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英語 中学生

3.4枚目が問題文、5枚目が答え、1.2枚目は問題を解くときに必要な文です。 なぜこの答えになるのかがわからないので教えてください。 解くのは大変だと思うので、一問だけでも大丈夫です。

2 次は, 高校1年生の Yusuke が書いた英文です。 これを読んで、 問1~間6に答えなさい。*印 のついている語句には、本文のあとに 〔注〕があります。(34点) My father loves *dinosaurs and *fossils. He (he/them/in/collects/is/that/interested /so) dinosaur toys, small fossils and books about dinosaurs. I heard he tried to find fossils along the river with my grandparents when he was young. When I was younger, my family took me to the science museum every year. My father loved looking at the dinosaur fossils there, and he always explained them to me. So, I got interested in dinosaurs and fossils, too. My father has a restaurant near our house, and he displays some dinosaur teeth fossils in the restaurant. One day, he introduced one of his customers to me. The man, Mr. Shirai, also loved dinosaurs and fossils, and often visited museums all around the world, such as in America, Canada and China. He realized that my father was interested in the same things because of the fossils in the restaurant. They became good friends. One day in September, Mr. Shirai came to my father's restaurant and showed me a fossil. It was a beautiful fish fossil in a brown stone plate. I was surprised to see it, Mr. Shirai A me a lot about the fossil. He traveled to Germany to look for fossils, and he found many fossils there such as fish, animal bones and leaves. The area is very famous for "archaeopteryx fossils. I once saw a picture of the archaeopteryx fossil in a book, so I wanted to go to see the fossil in -4-

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英語 高校生

全文訳お願いします!

4 20 科学 420 words Chapter 1 The recipe for making any creature is written in its DNA. So last year, when 1-1 geneticists* published the near-complete DNA sequence of the long-extinct woolly mammoth, there was much speculation about whether we could bring this giant creature back to life. 5 東京理科大学 Creating a living, breathing creature from a genome* sequence that exists only in a computer's memory is not possible right now. But someone someday is sure to try it, predicts Stephan Schuster, a molecular biologist at Pennsylvania State University and a driving force behind the mammoth genome project. So besides the mammoth, what other extinct beasts might we bring back to life? Well, 12 10 it is only going to be possible with creatures for which we can recover a complete genome Without one, there is no chance. And usually when a creature dies, the (1) - DNA in any flesh left untouched is soon destroyed as it is attacked by sunshine and bacteria. sequence. There are, however, some circumstances in which DNA can be preserved. If your 15 specimen froze to death in an icy wasteland such as Siberia, or died in a dark cave or a really dry region, for instance, then the probability of finding some intact stretches of DNA is much higher. Even in ideal conditions, though, no genetic information is likely to survive more than a million years. - so dinosaurs are out and only much younger remains are likely to yield good-quality DNA. "It's really only worth studying specimens that are less than 100,000 years old," says Schuster. The genomes of several extinct species besides the mammoth are already being sequenced, but turning these into living creatures will not be easy. "It's hard to say that something will never ever be possible," says Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute 25 for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, "but it would require technologies so far removed from what we currently have that I cannot imagine how it would be done." But then (3) 50 years ago, who would have believed we would now be able to read the instructions for making humans, fix inherited diseases, clone mammals and be close to creating artificial life? Assuming that we will develop the necessary technology, we have 30 selected ten extinct creatures that might one day be resurrected. Our choice is based not just on practicality, but also on each animal's "charisma" - just how exciting the prospect of resurrecting these animals is. 1-3

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英語 高校生

BIG DIPPERの答え持ってる方いませんか??

D 1-74- p.92 本文中での意味を調べ。 学を読。 ロ-73 B単語を調べよう ヒげま。 Part 3, 77- には品詞を書こう。 Amebl oteor otob struck the Tohoku 意味のまとまりを意識しながら読もう。 O earthquake [3:r0kwèik] A 本文を読もう wooden [wúdn] 1bta oainte region [ri:d3on] PCLG M 2 severe [siviar] raft [ráeft]| 2BviM m at の from *time to time 1 In 2011,/ a large earthquake and tsunami a asibl ges9aib esw J1 3manner [maénar] harvest [há:rvast]| region. // teuo 9n0 seed の rope [róup] | workshop [wá:rkja:p]|| D9SITT C1OLKGE 0 equipment (ikwipmant|| oyster farming in Japan / for 300 years. // shell [fél] 6 tie [tái] p1sm bnee ot bennslg 「2 *wash away idessl0 9on OIn Japan, oysters are grown baga" 2 19avo 。 C 本文を確認しよう jgsviM The First, / oyster farmers put ropes of shells / into the sea a.()に入る適当な語を本文から抜き出そう。 fron OSeed oysters grow / on e 1on asww aidi19woll organtzed the 1. What happened in 2011? France Ok ropes are tied / to a big wooden raft. // Fronca A large( and tsunami struck the(0 9qyi )( 9ved 2. How do Japanese oyster farmers grow seed oysters? bolle, 1 bluoo yor They grow them on( the shells. // OFrom time to time, / farmers pull the rafts / to bnoose 01 10na1stavoOTof ) on ropes. them=seed oysters P うad uo baib in pa 3. What did the tsunami wash away in Miyagi? lis nidbyovs bge Joined the projcct and solved Bh ), rafts, ropes, and other dotanutrol better place / with their boats. // ®After harvesting, / farme - It washed away( 1 yord) 9eus298 sib。 ldong.idodw needed for oyster farming. oysters to their workshops. // ®There, / the oysters are washed and )に適当な日本語を入れよう。 を benioi とesinegmdomel Sorted, / and the meat is taken from the shells. //19 m wo ei 1- )年の歴史をもつ, 日本の(1計をたて)の本場であ 2191つunsn Swor. 2011年の東日本大震災は,(ア 11ogenst 宮城に,深刻な(ウ Jn9mgiupe KI622999n s9rdt betsnob )を与えた。 3 ®The tsunami washed away / seed oysters, rafts, ropes, / and other (日本のカキ養殖) 官城ではカキを にPローズ/量闘特的inigmoo )に の 海に(エ前質を日)が付いたロープを入れる。ロープは大きな木製の(オ equipment / needed for oyster farming. // @ Some farmers even lost bevi びつけられる。 aloupdinss oh lo adinom wwel s niduiW 2(カンスの進)が貝殻に付着して成長する。 ansgsl jporbiW" 3 しばしば,ボートでいかだを(キ dongr 9n mot their boats and workshops. // )@It seemed / that their hope 0! LGLe e1g" )へ移動する。 bO収穫後,カキは(2 )で洗浄され, (ケ row)され,身が貝殻 Continuing oyster farming / was washed away as well. // (コのカキ Tnsgal glad 音読回数を チェック! 3((サ )による被害) )もなくなったかに見え カキ養殖に必要なものが流され, カキ養殖を続ける(シ

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英語 中学生

これの(1)はなぜdidがいらないんですか? 回答は3枚目です

1 次の英文は, ある新聞の投稿欄に掲載されたものである。 英文を読んで, あとの問いに答 えなさい。 (福 井) We have a lot of problems around us. When the problems are too big, we think we can't solve them. But if we look at the problems from a different view, we can sometimes find the answers. I will tell you about Mexico City. It is not as large as Tokyo, but it has more people than Tokyo. It is ina high place and it has only one big river. So it is difficult to get enough water. About 160 years ago, many people began to use water under the ground. Do you know what happened after a lot of people used too much water under the ground? Yes. The ground went down very much. That was a big problem. Then people in Mexico City looked at this problem from a different view. Some people thought, “How about using the place that went down?”、Other people thought, “Can we use the water we have already used again?” They put the water into the place. Soon it became a kind of lake. People made the water clean and used it again. We have an example in Japan, too. In big cities it is especially hot in summer. There are many reasons, and we know one of them. There are not so many trees in the big cities., If there are many trees, they can give us some shade in many places and the températúre around us will go down. But the big cities have few places for trees because they have a lot of huildinos Some penle thouoht about the problem hard TThen thev 1aorod ota building

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