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英語 高校生

教えてください

[3] 次の英文を読み, 各問いに答えなさい。 [思・判・表] (教科書 P.106~107 参照) (1) Good morning, everyone. Today I am going to tell you about orienteering. Do you know orienteering? Maybe some of you have experienced it. You might think it's like a game in the woods, where you use a map and compass to find some flags. Well, orienteering is also a competitive sport. It started in Sweden, and is most popular in Scandinavia. (2) (3) In an orienteering event, ( ① )competes alone, wearing a running suit that protects them from the weather and the bush. At the starting line, runners start at least one minute apart. When you are told to go, you are given the map for the first time. You then use your compass and the map to find a series of points in the forest. At experienced levels, the points are often far from roads. At each point, there is an orange and white box flag. There, you punch your card. You may not go to points in the wrong order. After all of the runners have passed the finish line, the person with the fastest time in each category of sex and age range is the winner. I tried orienteering once in elementary school, but I'd like to try it someday in a competitive event. Thank you for listening. (1)( ① )にふさわしい主語を選択肢から選び, 記号で答えなさい。 ア. all people イ. each person ウ. all players (2) the loser(敗者)と反対の意味を表す語句を第二段落から探し出し, 解答欄に書きなさい。 (3) 説明されている競技において、以下のア~エを進行順に並べ替えて, 3番目にくるものを記号で答えなさい。 ア. 走者達はコンパスと地図を用いて, 森の中の一連のチェックポイントをさがす。 イ. 全走者が走り終えた後, それぞれの性別や年齢層でいちばん時間が速かった人が勝者となる。 ウ. それぞれのチェックポイントには, オレンジと白の旗 (box flag)があり、 そこで自分のカードにパンチで穴をあける。 エ. 走者達はスタートしていいと言われたとき、 初めて地図が渡される。

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

答え合ってますか、、?🥲🥲

③ the best person 彼は決して内気ではない 11. He is ( not ① none (2) anything does, neither 10. I was surprised that John offered help to Mary. He was ( Meload (***) ) I expected to do such a thing, as they usually don't get along with each other. <the last 名詞 関係詞> ① the first person Part② the last person 最も~しそうにない名詞 ④ the right person 〈文教大〉 ) but shy. anything but A 決してAではない (3 nor toblue a ④ something 12. Unfortunately, the result of their experiments turned out to be ( would call a great success. in far from Af <宮崎大 > ) being what you from A Aからはほどとおい ① almost next to ② despite (3) far from ④ nothing but 〈金沢医科大〉 定表現 ① already ② known to 13. I have ( ) meet a person as dedicated to her job as Maria 彼女はこれらの記録がどのくらい重要なのかほとんど理解していな 14. Little( )how important these documents are 3 never ④ yet to have yet to do まだ~してない 〈立教大 > lit 否定の意味の副詞句が文頭に 1 she realizes of berl blu ② realizes she □ 17. ( ) he got on the bus did John realize that he had left his wallet at home. Not till ④ As 否定の意味の〈日本大) 1 When ② Once 副詞節が頭にくると うしろは倒置になる 85 15. ( ③ she does realize ) attended many international issues during these meetings, too. ① Not only he has 3 He only has 5 conferences, but he has expressed his views on many Not only A but BAだけでなくBもまた AとBどちらにも文がはいるときAに入る文だけ倒置 ② Not only has he ④ He used to only 〈北里大〉 )a reward. Only + 副詞節が文頭にくると ③ could you get 4 you get 16. Only when you pass the examination ( ①can you get ② you can get tamaldon 〈 松山大 > るとうしろは倒置形になる ④ does she realize <京都精華大〉 否定・倒置・省略 2

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

赤い下線のところがどういう構造になっているか分からないです、教えてくださいm(_ _)m

moving from " (1) 点) There are historians and others who would like to make a neat division between "historical facts" and "values." The trouble is that values even enter into deciding what count as facts-there is a big leap involved in 'raw data" to a judgement of fact. More important, one finds that the more complex and multi-levelled the history is, and the more important the issues it raises for today, the less it is possible to sustain a fact-value division. But this by no means implies that there has simply to be a conflict of prejudices and biases, as the data are manipulated to suit one worldview or another. What it does mean is that the self of the historian is an important factor. The historian is shaped by experiences, contexts, norms, values, and beliefs. When dealing with history, especially the sort of history that is of most significance in philosophy, that shaping is bound to be relevant. As far as possible it needs to be articulated and open to discussion. The best historians are well aware of this. They are alert to many dimensions of bias and to the endless (and therefore endlessly discussable) significance of their own horizons and presuppositions. A great deal can of course be learned from those who do not share our presuppositions. Our capacity to make wise, well-supported judgements in matters of historical fact and significance can only be formed over years of discussion with others, many of whom have very different horizons from our own. It is possible to I have a 12-year-old chess champion or mathematical or musical genius, but it is unimaginable that the world's greatest expert on Socrates could be that age. The difficulty is not just one of the time to assimilate information; it is (2)

解決済み 回答数: 1