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TOEIC・英語 大学生・専門学校生・社会人

この問題全ての解答教えて欲しいです!丸付いてるのは気にしないでください!

Let's Try! Part 5 空所に当てはまる選択肢を選びましょう。 1. We CheckLink ------- that gold is a sounder investment than stock or bonds due to the current currency crisis. (A) require (B) deliver (C) believe (D) press 2. Pacifico Company's new business plan looks like it will have a their revenue. (A) retiring (B) relative (C) collaborative (D) positive influence on 3. The noise of the construction in the warehouse was so loud that the client had to ------- himself three times before he could be heard. (A) recall (B) repeat (C) write (D) register tuo 4. The job which we had asked the technician to do was not done to our total -- (A) satisfaction (B) restoration (C) feedback (D) reference ------- to do in one operation. 5. The medical procedure used by the surgical team is too (A) sufficient (B) real (C) perfect (D) complex 6. It is imperative that the ------- be delivered before our client arrives at the office around noon. Too (A) package (B) manufacturer (C) mailman (D) currency aldesing (A) 7. The newly hired employee seems (A) previously (B) expensively capable of meeting our work expectations. (C) entirely (D) contrastively 8. The scientist's theory has been thoroughly tested and ------- to be reliable by many independent laboratories. (A) studied (B) proven (C) dedicated (D) combined (8) Frogs (A) aften med and

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英語 高校生

至急!!私立大学看護学部の過去問です。答えがないため、回答を作って欲しいです!!科目は英語です。

問題番号に対応 効とする。 うち受験票お researchers at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna, Austria, have found. Dogs won't give food to a human, even if that person gave them some food first, and that they would help other dogs that had helped them before. Therefore, the team Previous studies have shown that dogs can recognize cooperative and uncooperative humans, "reciprocal altruism"- that is, doing a good thing in return to a human who had given expected to find that their test subjects would put these two things together and show To start, the team trained a group of 37 dogs to press a button which would activate a them food first. *enclosure with the dispenser, while one of (2) two humans was in a separate enclosure with the button. One would press the button to food dispenser. Then, they put each dog in an would not. Each dog was paired with both humans in give food to the dog, and (4) unhelpful one. turn. After that, the researchers switched over the button and the dispenser. They expected that the dogs would press the button to give food to the helpful human but not to the though the dogs did press the button, they did it just as often when either human had the food dispenser, and even when no human was there at all. "In these kinds of studies (5) [perform / to / dogs / which/ trained / are in a particular behavior for an experiment, they will usually do the behavior a few times as they have simply learned the association between the behavior and getting a reward, and it may be enjoyable for them to do the behavior," said Jim McGetrick, a PhD student at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna who led the research. 身を正しく が本冊子 1番 2 次の英文を読んで下の設問に答えなさい。 (3) giving us some food? Are they a combination of reasons. "It is (6) Why wouldn't our best pals want to help us out by secretly all bad boys and girls? McGetrick believes there is possible that the dogs did not understand enough about the task to realize that only one of the humans was providing them with food," he said. It could also be because they didn't fully understand the button and dispenser system, or because they were too focused on the food to notice whether a particular human was pressing the button or not. "Having said all that, even if they did completely understand the task and were fully attentive to the actions of the humans, there is still a good possibility that they wouldn't have given food back in return," he added. "It could be that providing food to a dog as they do not typically do that in everyday life." After all, humans are the ones who human is something very strange for (7) already have food, from a dog's perspective. why would your pet need to worry about (8) making sure you have enough? However, all the humans in the study were people the dogs didn't know. "It is quite 5

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生物 大学生・専門学校生・社会人

至急お願いいたします🚨 生物の質問です。 ミトコンドリアの経路についての説明だと思うのですが、電子オーバーフローモデルと電子分布モデルの違いを教えていただきたいです。 また、どういう仕組みなのか、何故このように電子が流れるのかも教えていただきたいです。 UQ poolはユ... 続きを読む

(A) Electron overflow model (considered out-of-date) Alt UQ pool Alternative oxidase inactive. Alt No alternative pathway activity Cytochrome pathway unsaturated Cyt (B) Electron distribution model (reflects current thinking) UQ pool Cyt Alternative pathway active Cytochrome pathway saturated Alt Alternative oxidase active Alt UQ pool Cyt Cyt Figure 14.33 Two models for regulation of electron flow through the alternative oxidase. (A) In the electron overflow model, no appreciable electron transfer through the alternative pathway takes place until electron flow through the cytochrome pathway is at or near satu- ration. This could result from the effects of respirato- ry control, if the rate of mitochondrial ATP produc- tion exceeds its rate of utilization in the cytosol, or from some externally imposed stress, such as low temperature. Under such circumstances, the UQ pool becomes sufficiently reduced to allow electrons to flow through the alternative oxidase, the latter re- quiring that the UQ pool be 40% to 60% reduced to attain significant activity. (B) In the electron distribu- tion model, the alternative and cytochrome path- ways both show significant activity at low levels of UQ pool reduction, and electrons are distributed be- tween the two pathways on the basis of the relative activities of each pathway. The activity of the alter- native oxidase under these circumstances is thought to be regulated by the action of a-keto acids and by reduction/oxidation of the intermolecular disulfide bond, as well as by additional regulatory mecha- nisms not yet characterized.

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英語 高校生

赤線の部分の訳と文構造が分かりません。 見ずらくてすいません🙇‍♂️

truly become between two independent individuals who fell in love and decided to make a life Such an important decision, perhaps the most important for themselves. decision of one's life, cannot be made by others. (1) sense. Marriage is But in many cultures it simply doesn't make fundamentally a social bond, uniting families and cementing their cultural and (イ) religious values. It may be romantic, but it is not just about the bride and groom; it's about family and community. Indeed, even in the West for most of history, marriage was not primarily about the individual needs and desires of a man and woman and the children they produced. Marriage had as ( ) to do with getting good in-laws and increasing one's resources and family labor force as it did with finding a lifetime companion and raising a beloved child. or Marriage spoke to the needs of the larger group. 3 Different traditions, different marriages. In India, over 90 percent of the (2) bemarriages are arranged. One survey in 2013 revealed that 74 percent of young 9 Indians aged between 18-35 years said that they would rather let their parents ad choose their life partners than choosing themselves. While the traditiona practice of arranged marriage has been illegal in China since the 1950s, parent remain heavily involved in their children's marital decisions, with many paren trying hard to persuade their children to get married by interrogating the (13) during family gatherings. In Japan, it was not until the early 1960s that le marriages outnumbered arranged ones. Arranged marriages can take a variety of forms ranging from fo marriages (where either the bride or the groom, or both, have no choice in matter) to consensual marriages (where the bride and groom have all 002 - 1

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