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英語 高校生

H (9)の文です 実際の子供時代と私の子供時代はなにがちがうんですかね?そもそもこれ文構造がむずいんで解説してほしいです

(H) 出題内容 同義文選択 正解はア。 下線部(9)の文頭のItは,直前の最終段落第1文 (Looking back, I...) の my childhood を 指している。 could は 「・・・し得る」という意味合いの可能性を表す用法で,かつ could not have been の部分は仮定法になっている(この表現については,全文解説 <第1段落 > ③も参照)。 happier という比較級の比較対象 (than...) は 「筆者の実際の子ども時代」であ り、全体として「それ (私の子ども時代)は,実際にそうであった以上に幸せな時ではあ り得なかっただろう」という意味になる。 これは要するに「筆者の子ども時代は最高に幸 せだった」 ということなので,アが内容的に最も近い。 なお, アの more than は形容詞・ 副詞 名詞 動詞などの前に置かれ、「・・・以上であるとても・・・である」という意味を表す。 (例) Many people more than despised the unfair system. 「多くの人がその不当な制度をき わめて悪していた」 よってアは「私は自分の子ども時代がとても楽しかった」 という意 味になる。 ⋅ イは「私は子どものころからずっと幸福だ」という意味。 ウは「私の子ども時代は、よ り幸福ではなかったかもしれない」 という意味。 エは「私の子ども時代は決して満足のい くものではなかった」という意味 (far from... は 「... どころではない 決して・・・ではない」 という意味)。 いずれも上記の内容とは合わない。 最初にあるジャーナリストから 「あなたはきっと生まれた日に星くずを振りかけられたの “しょうね」と言われたとき、私はくすくす笑いが止まらなかった。 そんなばかげた言い回 それまでに聞いたことがなかったし くすくす笑いは、 照れたり不安になったり圧倒さ たりすると私がいつもしていることなのだ。 しかし彼女が立ち去った後、あれが私が恵ま ているという彼女なりの言い方だったとすれば、全く同感だと私は思った。 私は非常に この点で恵まれてきた。母と父と素敵な妹ローラが私の人生にいてくれたことに恵まれ、 ホールズの小さな町ニースで生まれたことに恵まれ、そしてとても多くの夢を私が叶えら とに恵まれてきたのだ。 a close-knit community and, however far its residents may travel to fulfil their various destinies, friends remain friends for life. Wherever I travel and put down roots in the future, it will always be my true home. Looking back, I wouldn't change a single thing about my childhood. not have been a happier time. (注) Neath ニース (ウェールズの都市) er she'd left, it, I thought I couldn't It could (9)

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英語 高校生

この文の第二段落のamid calls for ~のcallsは、名詞でしょうか?前置詞のamidとcalls forのつながりが、なぜこのような訳になるのか理解できません。このcalls が名詞だと仮定して直訳すると、管理下において大規模に火を放つことを求める要求の最中に... 続きを読む

王 jon 【目標解答時間 15分 配点 37点 15 次の英文を読み, 下記の設問 (A~D) に答えなさい。 Fire is "a good servant but a bad master." In my house, in summer, I smell the air for the faintest hint of smoke as keenly as any horse or dog or kangaroo. I watch for columns of smoke, visualising again and again how fire could rush( 1 )the hill towards us. But if you are philosophical about it, fire is a natural 5 part of the Australian environment and has been for millions of years. Living with the threat of fire in the bush, or in the wild, is like living with sharks when diving, or with snakes while walking, or with traffic accidents on a city street. The idea that we should remove every shark from the sea, or every snake from the land, and control- burn, or deliberately set fire, to prevent any risk of 10 bushfires is a recipe for making the environment even worse. As Phil Koperberg, head of the New South Wales Fire Brigades, said ( 2 ) the Sydney bushfires of 1994, amid calls for massive control burning, “Do you want to concrete over all the bush? If you choose to live in the bush, you choose to accept the risk. f It is often claimed that some Austratian plants and animals have actually adapted to fire, evidence of an extraordinarily long period (millions of years before human arrival) during which fire has been more significant in the Australian environment than it has been on any other continent, but this is probably not strictly true. Many plants have adapted to the environment in 20 ways that also happen to be valuable in times of fire. ( 3 ), animals have adapted to a variety of different habitats, and can therefore survive during different periods of vegetation regrowth after a fire (or after, say, a cyclone, a flood, or just a tree falling in a forest). A tree that has the ability to regenerate from roots or lower trunk when the 25 upper tree dies as a result of being broken off in a storm, or falls over, rotten to the core, will also be able to respond when the upper part is killed by a fire. Seeds adapted to long hot droughts, and requiring a combination of heat and water for germination", will also find a fire, if followed by rain, a good stimulus for growing new plants. There does appear to be evidence that chemicals in 30 smoke can help promote growth in plants, but whether this is a direct 可能性があるかを 何度も が続いているのだ。 森林地帯, ダイビングのときにサメ, そやカンガルーにも負けな の匂いを嗅ぐ。 私は,どのよ 暮らすようなものである。 海 しき主人である」( れば, 火事はオーストラリア >> のヘビを取り除くべきだと 意図的に火を放つべきだ , 1994年のシドニー ている真っ只中 と言った。 入れるこ

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英語 高校生

英語 これの答えなんだと思いますか?解いてみたのですが答えがなくて自信がありません。15番の選択肢は①ago ②from now ③past ④in です。 答えだけでかまいませんお願いします🙇‍♀️

A frosty Novemper morning decorates the leafless trees to perfection. When I went up the hill, the white frost was sparkling, and the of milky mist hanging in the air. 6 trees arose on all sides. There were layers The frost has not yet taken to lingering* on the trees in the morning. The air was soon mild. When I went to plant a new tree just received from the nursery*, a gentle moistnes prevailed. Planting trees is pleasant work, encouraging I dug the hole, the soil moved easily beneath the spade, soft and damp. thought about the future, and especially 7 so when conditions are as favorable as this. The weak roots settle 9 into the loam and compost and bone-meal*, pressed into the pit that has been dug; and the infant" thing, little more than a twig, is magnified in the 10 into a handsome and graceful maturity. The village has responded readily 11 the urgings* to plant more trees. In various corners single saplings* are being installed; where more space is available, groups are being planted. A decision as to 12 is not arrived at without much discussion, opinion being split, in general terms, between decorative exoties which put on a great show of blossom and those less showy trees, unfortunately slower in growth, which are more 13 to the village scene. To my relief the latter choice has been preferred. My immediate contribution has been to plant on the grassy edge of the lane which passes my house. 14 there is no room_for anything tall, I chose a white hawthorn*, and as I set it in the earth I could picture it giving pleasure to people who will walk along this lane many years 15 long after I am dead. [注] linger「とどまる」、nursery「苗床」 loam and compost and bone-meal 「黒土(ローム)と堆肥と骨粉」 infant「未発達の」、urging「奨励」、sapling「苗木」、 hawthorn 「セイョウサンザシ」 問6 0 green 2 rich 3 bare fallen 6 問7 0 Below As ③ Though Above 7 間8 0 for 2) dark ③ pessimistic の optimistic 8 問9 0 up hard unresistingly with difficulties 9 問10 0 imagination 2 real ③ future の life 10 問11 0 for ③ to by 11 on 問12 0 the way of planting の what to plant ③ how to plant 0 plant or not 12 問13 の traditional 2 colorful ③ dangerous 0 against 13 問140 If As long as 3 Unless Since 14

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英語 高校生

教えてほしいです!!お願いします!!

問題は【1】~【4】まである。答えは各問題の指示に従って別紙の解答用紙に書きなさい。 【1】次の英文を読んで設問に答えなさい。 Headaches are a big problem. Each year, millions of people suffer from severe headaches that affect their enjoyment of life, (1) not to mention their productivity at work. estimate, headaches cost individuals and businesses more than (2) $50 billion each year! (3) This is one of the reasons research into headaches has become a worldwide effort. Although he did not know much about how headaches work, Hippocrates was the first doctor to find a way to treat them. By 400 BC, Hippocrates had discovered that the *bark from willow trees was useful in treating pain. He made a white powder from the tree's bark and gave it to his patients. Hippocrates did not know it, but he was actually prescribing a natural chemical in willow bark called salicin. Whena person eats salicin, the chemical is changed inside his or her body into (4) salicylic acid. It turns out that salicylic acid is good for stopping pain, including headache pain, but it is bad for a person's stomach. In the 1800s, a chemist in Germany slightly changed easier for people to take. commonly known as aspirin. Aspirin was used throughout most of the 1900s to treat headaches, but doctors had little idea about what really caused headaches. When doctors can *diagnose the cause of a disease, they can find better ways to treat it. Therefore, as medical technology developed, doctors began to use it to learn more about the human brain and about headaches. In fact, according to one m to make it This new form of the chemical was called acetylsalicylic acid, now acid's Now doctors classify headaches ( A ) two general types: primary and secondary. A primary headache is a condition ( B) as only the headache itself. one caused by another physiological condition, such as an *infection or a *tumor. For primary headaches, doctors have determined three possible causes. headache is caused by stress. characteristically felt on both sides of the head as a dull, steady pain. Another kind of primary headache is the *migraine headache. Exactly what causes these headaches is not well understood, but many experts believe it could be abnormal brain activity causing changes in the brain's chemistry and blood flow. For many people, migraines are caused by certain (5) stimuli, such as poor sleep or particular foods or smells. A sufferer usually feels intense pain on one side of the head and becomes sensitive to light and noise. If the migraine is severe, the sufferer may *vomit repeatedly. The third kind of primary headache is known as the cluster headache. Cluster headaches typically occur around the same time each day for weeks or months at a time. The person ( C)from this kind of headache usually feels pain on one side of her or his head, and the pain is centered around one of the eyes. Doctors do not know much (6) at present about cluster headaches, but they seem to be more common among men and could be related to alcohol or other things that affect a person's blood flow. Using computers and more advanced medical equipment, doctors continue to learn more about what happens in the brain before and during headaches. Especially in the case of migraines, some doctors believe they have found the part of the brain that sets off the reaction for severe attacks. With these insights into brain processes, doctors hope new ways will be discovered to stop headaches before they begin. On the other hand, a secondary headache is One kind of primary Doctors usually call these tension headaches, and they are 注: bark 樹皮 diagnose ~を診断する、~を突き止める 感染症·伝染病 migraine (headache) 偏頭痛 infection tumor 腫場 vomit 食べたものを吐く (出典:READING FOR THE REAL WORLD 3rd edition, Compass Publishing より)

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英語 高校生

読解問題です。 時間かかるとは思いますが全部といて欲しいです! お願いします🙇‍♂️🙏

The Latin word infans, from which “infant" comes, means “a person who isunable to speak", parents with their eyes, their expressions and their whole bodies, and parents respond to them But all mothers know that communication begins long before actual speech. Babies “talk Human beings are different from other animals in our highly developed use of language and gradually learns to recognize meaning. In South Africa, *the Bantu tribe celebrates 得点 and understanding. A baby 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 取り組み日 日 月 目標時間 STEP3 読解問題にアプローチ 20分 単語を (2年7月 改) Ch 自標 yC VC (前直詞+関係代名詞〉, 不定詞, 動名詞に気をつけて英文を読もつ。 POINTの [問 to in the same language. POINTの 5 POINTO POINTの POINTO the first time a child answers to her name with a special dinner. 10 way to encourage your baby's language is to begin a two-way conversation. Mothers an 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 ouglammar to make sentences shorter. Mothers talk of themselves in the third person, repeat things, and POINTの speak to their infants in a sing-song pitch. By looking at our babies while we are talking to 15 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 word these first basic sounds are the roots of common names for other family members, most importantly “mother” and “father”. For example, baba means “mother” *the Gusii tribe of Kenya, while baban is “father” for *the Sambarivo people of 20 Madagascar. The English word “daddy” is tata in Greek, tatas in 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 among POINTの POINTの POINTの to hear their baby's first word as “daddy”, in order to make a father feel more important and 25 to add more meaning to his fatherhood. Or perhaps father, a familiar but often a little more POINTO 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 for mother's milk”, and the Roman mamma, meaning “breast". all these words come from the ancient Greek mamman, which means “to cry Before you know it, your baby will be giving her own special names to her brothers and 30 sisters and the cat. But it's not very surprising that a baby's very first “words” are meant for her parents - the first objects of a baby's attention. (461W) 注)*the Bantu tribe = バントゥー族(中央·南部アフリカの黒人諸族の名前) *the Gusii tribe = グシイ族(ケニアの農耕民族の名前) *the Sambarivo people = サンバリボ族(マダガスカルの民族の名前) (出典) From A Gift for New Mothers: Traditional Wisdom of Pregnancy, Birth, and Motherhood by Deborah .Jackson. 1999. 2005, Duncan Baird Publishers. Copyright © 1999, 2005 Watkins Meaia Limited. Used by permission. (Watkins. London. 2005)

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