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英語 高校生

日本語訳をお願いしたいです!!お願いします

次の英文を読んで、設問に答えなさい。 Everybody wants to eat delicious and safe food. However, exposure to different cultures reveals 2 how people's attitudes towards food safety and taste are not all innate or biological. Assumptions and practices regarding the preparation and presentation of food highlight the influence of culture on what and how people eat. For example, in one culture, some kinds of fresh ingredients might be considered edible (a), that is, without any kind of preparation like washing, peeling or heating. Yet in another culture, the same foodstuff may require some kind of preparation before it can be eaten. It is often difficult for people from the same culture to view such activities and beliefs objectively, and so witnessing the food practices of other cultures can be surprising. Sashimi is a great example of this. While sashimi may be the result of several steps of preparation from cleaning and cutting, to a particular style of presentation - heating is not one of these steps. (2)Japanese consumers take it for granted Cultures, the conventional belief may be that real and fish require some sort of cooking, such as baking or frying, (3) in order (b) them to be considered edible. In these cultures, sashimi is not thought of as raw, delicious and safe to eat, but rather as uncooked, and therefore possibly unsafe to eat, regardless of how it may taste. Fresh chicken eggs are another raw foodstuff commonly eaten in Japan — as a topping for rice, or as a dipping sauce for sukiyaki, for example but most people in the UK or the USA believe that chicken eggs require some kind of heating before they are fit for human consumption. However, the ways in which people from other cultural backgrounds eat certain foods might be considered equally unconventional by many Japanese. For example, few Japanese would eat the skin of apples or grapes. In this case, the difference involved in the preparation of the food is not the use of heat, but the removal of part of the foodstuff. People in much of the world eat apples and grapes without peeling them. A European might think, What could be more healthy and delicious than picking an apple from the tree and eating it?' But this way of thinking is not shared by a large number of Japanese. (4) It is clear that different cultures have different conventions regarding the preparation of particular foods, and different beliefs about what is considered delicious. However, there is no question that some common food preparation practices - or sometimes a lack of certain food preparation processes - are unsafe from a scientific point of view. However delicious they may be, raw meat and fish can contain the eggs of harmful parasites like tapeworms, which are often undetectable. If chicken eggs are not properly stored, and are left unconsumed for a long time, they can easily produce bacteria like salmonella. The poisoning caused by salmonella does not usually require hospitalization, but it can be very dangerous for young children and elderly people. In addition, while eating the skin of apples and grapes may be a good source of dietary fiber, one also runs the risk of consuming insecticides, the poisons that are used to protect many non-organically farmed fruits from insects. So, while there may be 'no accounting for taste' beyond culture, safety is a different issue, and (5) we should always be aware of the risks involved with culturally accepted methods of food production and consumption. 問1 下線部 (1)で,空欄 ( a )に入る最も適切な語句を, (A)~(D)から選び, 記号で答えなさい。 (A) as is clear (B) as is fresh (C) as they are (D) as unclean 問2 問3 問4 問5 下線部(2)を日本語に訳しなさい。 下線部 (3)の空欄(b)に入る語(1語) を書きなさい。 下線部(4) を日本語に訳しなさい。 下線部 (5)の理由として最も適切なものを, (A)~(D) から選び,記号で答えなさい。 (A) Eating raw chicken eggs or unpeeled fruits can be dangerous in certain conditions because of harmful bacteria or pesticides. (B) Eating unpeeled apples or grapes may cause weight gain. (C) Only young children and elderly people are vulnerable to particular bacteria. (D) Beliefs about what is considered delicious actually come from better understanding of food preparation. 問6 本文の内容と一致するものを, (A)~(G)から3つ選び,記号で答えなさい。 (A) By food preparation processes, the author exclusively means the use of heat. (B) Culturally established ways of consuming food may conflict with scientific principles of food safety. (C) In some food cultures outside Japan, fish in its raw state is not categorized as an edible foodstuff. (D) People having little contact with other cultures tend to view their own food-related conventions as natural and standard. (E) Repeated exercise is required for the mastery of any food preparation. (F) Instinct alone determines what and how people eat. (G) All cultures around the world consider it natural to eat unpeeled fruit.

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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

この問題の答えを教えてください🙇‍♀️

【IV】 次の(A), (B)の設問に答えよ。 ((A)11点,(B)6点) (A) 次の英文を読んで、 下の設問に最も適切な解答をせよ。 選択式の設問は記号 (アイウエ・・・) を1つ選んで答えること。 A World Bank report recently released suggests climate change could, force 216 million people across six regions to migrate within their countries in the next 30 years, with ""hotspots" emerging within the next nine years ( 2 ) urgent steps are taken. ) urgent steps are taken.numputė, valab The "Groundswell Part 2" report examines how climate change is a powerful driver of migration within a nation because of its impact on people's livelihoods through droughts, rising sea levels, crop failures and other climate-related conditions. The original Groundswell climate. report was published in 2018 and detailed projections and analysis for three world regions: sub- Saharan Africa, South Asia and Latin America. "Groundswell 2" conducted similar studies on East Asia and the Pacific, North Africa, and eastern Europe and Central Asia. Both studies established different scenarios to explore potential future outcomes and identify internal climate in- and out- migration hotspots in each region that is, the areas from which people are expected to move, and the areas to which they might go. The study suggests that by 2050, sub-Saharan Africa could see as many as 86 million internal climate migrants; East Asia and the Pacific, 49 million; South Asia, 40 million; North Africa, 19 million; Latin America, 17 million; and eastern Europe and Central Asia, 5 million. To slow the factors driving climate migration and avoid these worst-case outcomes, the report recommends a series of steps world leaders can take, including reducing global emissions (4) the goals established by the Paris 2015 climate agreement, and taking steps to better understand the drivers of internal climate migration, so appropriate policies to address them can be developed. (注)* hotspot: 自然破壊が進み, 危機に瀕している地域 -2/ Which of the following has the closest meaning to", force"? to talk someone out of doing something to keep someone from doing something to tell a lie I to make someone move 2 Put the best one into blank 2. 7 unless イ 1 ア イ once when I if ウ 3 Which of the following has the closest meaning to "3 a powerful driver"? ア a good person who drives a truckgran amma di kaill) a tool to fix some furniture I 0811 a strong power that causes something to happen a condition which causes climate change 4 Put the best one into blank 4. Pin line with イ I on behalf of in spite of even though

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英語 高校生

考えても全くわからなかったので答えを教えて欲しいです 長文でごめんなさい泣

13 CLIMATE ACTION Reading 目標→20分 12 速読問題次の英文を2.5分で読んで, 1. の問いに答えなさい。 寄のチ 間問間さ文 uA third of the global population- -3.5 billion people could be living in temperatures spibega vipg ai AU gd山,ni 1prirpw snit sausn,,f inhospitable to human life in the next 50 vears because of climate change, according to a iesw orb toib9tq n6 otzus recent study. The study, conducted by a team of five scientists and published by the National Academy of Sciences, found that most humans , have lived in places with an average コ5 W nL J19gm 5- annual temperature between 51 and 59 degrees F(about 11℃ and 15℃). By 2070, billions Could be living in a climate currently found only in a select few places, like (3 Mecca in Saudi Arabia, where the average temperature is 86 F(30℃). anibs9f bigs If current trends continue, more than 1 billion people in India, 500 million in Nigeria, and 100 woH 29mibliud Iist 1o Jol s 916 919) 19dw yio gid s ai enoqsgni2 million in the Niger and Sudan regions will be living with an average annual temperature of 84 G DIE 2991 T0 DS 2 10 F(29℃), according to Tim Lenton, Professor of Climate Change and Earth Systems Science at 1SV the University of Exeter. That temperature is usually only seen in the Sahara Desert today, dTson s ofuo o T6noe19glsme Lin dw but it could cover 19 percent of the planet in 2070. Two 9un 9W9 9W 16 21in u0. 1egagggaib ou The new study does not estimate how many people will leave their home countries in search 7ar」 lama wodl of cooler climates. However, in 1990, *the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had V9wollsm2 s egiibnuoriua lsuisa vil T w bialei lleme hemile,odt this could be the greatest impact of climate change. Human migration is 2u bnuoss extremely difficult to predict and responds to many factors other than heat alone, Lenton said 15 stated that Still. he said his findings show that billions of people will be facing (5Conditions that could mush ddormoa sVed 1on ob them to leave their present homes. (259 words) noitossih bis.odt.ni onion 0 CLL)onptpe bpu-0 14 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change :気候変動に関する政府間パネル unata stsmilo antnavetg lo sibbim-aitt nt u ro 2obGuusrc Gpane

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