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英語 高校生

Vintage Aviator600の22から30までおしえてください。

OEEEEf Vintage 口022 ) have accepted that offer! ) show up, tell her to ring me immediately. (2must 口034 What do you think ( be / like/ to/it/would) get along without TV sets in your home? (b) If she( の did 3 shall Oshould (専修大) (日本大) 口023 (a) It is ( (b) The new tower in Tokyo is 634 meters ( O large )time that you went to school. 口035 Both Gracie and I like British movies a lot. I(without / cannot / meet/ talking / her) の long 3 tall Ohigh (駒導大) about them. (法政大) 口024 (a) He can siggn ( (b) All( ) better than his brother. )numbers can be divided by two. 3much |基*) Deven 2 far の still (日本大) 5次の日本文に合う英文になるように,( ) 内の語(旬)を並べかえなさい。 (a) She is the( (b) I'm pleased that Jane's got a job at ( D last 口025 ) person I'd expect to meet in a disco. 口036 この大聖堂に足を踏み入れると,敬険な気持ちにならざるを得ない。 One (but / cannot / feel / help/into / reverence / this / walks / one / when) cathedral. (青山学院大) 2first 3 least の most (神戸学院大) 3次の英文の下線部のうち,誤りを含むものを1つずつ選び、訂正しなさい。 あなたの寛大なお申し出がなければ,私たちは子どもたちを幸せにすることができな かったでしょう。 (not / your /had / offer / for / been / generous / it ), we could not have made our children happy. 口037 口026 Rie o was spoken by a o foreign student o while she was o waiting for the bus. 〈開教大) く関西学院大) 口027 o In order to improve your English, you should spend as の much hours o studying the language oas possible. (立命館大) 口028 E-commerce o makes the creation of a @home-based business much p easy than oin the past. ロシアは南アフリカの4倍を超える量のダイヤモンドを産出している。 Russia produces ( four / number / more / of / than / the / times ) diamonds produced in South Africa. |本) 〈京都外国語大) 口038 (日本大) 口029 oWhat do you ethink ois the second o large city in the United States? (関西外国語大) Chewing gum is so popular o that e nearly 300 sticks of gum g is consumed per capita in the U.S. o each yea. 口030 (東京都市大) 彼女は、数学では他の学生に負けなかった。 She was ( the other / to / students / superior / at / math ). 口039 (東京理科大 4意味が通る英文になるように, ( ) 内の語を並べかえなさい。 A: According to the waiter, there will be at least a 20-minute wait. B:(reservation / had / a /we / made ), we wouldn't have to wait. 口031 〈玉川大) 車で大学へ来るのにいつもどれぐらい時間がかかっていますか。 How long (does/it/usually take /to/drive /you) to the upiversity? 〈日本大) We had Made a 口040 (* 本) teser vation A:I heard you moved to a new house. How do you like it? B:Ilove it. It's ( the / three / size / of / times) the old one. 口032 (玉川大) Words & Phrases Alex:(do / is/it/know/time / what / you) now? Pat: Quarter tothree. 口006 dusk「タ暮れ」 口012 on the way 「途中で」 口017 bribe「防略」 口008 diligent「動勉な」 口014 taste 「好み」 口021 thrive 「繁栄する」 口033 (防衛大) 口028 e-commerce 「電子商取引」 口030 per capita 「1人あたり」 Atnet 600

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英語 高校生

この問題の解説をお願いします

に意味が通るように並べかえ、そのうち20~39の空欄に入る語(句)の番号のみを答えなさい。 なお、語群では、文頭に来る語も小文字で示してある。 II The Buy Nothing Movement Consumers are buying more clothes and shoes than ever before. Online shopping means it is 21 Social media, magazines and shop windows bombard people daily with things to buy, and British thinking, while major brands oter such cheap clothes that they ean be treated like disposable items -worn two or three times and then thrown away. 20(2))( 23 22 That might not sound like much, ) society and for In Britain, the average [2] ( on new clothes a year, which is around four per cent of their income. but that figüre [3] ( 24 the environment. First, a lot of that Consumer spending is via credit cards. British [4] ( 263) the average wardrobe budget. Also, not only are people spending money they don't have, they are using it to buy things they don't need. Britain throws away 300,000 tons of clothing a year, ) to credit card companies. That's 66 per cent of 27 29 landfill sites. 28 [1](20,21) customers ② buy without 3) for 4 to 5) easy [2](22,23) 0 spends more 3) person than ⑤ £1,000 [3](24,25) 1 trends for 2 worrying hides two more far [4](26, 27) ① per ② approximately £670 ④ currently owe ③ people 5 adult [5](28,29) 1 into 2 of 4 most ⑤ which 3 goes

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英語 高校生

答えが無くて分からないので教えて欲しいです

SIMなし合 22:01 Cop 【1】次の英文を読んで, 設問 1~12に答えなさい。 なお, *印の語(句)には文末に注 がついています。 Modern examinations of working conditions in British and U.S. industry in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries concentrate mainly on the experiences, Complaints, and overall difficulties of working-class laborers. The first complaint that a majority of industrial workers had was that their workdays* were too long. The average (ア) of hours in a shift varied from industry to industry, from place to place, and from era to era. Workers in British and American textile mills* in the early to middle 1800s generally worked twelve to fifteen hours, six days a week, ( イ) only Sundays off. Their average workweek* was seventy-eight hours. In contrast were the hours of workers who labored in American steel mills in the late 1800s. The length of their shifts was determined by the fact that the blast furnaces* they tended almost always operated twenty-four hours a day. Thus, (oit became customary* for steel mills to have two twelve-hour shifts. However, many of the steel workers labored seven days a week. (a)That gave them a workweek of sighty-four hours. Moreover, sometimes they had to work extra hours on top of this demanding schedule. (オ )the minor differences in the length of workweeks from one industry to another, the average worker put in twelve-to fourteen-hour days at least six days a week, This harsh schedule remained more ( カ) less standard well into the twentieth century. It was not until 1920 that a fifty-hour workweek was introduced in the United States. Anda forty-hour week did not become the rule in most industries until 1938. Low wages was another common complaint of industrial workers. In 1851, the average wage earned by American industrial workers in general was seven to ten dollars per week. That same year New York's Daily Tribune* reported that a worker's family of five required just over ten dollars a week just for basics such as rent, food, and fuel. Most ordinary workers could not afford many simple comforts that middle-class workers enjoyed. (o This miserable situation lasted in America for decades and improved only slowly. As late as 1912, a study found that only 15

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英語 中学生

(B)教えて欲しいです😭😭 答えは preserve culture になります。 解説では(7)の2文目と(3)の最後から3文目を参照とかいてありますがそれでも意味がわからないです。

3 次の文章を読んで, あとの各問に答えよ。 (*印の付いている単語·語句には, 本文のあとに [注] がある。) When we go to the library, we read books/*search for and/share information and have a *discussion with others. // Libraries are very convenient places. /The library has a long history of collecting and keeping books. /Books have been an important part of culture. Around 1445 Johann Gutenberg *invented the *printing machine./ Libraries began to collect the hooks *printed by the printing machine, and the number of libraries grew./ Now some libraries have begun to *digitalize a lot of books. Some people say most of the books will become digitalized *data/ When 声った all the books are digitalized, what will the future of the library be? / Some even say the library will disappear. Will that really happen? To answer this question, we first have to see how people have digitalized books. We can say the idea of digitalizing books began with Michael Hart in 1971/ He was able to use an expensive computer,/so he thought he could do something good for other people by using it. A computer can keep a lót of data/and it can search for the data in a very short time./When the computer has a lot of digitalized data from the books, these data become an important part of culture. / Michael Hart thought that people would use these data as they like, His idea became a *project. /He couldn't digitalize books which had *copyright, so he digitalized books which were *in the public domain and collected them in a computer./ People were able to read the distalized books without *paying any money. Hart named his project “Project Gutenberg," |He thought his project was as important as Gutenberg's printing machine, because the printing machine also spread knowledge 知識てめる all over the world. / Project Gutenberg continues even after Hart died in 2011. Now you can read - 4

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英語 高校生

左の英文を読んで、右のA以外の問題を解いて欲しいですm(_ _)mお願いしますm(_ _)m

ZUJU 安全ではありません nanun-do.hondana.jp 安全ではありません- nanun-do.hondana.jp increasingly competes for fans with sports like football, basketball or ( ins greatly popular worldwide. 30 8/10 9/10 Baseball 2 People have debated the origins of baseball for many years. Some say baseball is an American variation of the British-born sport rounders. Where Understanding the Passage did people first play baseball? Whether baseball is a purely American game or it A. Listen and fill in the blanks in the reading passage. 音声を聞いて本文の空欄に適切な語句を入れなさい。 originated somewhere else, it is (°clear) that baseball has become B. True or False Questions a very popular American sport and has (°given) people excitement and Reading Passage の内容に合っているものにはT、間違っているものには Fをつけなさい。 ) There is no clear answer regarding the birth of baseball. 10 pleasure for many decades. ) No Japanese had ever played in major league baseball before Nomo. )“Take Me Out to the Ball Game" is a title of a movie. There are many indications of baseball's popularity throughout ) Fukudome's debut at the opening game was a great success. American (℃ulture). One famous example is the song "Take Me Out to the Ball Game". Spectators sing this song in the middle of the seventh inning. So the 7th inning break period is called the "7th inning stretch". C. Answer the following questions. 以下の質問に英語で答えなさい。 1. Where did rounders originate? 15 Now the more recent popularity of baseball may to some extent be 2. When do spectators sing the song "Take Me Out to the Ball Game"? resulting from the presence of many prominent foreign ( players ) in the major leagues. For instance, recently we have seen the appearance of more and more Japanese players in major league baseball. A (®wave ) of 3. Where did Nomo start his major league career? 20 Japanese professional players coming into the major leagues started when 4. What do baseball fans call baseball? Hideo Nomo (became) his major league career as a Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher in 1995. Nomo was the first Japanese major leaguer (°since) D. Translate into English using the words provided. 以下の日本文を( 1.私の故郷は何十年も変わっていない。 (for decades) 1965 and was credited with paving the way for Japanese players facing the )内の語を用いて英訳しなさい。 challenge of major league baseball. Most recently, Kosuke Fukudome made a very stunning debut as the (®Chicago) Cubs right fielder. He had three hits, including a homer, in three at bats in the opening game of the 2008 season. Now avid fans still (® call) baseball the "national pastime". Baseball increasingly competes for fans with sports like football, basketball or ('soccer). but it still remains greatly popular worldwide. 25 2. 停電は強風のために起きた。( result from) 3. あなたの申し出によって私の成功への道が開かれるでしょう。(pave the way for) 30 8 NOTES British-born:イギリス生まれの rounders:野球のルーツといわれる球技 result from:生じる decade:10 年間 spectator:観客 to some extent:ある程度 prominent:目立った、顕著な pave the way for ~:~への道を開く appearance:出現 avid:熱狂的な for instance:例えば stunning:素晴らしい 9 Understanding the Passage A. Listen and fill in the blanks in the reading passage. 音声を聞いて本文の空欄に適切な語句を入れなさい。 CIapeT

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英語 高校生

【 至急⠀】raise3の長文問題なんですけど、単語が難し過ぎるので答え教えて欲しいです!!!!

Grammar Expression| Listening|Speaking /12 Total 12 /9 /100 Reading /14 /21 /44 O Reading 2 速読 問題 次の英文を3分15秒で読んで, 1.の問いに答えなさい。 But the Scottish national costume for In Europe men don't usually wear skirts. men is a kind of skirt. It is called a kilt The Scottish like to be different. They are also proud of their country and its history. and they feel that the kilt is a part of that ほこリにう history. That's why (nthe men still wear kilts at old-style dances and on national 5 holidays. They believe they are wearing the same clothes that Scottish men always used to wear. That's what they believe. However. kilts are not really so old. Before 1730, Scottish men wore a long shirt and blanket around their shoulders. These clothes (2)got in the way when the men started to work in factories. So, in 1730 a factory owner changed 10 the blanket into a skirt: the kilt. That's how the first kilt was made. Then, in the late 1700s Scottish soldiers in the British Army began to wear kilts. One reason for (3this was national feeling: the Scottish soldiers wanted to look different from the English soldiers. The Scottish soldiers fought very hard and became famous. The kilt was part of that fame, and in the early 1800s men all around Scotland began 15 to wear kilts. laThese kilts hadcolorful stripes going up and down and across. Scottish people often believe that the colors of the kilts are part of their family history. In fact, each family just chose the colors they liked best in the late 1800s. This is not the story you will hear today if you are in Scotland. Most Scottish people 20 still believe that kilts are as old as Scotland and that the colors are as old as the Scottish families. Sometimes feelings are stronger than facts! (287 words)

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