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数学 高校生

英語が苦手でさっぱり分からないです。 なぜこの、runと言う意味が、運営されてなのかが分からないです。なぜこのように訳できるのでしょうか?

43 副詞節で省略される many 次の英文の下部を訳しなさい which are connected with the "dailies," though not run by the In Britain there are a number of Sunday newspapers, same editor and staff. The Sunday papers are larger than the daily/ papers and usually contain a greater proportion of articles concerned with comment and general information rather than (駒沢大) news. 英語は「節約の言語」です。 共通関係を駆使した英文構成もその1つですし、 法 語句の省略も技法の1つです。この課では、時・条件・譲歩などの副詞節の中 で 〈S + be 動詞〉 が省略されているのを見抜くのがポイントです。 に注目してください。 まず, 第1文の関係詞節中に組み込まれた though not run 後に by 〜が続いていますから、明らかに run は過去分詞です。とすると,接続詞 though の後に 〈S + be + run) と続くと節の形が整いますね。 いろいろ 新聞の日曜版が (In Britain), there are a number of Sunday newspapers, (Vi (FB) (先) M ~とつながりがある 日新聞 [many (of which) are connected (with the dailies"), s(ft) (代) V (受) M [though they S 運営されてによって 日刊と同じ編集長 are not run (by the same editor and staff)]]. V (過分) M (S+ be 省略

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英語 高校生

2枚目の画像の赤線部分の 「A man that had his life enter the twists and turns that occur in all our lives, but in his case, the road stopped much too ... 続きを読む

次の英文を読んで, a~ f の 2 ]内の語(句) を正しく並べ替え, 本文中の 【 (1) 】 ~ 【(6) 】の適切な場所に入れなさい。 (a,bなどの記号は書かず,並べ替えた英文を記入するこ と) My first real job. Thirteen years since high school in training, in hospitals, in books. All of a sudden at 8 a.m. tomorrow morning I would suddenly become Dr. Dhillon. Time to heal and fix. I began my first real posting as a rural physician in a small town in rural Saskatchewan. A beautiful little hospital, staff happy to see a young doctor in town, and the welcoming red and green of the local Co-op sign. The day began innocuously enough: morning rounds at the hospital, learning about all the patients who had been handed over to my care for the next two weeks; trying to decipher other physicians' illegible writing and promising to never let mine get that bad, and failing quickly at that. C "Hello, good morning. My name is Dr. Dhillon and 【 (1) little while until your doctor is back." With a vague idea of what was actually happening inside each patient's body, and not a clue what was happening in their minds, I popped in from room to room as 【 (2) 】 of things to check and recheck after the morning ward round was done.//Thankfully, the nurses were there to handle any miscues and give me a vital, two-to-three-sentence summary of the patient and any concerns before entering into their realm with a quick knock on a half-opened door. When I got to the last patient I was to see that morning, I found his door was closed. It was at the back corner of the hospital. It was darker. "This is Gary, he's dying." The nurse's tone of voice lowered, naturally, to the level we use when discussing death, just in case death was nearby and would hear and come hither to hasten the process. "Metastatic, it was too late when he came in. Really sad story. He's still so young." She continued. I gently knocked, lighter, more gently 【 (3) 】 a gall-bladder attack whom I had just chatted to. "Hello Gary, how are you this morning?" is what I said. "Hello, who are you?" he asked. "My name is Paul and I'll be your doctor until your normal doctor comes back." I couldn't bear to say I was Dr. Dhillon. What was I going to doctor in his case? "I'm leaving on Tuesday. Next week. To be closer to home," he said. "That's great, so that's something to look forward to then." Inside, I wondered, Was that

解決済み 回答数: 3