• ベストアンサー

英文を訳してください。

一部を取り出したので、難しいかもしれませんが。以下の二文をお願いします。 Even though the first Indian restaurant in Britain only opened as late as 1953. 特にonlyとas late asは何と訳しますか? Dr Jane Pryer commented that the British attitude to diet is worrying. 特に自動詞としてのworryを何と訳しますか?

  • 英語
  • 回答数4
  • ありがとう数4

質問者が選んだベストアンサー

  • ベストアンサー
  • SPS700
  • ベストアンサー率46% (15295/33014)
回答No.4

1。とは言えイギリスで、やっとインド料理のレストランができたのは、たった1953年という最近の話である。  しかし、ようやくイギリスで最初のインド料理店の開店に漕ぎつけるには、延々1953年まで待たければならなかった。 2。ジェイン・プライヤー博士は、食事に対するイギリス人の態度は、憂慮に値するといった。

kenji0730
質問者

お礼

ありがとうございました。!(^^)!

その他の回答 (3)

  • Nakay702
  • ベストアンサー率80% (9712/12079)
回答No.3

「補足コメント」を拝見しました。 >Dr Jane Pryer is worryingならば分かりますが、 >the British attitude to diet is worrying.でも、そう訳しますか? ⇒はい、そう訳せます。 >is worryingの主語はthe British attitude to diet になりませんか? ⇒確かに、is worryingの主語はthe British attitude to dietです。 worryingは形容詞で、「面倒な、厄介な、悩ませる、心配させる」という意味ですから、この部分を直訳すれば、「英国人のダイエットに対する態度が(人を)心配させる/心配になる/心配される/気になる」といった感じになります。

kenji0730
質問者

お礼

ありがとうございました。!(^^)!

回答No.2

1953年になってやっと ※「オープンが遅かった」という気持ちが伝わるように訳します。 「困ったもんだ」「心配だ」 ※ attitude が主語の形をとっていますが、Dr Jane Pryer の気持ちを言っています。

kenji0730
質問者

お礼

ありがとうございました。!(^^)!

  • Nakay702
  • ベストアンサー率80% (9712/12079)
回答No.1

以下のとおりお答えします。 >Even though the first Indian restaurant in Britain only opened as late as 1953. ⇒「英国で最初のインド料理店は1953年という遅い時期になってやっと/ようやく/はじめてオープンしたのですが」。 >特にonlyとas late asは何と訳しますか? ⇒only「やっと、ようやく」、as late as ~「~という遅い時期になって」のように訳せばいいと思います。 >Dr Jane Pryer commented that the British attitude to diet is worrying. ⇒「ジェーン・プレィヤー博士は、英国人のダイエット(食事/節食)に対する態度が心配だとコメントした」。 >特に自動詞としてのworryを何と訳しますか? ⇒worryは「心配する」ですから、is worryingは「心配している/心配される(こと)である」のように訳せばいいと思います。

kenji0730
質問者

お礼

ありがとうございました。!(^^)!

kenji0730
質問者

補足

Dr Jane Pryer is worryingならば分かりますが、 the British attitude to diet is worrying.でも、そう訳しますか? is worryingの主語はthe British attitude to diet になりませんか?

関連するQ&A

  • 英文翻訳をお願いします。

    Germany attempted to use Indian nationalism and pan-Islamism to its advantage. She tried instigating uprisings in India, and sent a mission to Afghanistan urging her to join the war on the side of Central powers. However, contrary to British fears of a revolt in India, the outbreak of the war saw an unprecedented outpouring of loyalty and goodwill towards Britain. Indian political leaders from the Indian National Congress and other groups were eager to support the British war effort, since they believed that strong support for the war effort would further the cause of Indian Home Rule.[citation needed] The Indian Army in fact outnumbered the British Army at the beginning of the war; about 1.3 million Indian soldiers and labourers served in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, while the central government and the princely states sent large supplies of food, money, and ammunition. In all, 140,000 men served on the Western Front and nearly 700,000 in the Middle East. Casualties of Indian soldiers totalled 47,746 killed and 65,126 wounded during World War I. The suffering engendered by the war, as well as the failure of the British government to grant self-government to India after the end of hostilities, bred disillusionment and fuelled the campaign for full independence that would be led by Mohandas K. Gandhi and others.

  • 英文を日本語訳して下さい。

    Prior to arriving in theater, Meerut Division had briefly refit in Egypt after being withdrawn from France. Although prized by I.E.F. "D" as a veteran formation, the Meerut Division's experienced had come at a high price. As part of Indian Expeditionary Force A, later re-designated as the Indian Corps, the Meerut Division had arrived in France in September 1914, participating in the Battle of La Bassée, Battle of Neuve Chapelle, Battle of Aubers, and Battle of Loos. By December 1915, the division has suffered heavy casualties among the sepoys and their British officers. The Indian Army's reserve system, never fully developed before the war, was overtaxed trying to resupply the division's battalions with fresh, trained sepoys. Even more difficult was the problem of finding replacement officers to command the Indian troops. Since the Sepoy Mutiny, British policy had been to ensure that senior officers of an Indian Army unit would always be British. Only European Britons could hold positions as company commanders, adjutants, quartermasters, and battalion commanders. However, not any British officer would be effective commanding the Indian troops. It took time to teach language and cultural skills necessary to deal with the various castes, religions, and ethnicities that made up the Indian Army.

  • 英文を日本語訳して下さい。

    Involving some 250 ships and 100,000 men, this battle off Denmark’s North Sea coast was the only major naval surface engagement of World War I. The battle began in the afternoon of May 31, 1916, with gunfire between the German and British scouting forces. When the main warships met, British Admiral John Jellicoe maneuvered his boats to take advantage of the fading daylight, scoring dozens of direct hits that eventually forced German Admiral Reinhard Scheer into retreat. Both sides claimed victory in this indecisive battle, though Britain retained control of the North Sea.

  • 英文翻訳をお願いします。

    Hindenburg and Ludendorff forced a return to the policy of unrestricted submarine warfare on 9 January 1917 and engineered the dismissal of the Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg and other opponents of the policy the next day. The policy was to resume on 1 February, with the intention of sinking 600,000 long tons (610,000 t) of shipping per month and knocking Britain out of the war in 5–12 months. Optimistic claims by the navy were less important to the decision, than the "desperate" position of the western armies and the decrepitude of Germany's allies. Another front in the west was to be opened by the resumption of air attacks on Britain. New aircraft had become available to replace airships, which had become too vulnerable to British counter-measures in 1916. Planning began in late 1916 and Operation Türkenkreutz began in May 1917. As part of the defensive strategy for the Western Front, five defensive positions were planned to form the basis of the Abwehrschlacht (defensive battle) expected in 1917.

  • 以下の英文を訳して下さい。

    Not only was it problematic finding qualified British officers to command the companies and battalions of the Indian Army, there was also a shortage of trained Indians to be granted a Viceroy's Commission. Viceroy Commissioned Officers occupied a unique position between the junior British officers and the senior non-commissioned officers. During its year in France, the VCO's of the Meerut had also suffered heavy casualties. Prior to the war, when most operations of the Indian Army were along the North-West Frontier, there had never been a need to quickly produce VCOs. Consequently, those who were promoted to the rank of VCO was typically a long service soldier of many years of experience. With the heavy casualties of France, the system had not yet caught up to the realities of the new type of war they were fighting. Confronted with a type of war they had never expected to be a part of, morale among the Indian troops plummeted. As an added insult, when the Meerut and Lahore Divisions were withdrawn from France, they ceased receiving combat pay, even though they were being shipped Egypt, under threat from Ottoman force, and then to Mesopotamia, to actively take part in an offensive.

  • 英文翻訳をお願いします。

    Comparatively, the Indian units were even more ill-equipped for modern war than the rest of troops of Britain's empire. Indian divisions had less artillery assigned to it. At the start of the war, an Indian Division had one brigade of artillery, as opposed to the three assigned to a British European division. What artillery that an Indian division did have was typically lighter, more suited for expeditions along the North-West Frontier. Its troops were deliberately kept a generation behind in infantry weaponry. During their time in France, the Indian Corps divisions had been brought up to date with the latest weaponry, including flare guns and bombs. However, when withdrawn from France, most of this equipment was left behind in France for their replacements to use. To manage the fighting of this ad-hoc unit, Aylmer had almost no staff support. His staff for the relief force, designated as Tigris Corps, consisted of one staff officer, one wounded officer, and one brigadier who had failed to finish the Quetta Staff College. In addition to this staff, his collection of brigades would be under the command of the Major-General Sir George Younghusband, GOC of the 7th (Meerut) Division, who was without his staff. Just after the new year, Aylmer's ordered his force to move upriver from Ali Gharbi.

  • 以下の英文を訳して下さい。

    Comparatively, the Indian units were even more ill-equipped for modern war than the rest of troops of Britain's empire. Indian divisions had less artillery assigned to it. At the start of the war, an Indian Division had one brigade of artillery, as opposed to the three assigned to a British European division. What artillery that an Indian division did have was typically lighter, more suited for expeditions along the North-West Frontier. Its troops were deliberately kept a generation behind in infantry weaponry. During their time in France, the Indian Corps divisions had been brought up to date with the latest weaponry, including flare guns and bombs. However, when withdrawn from France, most of this equipment was left behind in France for their replacements to use. To manage the fighting of this ad-hoc unit, Aylmer had almost no staff support. His staff for the relief force, designated as Tigris Corps, consisted of one staff officer, one wounded officer, and one brigadier who had failed to finish the Quetta Staff College. In addition to this staff, his collection of brigades would be under the command of the Major-General Sir George Younghusband, GOC of the 7th (Meerut) Division, who was without his staff. Just after the new year, Aylmer's ordered his force to move upriver from Ali Gharbi.

  • 訳はこれでよろしいですか。

    下にも質問した者ですが、書ききれなかったので新しく質問しました。よろしくお願いします。 It world be difficult now to imagine Britain except as a multicultural society. The richness and diversity of having so many different peoples is taken for granted. For example, Britain now has over one million Muslims, mainly from the Indian and Pakistani communities. Whereas just after the war there were only a handful of Indian restaurants, they are now the most popular places for British people to eat out. The biggest street festival in Britain is the Notting Hill Carnival held each August in London. It is a great celebration of West Indian music and dancing. 自分なりに訳してみました。 それ、世界、多文化的な社会としての場合以外は英国を想像するのに今困難です。同数の異なる民族を持っている豊富および多様性が当然と思われます。例えば、英国は今主としてインドとパキスタンのコミュニティーから、100万人以上のイスラム教徒を持っています。戦争直後に、わずかに1握りのインドのレストランがありましたが、それらは今英国民が外食するべき最もポピュラーな場所です。英国で最も大きな通りフェスティバルは各8月にロンドンで保持されるノッティング・ヒル・カーニヴァルです。それは西インド諸島の音楽の大きな祝賀およびダンスです。よろしくお願いします。本当にすみません。

  • 英文翻訳をお願いします。

    In Britain, an Offensive sub-committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence was appointed on 5 August and established a principle that command of the seas was to be ensured and that objectives were considered only if they could be attained with local forces and if the objective assisted the priority of maintaining British sea communications, as British army garrisons abroad were returned to Europe in an "Imperial Concentration". Attacks on German coaling stations and wireless stations were considered to be important to clear the seas of German commerce raiders. Objectives at Tsingtau in the Far East and Luderitz Bay, Windhoek, Duala and Dar-es-Salaam in Africa and a German wireless station in Togoland, next to the British colony of Gold Coast in the Gulf of Guinea, were considered vulnerable to attack by local or allied forces.

  • 英文を訳して下さい。

    Unternehmen Strandfest (Operation Beach Party) began with a German artillery bombardment on 6 July, though not of an intensity sufficient to suggest an attack. The dawn of 9 July was wet and stormy, so Strandfest was postponed for 24 hours at 6:10 a.m., about two hours before zero hour. The next day was overcast, with a strong wind and the bombardment increased at 5:30 a.m. The British floating bridges near the coast were destroyed and near Nieuport, only one bridge and the lock-bridge remained intact. By 10:15 a.m., telephone and wireless contact with the British front was lost. The shelling was heaviest from the Geleide Brook to the coast, held by the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division and by 11:00 a.m., the two British battalions had been cut off. Before noon all the German artillery and mortars began firing, except for twenty-minute periods at 2:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. for observation. The breastworks on the British side were only 7 ft (2.1 m) high and 3 ft (0.91 m) thick and collapsed immediately. Sand clogged the defenders' rifles and machine-guns and the Germans used Yellow Cross (mustard gas) and Blue Cross gas shells for the first time, mainly for counter-battery fire, which reduced the British artillery to a "feeble" reply. German aircraft made low-altitude strafing attacks and by late afternoon, the British troops on the west bank of the Yser were pinned down. The British artillery defence plan was implemented, with one-hour bombardments of German trench lines at 9:30 a.m., 11:25 a.m. and 2:10 p.m., which were ineffective against German concrete shelters. The German artillery had a 3:1 advantage in numbers and to conceal their presence, many British guns had not registered, only 153 coming into action.