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英語 高校生

画像の問題を教えてください‼︎🙇🏻‍♂️

1 以下の英文を読んで,次の問いに答えなさい。 red, the color that teachers long have used to grade papers. Parents objected po。 5 writing, they asserted, was stressful. So the principal put red on the blacklist. Red has become so negative that some principals and teachers will not touch (1) Joseph Floriska*, principal of Stevens Elementary in Pittsburgh, has teachers grade with more pleasant-feeling tones* so that their instructional messages do not seem as critical or insulting. “There's been a broad shift in grading. It's taken 10 a turn from Here's what ( it. (2a) )' to Here's what( (2b))" Floriska said. “We're still pointing out mistakes, but the method in which it's delivered is more positive." da T imuibom サっd e adT Purple has emerged as a new color of choice for many educators. That is a Sound approach, said Nancy Eiseman, a color specialist on the ties between colors 15 and communication. Purple may be rising in popularity, Eiseman said, because teachers know it is a mix of blue and red. "You still have the element of danger the red - but it's kind of subtle, hidden. directed at students." It is in the color, rather than being But reading and writing specialist Janet Jones helps teachers take (s) a different 20 approach. The students at Berry Elementary School in Waldorf, Maryland, edit* each other's papers, so that, by the time teachers add their markings, the colors they use aren't that important. "I don't think changing to purple or green will make a huge difference if the teaching doesn't go along with it," Jones said. “If you avoid the color red, the students might not be as frightened, but they also might not become better writers." 記事使用許諾: AP Images 主)grade 「~を採点する」 edit「(~に)手を入れる,(~を)修正する」 Joseph Floriska 「ジョセフ·フロリスカ (人名)」 tone「色調」

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英語 高校生

この問題が分かりません教えてください

Lesson 19 , od ne mi m om a get their support. 5 He himself was through far-reaching reforms. He abolished slavery, introduced a *bureaucracv and 298628 ig piaum. ofh al nao o litmo of the 2010s, donated about 90% of his salary to charities which helped poor people. The he was often described as the world's *humblest head of state. Not all leaders are like them. Unfortunately, some leaders only care about their statis 15 When their popularity declines, they often try to shift the criticism onto others so as to maintain their power. The class system during the Edo period aimed at dividing people into classes and giving them contentment by encouraging them to look down on the lower classes. Hitler managed to win people's support by setting *Jews up as their enemies. It is quite difficult to satisfy everybody and unite a nation. Nevertheless, good leaders smo ons Tanolaom nd listen to people's voices, including critical ones, to make better policies for the welfare of 20 naw asng-1agie all the people from the perspective of national interests. So when you are qualified to vote, collect as much information as possible about candidates and political parties. It will help Coo b you judge whether they are willing to create a better society or are just trying to ake 25 advantage of their status for their own benefits. Your single vote can make a big differèIto to our future. oiauM 9oitasrf o eysW ) 363 words

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英語 高校生

この英文の()に入る言葉が全然分かりません。 分かるところだけでも大丈夫なので説明してほしいです!

|1| The conversation begins with a British professor talking to a Japanese professor about a lesson he had conducted with his Japanese students. He explains how one of his students ( ① ) him by referring to one of the colors of traffic lights as blue 及する 指角する ( 2 ) of green. The Japanese professor points out that in the Japanese language some objects that are usually thought of as green in many languages are ((3 ) using a Japanese word for blue. The British professor then describes similar ( ④ ) in other languages and cultures, such as that of the Berinmo in Papua New Guinea. They also discuss how Japanese and other languages also have ( ⑤ ) words for light blue and blue. 特称もべろ 2| This leads to a discussion about whether Japanese people are( ⑥ ) different things when they look at objects, or whether they are just ( ⑦ ) different terms to describe them. The British professor then brings up a study that investigated how bilingual speakers of Greek and English ( ③ ) different shades of blue. He notes that the conclusion of the study was that those people who spent more time in the UK were ( 9 ) likely to describe the shades of light blue and blue as very different from each other. 3 The Japanese professor continues the conversation by bringing up a second study that further examines the idea that language can( 10 ) the way we think. This study involved Japanese and English speakers and found that the Japanese speakers judged shades of light blue and blue to be further apart. Both professors conclude the discussion by noting the ( ① ) in interpreting the results of these studies, with the Japanese professor observing that language could be influencing thought or that other ( 2 ) factors could be at work. (D) separate (B) cultural (F) effect (A) assessed (C) characteristics (G) society (H) in contrast (E) less (K) disagreeing (O) surprised (S) designed (W) seeing (L) more (1) using (J) instead (N) mistakes (P) dificulty (M) felt (T) critical (X) increasing (Q) need (R) affect (U) reinforce (V) referred )6(W) へ の( )の( C ) ⑤ ( の( 9

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