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English Senior High

関西学院大学の英語の問題です。 定期テストの初見問題で出た問題なのですがBの(2)の線で引いた問題(空欄補充・画像1枚目の13行目の真ん中辺りにあるgeneration (2) generationの問題です。)の答えがなぜ(エ)afterなのかが分かりません。 どなたか教... Read More

次の英文を読み、 下記の設問 (A~D) に答えなさい。 In the last few decades, people all over the world have been told that humankind is on the path to equality, and that globalization and new technologies will help us get there sooner) In reality, the twenty- first century might create the most unequal societies in history. Though globalization and the Internet bridge the gap between countries, they threaten to enlarge the gap between classes, and just as humankind seems about to achieve global unification, the species itself might divide into different biological types. Inequality goes back to the Stone Age. Thirty thousand years ago, hunter-gatherer tribes buried some members in grand graves filled with thousands of ivory beads, bracelets, jewels and art objects, while other members had to (7)settle for a mere hole in the ground. ( 1), ancient hunter-gatherer tribes were still more egalitarian* than any succeeding human society, because they had very little property. Property is a condition for long-term inequality. Following the Agricultural Revolution, property multiplied, and with it inequality. As humans gained ownership of land, animals, plants and tools, hierarchical** societies emerged, in which small elites monopolized wealth and power for generation (2) generation. Hierarchy, then, came to be recognized not just as the model, but also as the ideal. How can there be order without a clear hierarchy between elites and ordinary people, between men and women, or between parents and children? Authorities all over the world patiently explained that just as in the human body not all parts are equal, so also in human society equality will bring nothing (3) disorder. In the late modern era, however, equality became an ideal in almost all human societies. It was mainly due to the Industrial Revolution, which made the masses more important than ever before. Industrial economies relied on masses of common workers, (4) industrial armies relied on masses of common soldiers. Governments invested heavily in the health, education and welfare of the masses, because they needed millions of healthy workers to operate the production lines and millions of loyal soldiers to fight in the wars. with ti own no (3) of sup horizo partic again A. Consequently, the history of the twentieth century revolved around the ( 5 ) of inequality between classes, races and genders. Though the world of the year 2000 still had its share of hierarchies, it was かなり nevertheless a much more equal place than the world of 1900. In the first years of the twenty-first century people expected that the egalitarian process would continue and even speed up. In particular, they hoped that globalization would spread economic growth throughout the world, and that as a result people in India and Egypt would come to enjoy the same opportunities and privileges as people in Finland and Canada. An entire generation grew up on this hope. Now it seems that this hope might not be fulfilled. Globalization has certainly profited large portions of humanity, but there are signs of growing inequality both between and within societies. Some groups increasingly monopolize the fruits of globalization, while billions are left behind. Already today, the richest hundred people together own more than the poorest four billion. This could get (6) worse. The rise of Al (Artificial Intelligence) might eliminate the economic value and political power of most humans. At the same time, improvements in biotechnology might make it possible to translate economic inequality into biological inequality. Soon the super rich might be able to buy life itself. If new treatments for extending life and for upgrading physical and intellectual abilities prove to be expensive, a huge biological gap might open up between the rich and the poor. By 2100, the rich might be more talented, more creative and more intelligent than the less advantaged. Once a real gap in ability opens between the rich and the poor, it will become almost impossible to close it. If the rich use their superior abilities to enrich themselves further, and if more money can buy them more efficient bodies and brains, B B V

Resolved Answers: 1
English Junior High

問4の解説を簡単にでいいので教えていただきたいです🙇🏻‍♀️

American movie about them. It's about the meeting between a white man and Native Americans in the 1860s. My father 1likes this movie very much and has a DVD of ody a(Hiroshi gives a speech_about indigenous people in the U.S.〉 The indigenous people of the US. are called "*Native Americans." I know a famous and I watched it with him two or three times. It's a long movie, but it Shows ome important things about the history of the U.S. and has a very interesting story. B There are different kinds of Native Americans. Each kind is called a "*tribe." T movie is about the *Sioux. The Sioux were a *nomadic tribe. They traveled from place to place, so their home [ to / to / to / easy / needed /place / move / another / be ]. That SO kind of home is called a “*tipi." Tipis are made with long *wooden poles and animal *skins. They look like *upside-down ice cream cones. In the story of the movie, the white man and a Sioux woman get a tipi to live in together, and it looks really cool! One of my future dreams is to sleep in a real tipi! be cay (注) Native American…… ·ネイティブアメリカン tribe……部族,民族 Sioux……スー族 nomadic 遊牧の tipi………ティピー (tepee, teepee とも書く) wooden pole………木の棒 (pole は 「柱, 棒」) ひふ skin 皮, 皮膚 upside-down ice cream cone…… 逆さにしたアイスクリームのコーン 問 本文の流れから, にあてはまる内容を考え,次の語句を B すべて使って, 2文以上の英語で書きなさい。なお,語句を使う順番や回数は問いません。 (4点) want If toan the mov le, please ash I/ borou The ovD trom you tO 「 please / my father / if / the DVD 】 Path J内のすべての語を, 正しい順序に並べかえて書きなさい。 (3点) All richte 7

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

1、3、5は解けたのですがそれ以外が訳分からないので、教えてくれると嬉しいです!

取り組み日 再点 月 目標時間 STEP3 読解問題にアプローチ (2年7月改) 20分 The Latin word infans, from which “infant" comes, means "a person who is unable to speak" But all mothers know that communication begins long before actual speech. Babies “talk" to parents with their eyes, their expressions and their whole bodies, and parents respond to them in the same language. Human beings are different from other animals in our highly developed use of language and understanding. Ababy can hear conversations even while she is in her mother's womb. And then from the minute she is born she begins to feel the rhythms of her native language and gradually learns to recognize meaning. In South Africa, *the Bantu tribe celebrates the first time a child answers to her name witha special dinner. The best way to encourage your baby's language is to begin a two*way conversation. Mothers all over the world talk to their babies in a special language, known as "(ア)motherese" or “baby talk". Without learning how, we tend to use the simplest words, changing our grammar to make sentences shorter. Mothers talk of themselves in the third person, repeat things, and speak to their infants in a sing-song pitch. By looking at our babies while we are talking to them, we also teach them the facial expressions that come with speech. Babies start babbling from around three months, repeating easy sounds like “da", “ta", "ma", “ba" and “pa”. All around the world these first basic sounds are the roots of common names for other family members, most importantly “mother" and “father". For example, baba means “mother” among *the Gusii tribe of Kenya, while baban is “father" for *the Sambarivo people of Madagascar. The English word “daddy" is tata in Greek, tatasin Sanskrit and papa in French. Considering the amount of time she spends with her baby in the first months, a mother might expect her baby to say her name first. But this doesn't usually happen. Studies have shown that (イ)babies try to name their fathers before their mothers. Perhaps mothers want to hear their baby's first word as “daddy", in order to make a father feel more important and to add more meaning to his fatherhood. Or perhaps father, a familiar but often a little more distant person, is considered worth saying first. In Europe, the origins of the everyday words for “mother" are closely related to breastfeeding. Mom, Mam, Mummy - all these words come fronm the ancient Greek mamman, which means 17

Resolved Answers: 1
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