut] 6) control [kəntróul] way 教科書 pp. 116~117 7) freely [frí:li] 8) centimeter Yoshi [séntəmì:tər]ght, コラム アバターロボットへの期待 BI 20 10) D} -CAJEST^H created Orihime, he - Orifime could help előfedulo more people." So he cally has the same functions as SAMIHO AMIERU Golevab og mun beldega AnaitanX9.5** 1 う警備ロボットなど、 多様なアバターロボットが開発され、 実用化が進んでいます。 19 α-amiHiTO 遠隔地に暮らす親戚が子育てに参加できる育児ロボット、 工場や倉庫の見回り・ トで行

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English Senior High

英語 高校生 長文問題 自分で解きましたが自信がありません。 お直しお願いしますm(_ _)m

25 20 1 5 15 The two men quit their jobs and decided to create a trash bin for the ocean, which they called a "seabin." They made the first model of the seabin and raised money to start the Seabin Project. The project's aim was to distribute a lot of seabins around the world. The seabins were designed to automatically collect trash 6972 自動で 10 from the surface of the ocean by using a bump powered by electricity. By へを源動力と した 電気 collecting trash near marinas and harbors, they hoped to stop the trash from Wastebasket in the Sea The increasing amount of trash in the ocean is a big global issue nowadays. It is 海のゴミの difficult to collect plastic bottles, plastic bags, cans and oil drifting on the waves. It would take a lot of time and effort. However, in Australia, two surfers named Pete Ceglinski and Andrew Turton never gave up hope. They had always loved the 昔からすきだった。 ocean and wanted to keep it clean. flowing further into the ocean. 流れる さらに良く インストール Re97-H1L F Seabins are very simple to use. A seabin is installed several centimeters below the surface of the water. When the pump is turned on, water flows into the seabin with trash on the surface. Then the water passes through a catch bag inside the 通り抜ける bin. The water is pumped back into the sea, leaving the trash inside the catch bag. Seabins are able to collect plastic that is as small as two millimeters. The catch bag can hold up to 20 kilograms. The amount of trash collected varies depending on 2MKI chŢint gk 6.10 the weather, but the estimated average amount per day is about 1.5 kilograms. THEAU 平均 A pad to absorb oil, detergent and microfibers can also be attached to the M とりつけてる seabin. Improvements like this continue to be made. The project team is also trying to educate people. For example, the team is teaching children what they can do to reduce the amount of trash in the ocean so that they can influence other members of their family and their friends. The goal of the Seabin Project is to make the ocean clean so that these seabins will no longer be needed. Ceglinski and Turton hope to pass on a clean ocean to future generations.

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

問題を解いたのですが答えが分かりません😭教えてください🙏

テーマ 資源・エネルギー 10 文法項目 動名詞(いろいろな形/動名詞と不定詞) UNIT 6 Reading Track 29-30 HUNDR パンダのふんの研究が、いつの日か環境問題の解決に寄与するかもしれません。 In June, 2016, a baby *giant panda, Tian Bao, was born at a zoo in Belgium. It became big news because the birth of a baby panda is an *extremely Actually, that of Tian Bao was only the sixth in Europe in the last 20 years. While its population is slowly increasing, the giant panda remains one of the rarest animals 5 in the world. Therefore, scientists have been doing research on how pandas have babies. rare event. So, you may think the scientists working at the Belgium zoo *accomplished the goal of their research. But they have another goal; apart from having done that research, they've been studying panda *poo. Why are they doing that? G Som pluoda Dol Tian Bao's mother Hao Hao and its father Xing Hui live in the same zoo as their baby does. While they enjoy sitting in the sun and eating bamboo, iedario ew dinga 2.5T (s) the scientist team collects their poo. By studying the poo, the team is aiming to understand how pandas can digest bamboo. Note 30 In fact, bamboo is receiving a lot of attention in biofuel research these days. 15 It's among the fastest-growing plants on earth, and yet needs the least care. So the in hewa plant can become a good source of *renewable energy. But because bamboo is very tough and hard to *degrade, today's method for making a biofuel from bamboo costs a lot. *Technically, pandas are meat-eating animals, but over the years the food they eat 20 has changed to almost only bamboo. The scientists are trying to find the *microbes that help a panda digest about 10kg of bamboo a day. By using these microbes, they will be able to discover an easy and cheap method for ( 4 ). It may take time, but some day panda poo may help cars run. (296 words)

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English Senior High

時間を意識して解きたいのですが、目安時間が分からないです。偏差値60を近いうちの目標にしている者です。 これは400 word 神奈川大学の問題です。記述が4問、選択が2問という点も考慮して目安時間を教えて頂けると嬉しいです。お願いします。

400 words/ Unit 7-Language - 1 All over the world, there are hundreds of languages that will soon disappear, some of them spoken only by a single person. "Languages are now dying at a faster rate than ever before," said David Harrison, a professor of language studies. Harrison has traveled the world to interview the last speakers of languages that are in danger of disappearing. 5 2 Bolivia* has a far greater variety of languages than all the countries of Europe combined. but they are increasingly threatened by dominant languages such as Spanish. In Bolivia, Harrison met with people who have used certain plants as medicine since the time of the Inca Empire*. Besides a common local language, they also maintain a secret language to name thousands of plants used as medicines, some unknown to science. 10 3 (1) When a language is lost, centuries of human thinking about such things as animals and plants may be lost with it. Eighty percent of existing species have not yet been discovered by science. However, (2) this does not mean that they are unknown to humans, because the people who live close to them know those species (3)intimately. They often have more detailed ways of classifying them than science does. 15 4 In Micronesia*, there are a handful of people who can sail across thousands of kilometers of ocean without any modern instruments of navigation. Their languages have a special set of terms for these skills. If their languages are lost, (4)their navigational skills will be lost, too. 5 Children are often the ones who decide to abandon a native tongue. "(5)It's actually the children, not the parents, who have the power to make the decision that will affect the 20 community and the future of their language," Harrison said. He was encouraged by an experience he had in Australia, when he watched a woman in her eighties teaching her language to schoolchildren. She was one of only three speakers of an aboriginal* language. The lesson was about plants which are used as medicine in aboriginal culture. 6 "The children had chosen to learn the language - no one forced them. When we 25 asked why they were learning it, they said, 'This is a dying language. We need to learn it.' The woman waved the plants in front of the children and said something in her language about them, which they repeated. It was an amazing thing to watch her communicate that knowledge to the children. That inspired us greatly." quor 左の英文を読み、下の各問いに答えなさい。 ごとの SPONS 1. 下線部 (1) を日本語に直しなさい。 ただし, it が何を指すのかわかるようにすること。 下線部 (3) の意味として最も適切なものを選びなさい。 [3. with a deep knowledge 3 in one's private life 2. 下線部 (2) を日本語に直しなさい。 ただし, this が何を指すのかわかるようにすること。 5. 下線部 (5) を日本語に直しなさい。 3050 in a friendly manner 4 in secret 4. 下線部 (4) はどのような技術か, 日本語で説明しなさい。 2x030 D 6. 本文の内容に合うものを2つ選びなさい。 Harrison has traveled even in dangerous places to interview the last speakers of disappearing languages. The total number of languages in Bolivia alone is larger than that of all the languages used in Europe. From a scientific point of view, the medical plants used in Bolivia have little value. An old woman in Australia was teaching her language to children, but they did not want to learn it. The old woman was teaching not only her language, but also her knowledge about medical plants in her aboriginal culture. istory Culture anguage ociety Health Science Nature

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