reading 구문 해설 lesson 12. 내용 일치 수능길잡이 pp. 72~76 1
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Reading 구문 해설Lesson 12. 내용 일치
수능길잡이 pp. 72~76
1
2
※ 도치 (p.70-71)
1. 부정어구 (never, little, not only, not until,
no sooner, scarcely, hardly 등 ) / only
+ 부사 [ 구 , 절 ]+ 조동사 + 주어 + 본동사
- Not until the early years of the 19th
century did man know what heat is.
- Only after I read the text over again did I
know its main idea.
3
※ 도치 (p.70-71)
2. 위치 [ 장소 , 이동 ] 의 부사 [ 구 ] + 동사 +
주어
Down came the plane at the low speed.
3. 보어 ( 강조 ) + 동사 + 주어
So shallow is the lake that no fish can live
in it.
4
1. This map indicates where did the
earthquake occur / the earthquake
occurred.
2. So important speed is / is speed to the
survival of the gazelle that nature has
endowed it with swiftness from the
moment it is born.
3. Not only they could / could they see
nothing in front of them, but they were
tired and ill and could not walk any more.
the earthquake oc-curred
is speed
could they
※ 도치 (p.70-71)
5
CARE was founded in the mid-1940s in
both the USA and Canada / following
World War II / to help war victims in
Europe or Japan. When aid was no
longer needed in Europe or Japan,
CARE's focus shifted to the developing
world.
Example 1 (p.72)
설립되었다 ( 수동태 )
수동태
CARE = Cooperative for Assis-tance and Relief Everywhere
6
With operations in 70 developing
countries, CARE is one of the world's
largest humanitarian organizations,
headquartered in Brussels,
Belgium. Each of its 12 national
member organizations is an
autonomous NGO [organized under the
laws of its own country].
Example 1 (p.72)
S
V
7
All of CARE International's member
organizations share a common
commitment to [fighting poverty and
protecting and enhancing human
dignity]. Its long-term development
assistance and emergency relief works
are currently benefiting about 55
million people around the world.
Example 1 (p.72)
~ 에 의 헌 신 ( 전 치사 )
혜택을 주다
8
※ Topic
☞ CARE, the major
international humanitarian
organization
Example 1 (p.72)
9
Judith Ortiz Cofer was born in a small
town in Puerto Rico. When she was a
young child her father's military career
took the family to Paterson, New Jersey
in America and again to Augusta,
Georgia, [where she eventually earned
a BA in English from Augusta College].
Example 2 (p.73)
= and there
Bachelor of Arts ( 문 학 학사 )
10
She later earned an MA in English from
Florida Atlantic University and did
graduate work at Oxford University.
Although she is best known for her works
of creative nonfiction, she began her
writing career with poetry. Her early
immersion (in both Puerto Rican and
American culture) has shaped her multi-
genre approach.
Example 2 (p.73)
병렬 연결
S
V
11
Her work The Latin Deli, (which was
nominated for a Pulitzer Prize), explores
various genres, combining poetry, short
story, and personal narrative. She is also
an author of children’s books. In 2010,
she was inducted into the Georgia
Writers Hall of Fame.
Example 2 (p.73)
S
V
~ 결합하여
12
※ Topic
☞ The female author, Judith
Ortiz Cofer
Example 2 (p.73)
13
Wangari Maathai, the Kenyan woman
[who won the Nobel Peace Prize in
2004] was trained as a biologist, but
she went on to work with problems of
the environment, economics, politics,
discrimination, and peace.
Let’s Practice 1 (p.74)
S
V
14
In 1997 she started an organization
[primarily made up of women], called
the "Green Belt Movement," / to help
solve environmental and poverty
problems. Since then, her group has
planted more than 30 million trees.
Let’s Practice 1 (p.74)
~ 라고 불리는
15
This has helped not only to restore the
environment but also to support
people's lives / by providing wood for
fuel and by creating strong
communities. She had to fight against
corrupt political leaders [who opposed
her work]. She was arrested numerous
times and beaten by the police. Yet, she
continued to unite people.
Let’s Practice 1 (p.74)
16
※ Topic
☞ the winner of the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2004, Wangari
Maathai
Let’s Practice 1 (p.74)
17
The fully-grown octopus lives in the deep
ocean and the only time [it comes to
shallow water] is during the breeding
season. The female, larger than the male,
finds a quiet place in a cave and lays long
strings of eggs, some of (A) them / which
are the size of a man's thumb, like ropes
with knots [that hang from the rocks].
Let’s Practice 2 (p.74)
S V1
V2which
18
Both parents wait until the babies hatch,
approximately two months. Then the
young octopuses go straight to the
surface, play around the rocks and lie
along the shore. When they are three or
four months old, they begin to go down
below.
Let’s Practice 2 (p.74)
19
When they reach full size, they live in the
deep ocean - but, of course, not below
the level (B) which / where there is
abundant food.
Let’s Practice 2 (p.74)
where
20
※ Topic
☞ the characteristics of
octopuses
Let’s Practice 2 (p.74)
21
A speaker stood before a group
of alcoholics, determined to
demonstrate to them [that
alcohol was an evil beyond
compare].
Let’s Practice 3 (p.75)
22
The graph above shows the proven oil
reserves and production in five major
countries in the Western Hemisphere in
2011. ① Venezuela had the largest
proven oil reserve, which was 211.2
billion barrels, but it produced the least
oil among the five countries.
Let’s Practice 3 (p.75)
23
② Canada ranked second in both
proven oil reserves and production.
③ The United States had the third
largest proven oil reserve, but it
had the biggest oil production,
which was 10.1 million barrels per
day.
Let’s Practice 3 (p.75)
24
④ The oil production of the United
States was over four times
bigger than that of Brazil. ⑤
Mexico had the smallest proven oil
reserve, but its production was
bigger than that of Venezuela.
Let’s Practice 3 (p.75)
10.1
3.0
25
※ Topic
☞ Western Hemisphere’s Proven
Oil Reserves and Production
☞ Except for the United States, the
oil production of each of the other
countries was than
4 million barrels a day.
Let’s Practice 3 (p.75)
less (s-maller)
26
A study by the Animal Medicine Center
in New York has confirmed [that cats
do indeed ① manage to right
themselves during a fall from a
building]. Doctors (in the New York
veterinary hospital) looked at 132 cats
[② that fell from tall buildings, from
the second to the thirty-second floor].
Grammar in Context (p.76)
V
S
27
Astonishingly, 90 percent of the cats
[that fell from these heights] survived,
and almost two-thirds of ③ them
required no medical treatment. Cats
survive these incredible falls / because
they turn their legs downward and
extend their limbs outward, essentially
④ assuming a flying or gliding
position.
Grammar in Context (p.76)
V
S
~ 를 취 하 며 ( 동 시 상황 )
28
This prevents them from tumbling
head over heels through the air while
falling and ⑤ save them from hitting
the ground head first.
Grammar in Context (p.76)
saves
29
※ Topic
☞ cats which survived falling from
a building
Let’s Practice 3 (p.76)
30
Thank You!
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