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英語 高校生

下から15行目のthrow whichのthrow とはなんですか?

y II Day 12 15 5 Negro Leagues Baseball was a collection of major and minor-league baseball leagues that were the first to showcase black team sports on intertwined with the African American and American experience not only a national scale. Launched in 1895, the leagues, as with jazz, became as a cultural element, but as a lucrative business endeavor. team The leagues were not under central management, and schedules and composition League, were changeable from season to season. Appearance and disappearance of leagues was common: the National Colored Baseball for instance, collapsed after only two weeks of operations. Latins, especially Cubans, were also a significant presence on teams. In these ways, the Negro Leagues were quite similar to their white counterparts which would eventually consolidate into Major League Baseball. Blacks near the beginning of the 20th century had only a fraction of whites' purchasing power, so the emergence of the Negro Leagues might have seemed unlikely. However, the Negro Leagues had two main draws that accounted for its business success. The first was a deep reserve of athletic talent. After blacks were formally excluded from white leagues in the 1880s, the Negro Leagues were the sole organization through which black players could work professionally. The quality of Negro Leagues 20 players was high, and substantiated through exhibition matches between Negro Leagues and Major League teams: over the years, both had their fair share of wins and losses in these matches. Another reason for the success of the Negro Leagues was an increasingly affluent black fan base. Driven by American industrialization, blacks were concentrating in major cities such as New York City, Chicago, and Atlanta. Usually barred by custom-and in the South by law-from attending many white entertainment outlets, blacks turned to Negro Leagues games. As a result of these factors, by the 20th century the Negro Leagues were earning a combined millions of dollars. This profitability ended with the desegregation of Major League Baseball. Black fans began attending Major League games, starving the Negro Leagues of its core revenue source. By 1951, the Negro Leagues had ended, although a succession of black star athletes in the Major League had begun.

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英語 高校生

この黄色いマーカーのとこの分構造を教えて欲しいです。

異議をとなえる 明治大文 significant five per cent. 2022年度英語 7 chalerghg T困難だがやりがいある always prefer print to ebooks. By 2016, that number had climbed a modest but 控えぬ The increased sales books) and their popularity with of younger people, demonstrate that old media is not just the province the old)/ 領域 3 The argument that printed books were becoming outdated and obsolete was by challenged not only by books' renewed popularity, but also by expert studies that pointed out the psychological Benefits enjoyed by people (who liked to read 動 a remedy for (イ) b.difficult writing) (in other words researchers suggested reading ( n all sorts of problems) (2013) the journal Science published a study that concluded that people who mostly read literary writing had a clearer appreciation breached other people's ways of thinking than those who tended to prefer popular bestsellers: The authors (②this study) discovered readers to be better (あ the emotions expressed faces on at understanding others' false beliefs when they had just read prizewinning short stories than when they had I read lighter more commercial writing: This experiment provided a new contribution to the familiar debate (on the difference between literary writing and popular bestsellers Bluzin 1 0 experiment suggested b/captivated (②E a printed book) remained a worthwhile (even in the digital age that finding time to be activity (C① many people) O 4 est The view that people the past read more were better readers is not ✓ and (historical evidence. It is true that print experienced a golden age between the rise D mass audiences: ( the eighteenth century (and the twentieth- a century triumph of the paperback Nonetheless, well before competition (from social media, only a finy minority (①volumes that were published ever found a ader(1 Instead of reading novels carefully, aristocrats had their hair curled reader ✓ ever while listening to a servant reading aloud Long before people compiled favorite songs or pieces of music on their computer or mobile phone, poetry lovers scissored pages apart to paste scraps of one collection onto the margins of another. Early bookstores sold fish, while books were also sold door-to-door by clothing salesmen. Authors back then debated in print, as strongly as today's content providers do online, whether the written work should be rented or sold, licensed or owned. In short, printed books gave birth to many of the capacities cs CamScanner でスキャン

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英語 高校生

fについてです 解説が載っていなかったため質問しています、。 なぜ、③を選ぶことができるのでしょうか?

Long-s doctrin holds that we are protected from fungi not just by layered immune defenses but ( e ) we are mammals*, with core temperatures higher than fungi prefer. The cooler outer surfaces of our bodies are at risk of minor assaults-think of athlete's foot*, yeast infections, ringworm*-but in people with healthy immune systems, invasive* infections have been ( f ). That may have left us overconfident. "We have an enormous (g) spot," says Arturo Casadevall, a physician and molecular microbiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Walk into the street and ask people what are they afraid of, and they'll tell you they're afraid of bacteria, they're afraid of viruses, but they don't fear dying of fungi." Ironically, it is our successes that made us vulnerable*. Fungi exploit damaged immune systems, but before the mid-20th century people with impaired immunity didn't live very long. Since then, medicine has gotten very good at keeping such people (h), even though their immune systems are compromised by illness or cancer treatment or age. It has also developed an array of therapies that deliberately suppress immunity, to keep transplant recipients healthy and treat autoimmune* disorders such as lupus* and rheumatoid arthritis*. ( i ) vast numbers of people are living now who are especially vulnerable to fungi. Not all of our vulnerability is the fault of medicine preserving life so successfully. Other ( j ) actions have opened more doors between the fungal world and our own. We clear land for crops and settlement and perturb* what were stable balances between fungi and their hosts. We carry goods and animals across the world, and fungi hitchhike on them. We drench crops in fungicides* and enhance the resistance of organisms residing nearby. (s) ELSE

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