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英語 高校生

和訳お願いします。

次の英文を読んで, 設問に答えなさい。 [5] The headline grabs your attention: "The ancient tool used in Japan to boost memory." You've been The Japanese art of racking up clicks online more forgetful recently, and maybe this mysterious instrument from the other side of the world, no less! could help out? You click the link, and hit play on the video, awaiting this information that's bound to change your life. The answer? A soroban (abacus). Hmm, () それは私がどこに鍵を置いたか覚えておく助けになりそうには ないですよね? This BBC creation is part of a series called "Japan 2020," a set of Japan-centric content looking at various inoffensive topics, from the history of Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki pancakes to pearl divers. The abacus entry, along with a video titled "Japan's ancient philosophy that helps us accept our flaws," about kintsugi (a technique that involves repairing ceramics with gold-or silver-dusted lacquer), cross over into a popular style of exploring the country: Welcome to the Japan that can fix you. For the bulk of the internet's existence, Western online focus toward the nation has been of the "weird Japan" variety, which zeroes in rare happenings and micro "trends," but presents them as part of everyday life, usually just to entertain. This sometimes veers into "get a load of this country" posturing to get more views online. It's not exclusive to the web traditional media indulges, too but it proliferates online. Bagel heads, used underwear vending machines, rent-a-family services - it's a tired form of reporting that has been heavily criticized in recent times, though that doesn't stop articles and YouTube videos from diving into "weird Japan." These days, wacky topics have given way to celebrations of the seemingly boring. This started with the global popularity of Marie Kondo's KonMari Method of organizing in the early 2010s, which inspired books and TV shows. It's online where content attempts to fill a never-ending pit - where breakdowns of, advice and opinions about Kondo emerged the most. Then came other Japanese ways to change your life. CNBC contributor Sarah Harvey tried kakeibo, described in the headline as "the Japanese art of saving money." This "art" is actually just writing things down in a notebook. Ikigai is a popular go-to, with articles and videos popping up all the time explaining the mysterious concept of ... having a purpose in life. This isn't a totally new development in history, as Japanese concepts such as wa and wabi sabi have long earned attention from places like the United States, sometimes from a place of pure curiosity and sometimes as pre-internet "life hacks" aimed making one's existence a little better. (B) The web just made these inescapable. There's certainly an element of exoticization in Western writers treating hum-drum activities secrets from Asia. There are also plenty of Japanese people helping to spread these ideas, albeit mostly in the form of books like Ken Mogi's "The Little Book of Ikigai." It can result in dissonance. Naoko Takei Moore promotes the use of donabe, a type of cooking pot, and was interviewed by The New York Times for a small feature this past March about the tool. Non- Japanese Twitter users, in a sign of growing negative reactions to the "X, the Japanese art of Y" presentations, attacked the piece... or at least the headline, as it seemed few dove the actual content of the article (shocking!), which is a quick and pleasant profile of Takei Moore, a woman celebrating her country's culinary culture. Still, despite the criticism by online readers, the piece says way more about what English-language readers want in their own lives than anything about modern Japan. That's common in all of this content, and points to a greater desire for change, whether via a new cooking tool or a "Japanese technique to overcome laziness." The Japan part is just flashy branding, going to a country that 84% of Americans view positively find attention-grabbing ideas for a never-ending stream of online content. And what do readers want? Self-help. Wherever they can get it. Telling them to slow down and look inside isn't nearly as catchy as offering them magical solutions from ancient Japan.

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英語 高校生

答えがなくて困っています。 よろしくお願いします!

Ⅰ 次の英単語で最も強く発音する部分(第一アクセント)を、 それぞれ記号で答えなさい。 1. un-der-stand 2. su-per-mar-ket 3. de-li-cious 4. el-e-va-tor 5. mu-se um アイウアイウ アイウェ アイウ アイウ Ⅱ 次の英文を読み、 設問に答えなさい。 If you are a woman, do you want to change your *surname ( ) you marry? Some people say that women should keep their surnames even after marriage. Do you @agree or disagree? ( The supporters of this opinion say that women have the right to keep their *identity. ) marriage, a woman becomes a member of her husband's family. So how about her own family? To give up her surname *means to give up her identity. If she has a *career and has gained a good reputation under her own name, she will lose her *achievements. Somebody from her Delementary school may try to find her, but it will be harder ( 3 ) she has changed her surname. If she *divorces, she will be embarrassed when she has to change her surname again. If she has children, they will be embarrassed as well. The *opponents of this opinion say that a family should be united under the same surname. the mother has a different surname, it will *confuse her children and *cause many troubles. ®People can recognize her and her children are a family if they all have the same surname. There are some countries) women don't change their surnames after marriage. Which do you think is better? () surname: identity: アイデンティティ mean : 意味する career: キャリア ( 職業 ) reputation: W achievement: ** divorce: 離婚する be embarrassed: 困惑する opponent: 反対者 confuse: 混乱させる cause: 引き起こす recognize: ~ だと認める 1. ( ①~④に入れるのに最も適した語をそれぞれ一つずつ選び、その記号で答えなさい。 (1 and during whom = when) Before 2 ( After 3 ( but 4 (which if who > As although > where 2. 下線部 AとBを日本語に訳しなさい。 If = Without) since) = how) 3. 下線部の名詞形と、ⓑの日本語の意味をそれぞれ答えなさい。 4. 以下の英文が本文の内容と一致していたら○を、一致していなければ×をつけなさい。 (1) Almost all women want to change their surnames after marriage in the world. (2) When you want to meet your friend from elementary school, it will be hard if she has a different surname after marriage. (3) People are not troubled even if a mother and her children have different surnames. (4) Some countries allow women to keep their surnames after marriage.

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

(A)の問題の(1)~(6)までの答えと訂正した回答を教えてほしいです。よろしくお願いします。

【4】 次の設問 (A), (B) に答えよ。 (配点 30> (A) 次の(1)~(6) の各英文には、下線部ア~エのいずれか1つに文法・語法に関して不 適切な あるいは文意を通らなくする箇所が含まれている。 その下線部の記号を記せ。 ア (1) It is estimated that the surface temperature of our planet has been risen by about half a degree Celsius, compared to a hundred years ago, and some scientists believe it's going to get warmer yet in the years to come. (2) In English-speaking cultures, children are often told to say "please" when asking for something. By so doing, they are more likely to be given イ permission than they do not. If they don't, their parents give them a hint, by asking them " What's the magic word?" Trying to forecast weather is incredibly complicated. Some scientists P believe that no matter how advanced science is, weather is impossible to イ predict it accurately, because there are too many random elements involved. (3) Inuits are a related group found in Alaska, and also in Canada and Greenland. They are thought to have spread into North America from Siberia many thousands years ago. In both the US and Britain these people are ウ often called Eskimos but the name Inuit is now preferred and is becoming more widely used. 5) The Cold War is a term for the political conflict between the capitalis countries of the West and the Communist countries of the East that begar 7 after World War II. Both sides had large military forces which were kep イ ready for war, and threatened at each other with nuclear weapons. I

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