山东师范大学翻译讲义
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笔译(一)第一讲翻译概论Some suggestions1. Students are expected to keep on improving language competence both in their English and Chinese so that they can be fit for the work of translation;2. Students are expected to cultivate a sense of bi-culture involved in translation and observe similarities and difference between two languages in lexicology, syntax, discourse.3. Students are expected to read and study translation works by well-known translators, and to have a lot of exposure to both SL (源语) and TL(目的语).4. Students are expected to do ample translation practice to improve translation ability and try to apply translation theory to practice.5. Students are expected to read extensively after class to get ample knowledge in different fields. General knowledge is of vital importance.6. Discuss with your classmates and teachers.7. Summarize and make a frequent reflection.8. Be patient and careful.The Story of Babel 巴别塔的故事那时,诺亚的后代都使用同一种语言。
2015年山东师范大学外国语学院711基础英语考研真题及详解一、翻译(共60分)1)英译汉(30分)Last night, the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize was awarded to Aharon Appelfeld’s novel “Blooms of Darkness” at a ceremony in London. It was a night for the winner, but also for small publishing houses, which had published five of the six novels on the shortlist, including Appelfeld’s (Umberto Eco’s “The Prague Cemetery”,published by Harvill Secker, an imprint of Random House, was the exception). The prize proved, yet again, how much we need these publishers. Independents have given us everything from the multimillion-selling “Millennium Trilogy” by Stieg Larsson,published by the MacLehose Press, to last night’s winner, about moments of hope amid the terrors of the Holocaust, published by Alma Books.It was also a night for translators. The prize is one of the very few occasions when authors share the spotlight and the prize-money equally with their translators, whose reward doesn’t often extend beyond a tiny sum of money for their work and a small credit on a book’s title page.【参考译文】昨晚,在伦敦举行的独立报外国小说奖颁奖仪式上,Aharon Appelfeld的小说《黑暗之花》获奖。
2013山东师范大学翻译硕士MTI(回忆版)话说俺媳妇和俺一起考研,考试前和俺媳妇一起约好无论如何一定要把考试题给大家弄出来,回馈大家。
不管考得怎么样,先发题啦!为俺媳妇攒人品!话不多说,上题!翻译基础一,短语翻译grain reservefederal reserve bankCODforeign exchange reservearbitration commissionIMFOPECinaugration ceremonyenvironmental degredationport dutsfurded debtdynamic equivalencelegal inheritancecosmopolitan citycash chops市场准入自然保护区对口支援以人为本公务员自筹经费大众传媒上市公司风险评估政府采购认知能力剩余劳动力资产负债表宏观调控基础设施二,段落翻译Text1We are inveterate spectators. Large fractions of our lives are spent watching peopleacting, competing, working, performing, or just simply relaxing. Nor is our interest confinedto the human spectacle. We are captivated by 'things' as well: pictures, sculptures,photographs of past experiences--all have the power to capture our attention. And, if wecan't watch real life, then we are drawn into the virtual worlds of the cinema, televisionpictures, and videos. You may even find yourself reading a book.While some people are skilled in the creation of interesting sights and sounds, others aretrained observers. They seek out unusual sights, or register events that most of us wouldnever notice. Some, with the help of artificial sensors, delve deeper and range farther thanour unaided senses allow. Out of these sensations has emerged an embroidery of artisticactivities that are uniquely human. But, paradoxically, from the same source has flowed asystematic study of Nature that we call science. Their common origins may seem surprising to many, because a great gulf seems to lie between them, shored up by our educational systems and prejudices. The sciences paint an impersonal and objective account of the world, deliberately devoid of 'meaning', telling us about the origins and mechanics of life, by revealing nothing of the joys and sorrows of living. By contrast, the creative arts encodethe antithesis of the scientific world-view: an untrammelled celebration of that human subjectivity that divides us from the beasts; a unique expression of the human mind that sets it apart from the unfeeling whirl of electrons and galaxies that scientists assure us is the way of the world.我们生来就是看客,一生的大部分时间在看别人怎么做事,瞧着别人竞争、工作、表演,甚至看别人休闲。
本门课程要求:1. 期末卷面考试成绩占80%,平时成绩占20%;2. 平时成绩由出勤、作业、课堂测验、课堂表现构成;3. 一学期不定期点名六次,缺课一次期末卷面成绩扣5分(迟到三次相当于缺课一次),累计6次缺课者取消考试资格;4. 一学期可以请假三次(短信或电话),请在上课前十分钟请假,事后请假无效;5. 上考研班、病假、事假均需提供相关证明且需事先经过老师本人同意;上考研班者请提供上课证,病假者请提供医院开具的医疗证明,事假者请提供系部盖有公章的事假条;6. 本课程期末考试不划重点;7. 未经允许拷贝老师带答案课件者、迟到早退缺乏礼貌报告者,酌情扣分。
8. 严格按课程要求执行,谢绝一切说情或求情;9. 对于本课程或本人教学和工作有任何建议或意见,欢迎致电本人或发邮件至rg.peng@。
10. 祝学习、生活愉快。
《英汉双语翻译理论与实践》参考书目(迷你版):[1]陈宏薇、李亚丹. 新编汉英翻译教程(第二版)上外教, 2010年[2]邓炎昌、刘润清. 语言与文化. 外语教学与研究出版社, 1989.[3]古今明. 英汉翻译基础. 上海外语教育出版社,1997年版[4]华先发、邵毅. 新编大学英译汉教程. 上外教出版社,2004年版[5]柯平. 英汉与汉英翻译教程. 北京大学出版社,1993.[6]李长栓. 非文学翻译理论与实践. 中国对外翻译出版公司, 2004.[7]李运兴. 英汉语篇翻译(第二版). 清华大学出版社, 2003.[8]连淑能. 英汉对比研究. 高等教育出版社, 1993.[9]吕瑞昌等编著. 汉英翻译教程. 陕西人民出版社,1983.[10]邵志洪. 汉英对比翻译导论. 华东理工大学出版社, 2005.[11]孙致礼. 新编英汉翻译教程. 上海外语教育出版社, 2003.[12]叶子南. 高级英汉翻译理论与实践. 清华大学出版社,2001.[13]余光中. 余光中谈翻译. 中国对外翻译出版公司, 2002.[14]张培基. 英汉翻译教程. 上海外语教育出版社, 1983.英汉翻译讲义Instructor: Mr. Peng第一章翻译的性质、标准及过程1.1 “翻译”古今称呼之由来。
育明教育【温馨提示】现在很多小机构虚假宣传,育明教育咨询部建议考生一定要实地考察,并一定要查看其营业执照,或者登录工商局网站查看企业信息。
目前,众多小机构经常会非常不负责任的给考生推荐北大、清华、北外等名校,希望广大考生在选择院校和专业的时候,一定要慎重、最好是咨询有丰富经验的考研咨询师!militate for影响minimum capital for incorporation最低注册资本额minimum capital requirement最低资本要求minimum capital最低资本minimum income guarantee最低所得保障minimum purchase pricing最低购买价格minimum standards最低标准ministries and commissions部委Ministry of Civil Affairs民政部★Ministry of Commerce商务部Ministry of Education教育部Ministry of Finance财政部Ministry of Forestry林业部Ministry of personnel人事部Ministry of Public Security公安部minority interests少数股东权益minority investor/minority shareholder/minority stake小股东miscellaneous commercial services各种商业服务miscellaneous transfers杂项转移支付mismanagement of public funds对公共资金的不善管理mismatch between比例失当misnomer用词不当misreporting by enterprises企业错报misrepresentation失实描述mitigating effect缓和作用1, paragraph4mixed economy混合经济mixed operation/ managementmixed ownership混合所有制★MOA Ministry of Agriculture农业部mobile worker流动工人★★★★★mobility of capital资本流动性mobilize the information and energies of all concerned parties集合有关各方的信息和力量modalities for re-deploying resources重新配置资源的方式modern bankruptcy legislation现代破产立法modern corporate governance structures现代公司治理结构modern enterprise system现代企业制度★★★★★modest additional cost适度的额外成本modus operandi(A way of doing sth.that is typical of one person/group)工作方法MOE: Ministry of Education教育部MOF: Ministry of Finance财政部MOFCOM: Ministry of Commerce商务部MOFTEC: Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation对外贸易经济合作部MOH:Ministry of Health卫生部MOLSS: Ministry of Labour and Social Security劳动和社会保障部mom and pop store夫妻杂货店★monetary aggregates货币流通总额monetary and fiscal policy instruments货币和财政政策工具monetary control货币管理monetary incomes货币收入monetary policy货币政策★★monetary regime货币体制monetary velocity货币流通速度更多考研问题咨询育明教育!全程保过视频课程同步发售,最低640元起!。
Unit1我认为,选修第二专业并不合适每一位本科生。
我大学本科主修英语专业,大一时就开始辅修经济学了。
无疑,我是班里最用功的学生。
我竭尽全力想同时达到两个不同专业的要求,但还是有不及格的时候。
因为经济学需要良好的数学基础,我不得不花大量时间钻研数学,因而忽略了英语学习。
第二学期,《英国文学》及《宏观经济学》两门课不及格给我敲响了警种,这可是我一生中第一次考试不及格,这大大打击了我的自信心。
虽然我不是一个容易向命运低头的人,在暑假结束的时候,我还是决定放弃经济学,以免两个专业都难以完成。
当我只需修一个专业的时候,一切似乎又回到了正轨。
If you ask me,taking a second major isn’t good for every undergraduate.In my freshman year as an English major,I took economics as my minor.By all odds, I was the most hard-working student in my class.But try as I might to meet the requirements of the two different subjects,I still couldn’t do well enough to pass all the exams.Given that the study of economics required a good command of mathematics,I had to spend so much time on math that I neglected my English. Failing English Literature and Macro-economics in the second semester sounded the alarm for me.This was the first time I did not pass a course in my life, which had greatly sapped my confidence.Although I was not a man who would easily bow to fate,as the summer break came to a close,I decided to give up economics for fear that I would fail in both subjects.Now that I had only one subject to attend to,everything seemed to be on the right track again.Unit2张磊是在毕业工作后才开始意识到读书的乐趣的。
山东师范大学外国语学院英汉翻译English-Chinese Translation贾磊20111.Editing/修改English Chinese..the best collection of his drawings being in the Uffizi inFlorence他最好的草图都被收集在佛罗伦萨的乌菲兹美术馆…during the funeral service,St Stephen and St Augustine were said to have miraculously intervened to place the body in its tomb with their own hands.据说圣史蒂芬和圣奥古斯丁神秘地介入了殡葬仪式并亲手将尸体放入墓地He(Prince of Angri)had offered Caravaggio6,000scudi(a large sum)to fresco a loggia,an offer that was refused, doubtless because he disliked the medium,which he is not definitely know to have employed.亲王支付给卡拉瓦乔六千银币(一大笔钱)请他为自己的凉廊绘制壁画却遭到了拒绝,显然画家不喜欢这种绘画,因为这样不能明确地表明他是受雇而创作。
This marriage of convenience is clearly doomed.显然,这场贪图财利的婚姻,将不可避免地走向灾难的结局。
Wright of Derby was one of the earliest artists to restore men and women(pictorially at least)to what society then believed was their proper spheres:men think and reason, women feel.德比的莱特是把男人和女人重新恢复到当时社会所认为的适当社会地位的早期艺术家之一(至少在绘画上如此),即:男人善于思考推理,女人善于感性体验。
Unfetted by the conventions that such grandiloquent portaits required,Reynolds created his freshest and most daring portait of a society beauty.雷诺兹没有被这种浮华肖像画的惯例所束缚,他创造了一个上流社会美女的最令人耳目一新,也是最大胆创新的肖像画。
Sitting backwards in a chair,Mrs Abington has her thumb in her mouth as she stares distractedly,yet with bright, captivating eyes,out into space.阿宾顿夫人靠在椅背上,拇指放于嘴中,瞪着眼睛若所所思,但她明亮美丽的眼睛却望向苍穹。
在20世纪初期拿破仑的妈妈在骄傲地观礼。
He confronts a people whose language he does not know, on whose kindness he must rely,and with whom–his poetic gifts now all but useless to him–he must attempt to communicate.他碰上的这个民族,他不懂他们的语言,他又必须依赖他们的善良生存,而且他必须试着去跟他们沟通——现在诗人的天赋对他来说已是百无一用。
The painting must have been admired by Edgar Degas, because the older artist started in earnest on his own quest to represent the“modern”,but female,body in the act of bathing in1884-85,just as Caillebotte signed and dated his most important late painting.这幅画肯定受到了埃德加•德加的赞美,因为这位艺术前辈早在1884-85年就开始用他自己的方式虔诚地表现“现代的”,而不是女性的,浴中人体艺术,正如同卡耶波特在他晚期最重要的作品中所签署并注明的一样。
当它还在画架上时便被著名的俄国收藏家史楚金(Sergei Shchukin)预定收藏。
Schwitters was particularly influenced by Kandinsky’s ideas about the synthesis of different art forms and his ideal of creating a universal Gesamtkunstwerk(‘total work of art’).康定斯基对不同艺术表现形式之间应相互融合的思想以及他希望创造一个世界性的完全的纯艺术作品的理想深深地影响着施维特斯。
Essentially self-taught,in autumn1954the young American Jasper Johns destroyed all the works in his New York studio as a prelude to reinventing his art from first principles.1954年秋天,贾斯帕•约翰斯——一位基本上是自学成才的年轻的美国小伙子——销毁了他纽约工作室里所有的作品,这一举动,拉开了约翰斯挑战抽象主义画风的序幕。
2.Q&A:China's Scientist PremierIn a rare one-on-one interview,Premier Wen Jiabao spoke with Science about China's efforts to ground its economic and social development in sound scienceBEIJING—2008has been a roller-coaster ride for China and for Premier Wen Jiabao.Recent highs were the spectacular Olympics and the successful space walk late last month during the Shenzhou-7mission,a key step toward China’s aspirations of building a space station and sending astronauts to the moon.Lows included the Tibet riot,a devastating earthquake in Sichuan Province,and the tainted-milk scandal.In2003,early in his first term as head of China’s government,Wen promoted measures to address the spread of AIDS and the emergence of SARS.His leadership qualities were tested again after the12May Wenchuan earthquake.Within hours,Wen was on the scene,rallying rescuers and comforting victims.Wen led the earthquake response with technical authority few politicians anywhere could match.The Tianjin native studied geological surveying as an undergraduate and geological structure as a graduate student at Beijing Institute of Geology from1960to 1968,then spent the next14years with Gansu Provincial Geological Bureau in western China.In the1980s,Wen rose through the ranks of the Communist Party and became vice premier of the State Council,China’s Cabinet,in1998and premier in2003.Wen began a second5-year term as premier last March.In a2-hour conversation with Science Editor-in-Chief Bruce Alberts at the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in the heart of Beijing on30September,Wen,66,spoke candidly and forcefully,without notes,on everything from the role of social and economic development being“the wellspring”of science and technology to cultivating scientific ethics and reducing China’s reliance on fossil fuels.3.From How to Mellify a CorpseDuring a meditative stroll around his home turf,the region of Turkey that the Greeks of old called Asia Minor,a keen-eyed thinker named Thales stumbled across naturally occurring magnets called lodestones.Experimenting,he discovered their ability to attract iron;back in600b.c.,this amounted to headline news.Giving the world its earliest sound bite,he exclaimed,"Lodestone made the iron move—it has a soul!"With that statement,he rejected the prevailing belief about inexplicable events:that the gods must have done it.That took courage.Thales spent his life inquiring into the animating principles of the universe,the deeper nature of matter.Like other Greek seekers,he embraced learning from more ancient cultures,studying geometry and astronomy with the Egyptian sages.With his newly won knowledge he was able to accurately predict a solar eclipse,forcing armies to cancel a perfectly good battle slated for that day.This insightful eccentric has been called the first Greek scientist.In the same era,his class act was echoed by Pythagoras,who sought answers to the universe in numbers and in music.A Greek born on the island of Samos,Pythagoras chose to establish his community of three hundred like-minded geeks,male and female,in southern Italy.It would grow to include thousands of adherents,including his wife and daughters,and thrive for centuries.4.Earth-friendly schoolBy Rebecca BarnsKids at Sidwell Friends School in Washington,D.C.,love their new'green'campus.What has light,fresh air,and is a great place to learn?An ecofriendly middle school.At Sidwell Friends Middle School in Washington,D.C.,one of the newest teachers on campus this year is a building.From top to bottom it's energy efficient,environmentally friendly,and an inviting place to learn everything from science to singing.It all started when the school needed more classroom space.Instead of tearing down the existing building,a construction crew brought in a bulldozer to clear out the interior,and an L-shaped addition went up beside it.The new,U-shaped building is filled with earth-friendly features,but the spacious rooms with huge windows are the first things you notice."The extra natural light in the classrooms really keeps you awake and enjoying the day,"says Isabel Dorval,a ninth-grader at Sidwell.Walkways made of what?The architects chose natural,recycled,and renewable materials wherever possible.Most of these could be used with minimal impact on the environment.Doors were made with a veneer of bamboo(a fast-growing grass),bulletin boards with cork(which can be harvested without cutting down trees),and cabinets from wheatboard(which is made of wheat straw–the part of the plant that's left over after the grain is harvested).Old materials were also reused in new ways.Bleachers from another school were used to make the window trim.Wood for walkways came from a pier in Baltimore.The"skin"on the outside of the building was made with wood from wine casks.The sun is turning the boards a beautiful silvery gray.On the roof,tall,glass-sided chimneys vent warm air,creating a current that pulls cool,fresh air through the building's north-facing windows.Sixth-graders tend rooftop beds of herbs that they cut and bring to the cafeteria.Native plants help insulate the building and filter rain-water that flows through downspouts to the landscaped area below.Recycled waterInstead of planting a grass lawn,the school created a terraced wetland area and pond by the main entrance.The area has become a hands-on science lab where students take water samples,identify microorganisms,and study wildlife.Another important purpose of the wetlands is to treat the water from sinks and toilets.Waste goes into an underground tank,where tiny organisms begin to break it down.Then it filters through plants,rock,and sand in the wetland and back through the building to be used in sinks and toilets and to cool machinery.Fresh water in drinking fountains comes from the city supply.The school uses about90percent less water than a traditionally built school of the same size."My favorite place is probably the benches outside by the wetlands,"says Isabel."It feels like it's a little habitat out there because you're enclosed on three sides by the building.There's a mural that illustrates the sedimentation process.That brings awareness of what's happening right in front of you.That's very neat."Lessons from the buildingMechanical controls,vents,and pipes in plain view make it easier to understand how everything works.Along the wide,open hallways filled with natural light,wind chimes in vents signal when fresh air is being taken into the building.In science class,everyone reads the monitors to note how temperature and levels of carbon dioxide change throughout the day.The building is a great place for environmental detective work,too."I asked the students to look around and tell me where paper was used to make something in the classroom,"says Jennifer Mitchell, who teaches fifth-grade science."One student looked up and said it was in the ceiling tiles,and he was right.The ceiling tiles are made from recycled newspaper."Let the sunshine inThe building's greatest energy saving is in its use of light.The large windows have light shelves above that reflect natural light farther into rooms without letting in heat from the sun.On the south side of the building,where the sun is strongest,horizontal screens shade classrooms from glare.On the east and west sides,vertical screens shade windows when the sun is low.Some days,the overhead fluorescent lights never need to be turned on.That saves not only the energy it takes to keep lights on;it also saves the energy it takes to cool down the building from all the heat that lights can generate.The result is that such an efficient building has helped the school cut its energy use by60percent.All about the environmentFrom the day the doors to the new building opened,changes have echoed through Sidwell Friends School.The cafeteria has been serving more organic and locally grown food.There's an environmental club called ECO,and students have begun to teach their parents about more energy-efficient ways of doing things at home."We have such an opportunity here,"says Ms.Mitchell."As you learn about the building,it makes you think how much sense it makes to do things this way."Isabel likes science very much and says the new building has made science even more interesting for her."It went from little in-class experiments to really learning about the school itself as an experiment,"she says."I think I can speak for our whole grade,saying that suddenly you just understood your environment and how you affect it."Green schools across AmericaFrom Hawaii to New Jersey,a growing number of schools in the United States are going green.An organization called the U.S.Green Building Council is helping to spread the word.It has certified more than70schools as"green,"and hundreds more have applied for certification.Here are some neat ways schools across the country have cleaned up their acts:Clackamas High School in Clackamas,Ore.,used native plants that are pest-tolerant to reduce the need for pesticide use on school grounds.Solar power serves as an energy source.And students monitor the effect their school has on its watershed.They also plant trees,help remove invasive species,and collect garbage in their community on weekends.East Clayton Elementary School in Clayton,N.C.,uses recycled denim to insulate walls and protects the air around the school by not allowing buses to idle outside the building.Desert Edge High School in Goodyear,Ariz.,has a white roof to reflect the blazing desert sun,motion and daylight sensors to turn off lights when they're not needed,and sensors that monitor stale air in the building and automatically open vents.Fossil Ridge High School in Fort Collins,Colo.,runs on energy from wind and solar power.Great Seneca Creek Elementary School in Germantown,Md.,uses a geothermal heating and cooling system that's buried deep underground.Lick-Wilmerding High School in San Francisco has photovoltaic cells that generate the power to run dozens of computers,and there are plans to erect a windmill.Students compost cafeteria food and run a recycling program.One World Montessori School in San Jose,Calif.,uses green cleaning products and avoids using pesticides on school property.Punahou School in Honolulu,Hawaii,has student lockers made from milk cartons and floors made of recycled tires.T.C.Williams High School in Alexandria,Va.,has a rooftop garden and a huge underground storage tank to hold rainwater runoff for use in the building.Willow School in Gladstone,N.J.,turns off the heating and air conditioning when the outside temperature is between65and80 degrees F.Then,a light comes on to remind students to open the windows.Solar power that's generated on campus provides some electricity.5.Lego Celebrates50Years of BuildingBy Leo CendrowiczFor devotees,Monday sees the50th anniversary of an event in Copenhagen that transformed toys and revolutionized childhood itself.It was at1:58p.m.on January28,1958,that then-Lego head Godtfred Kirk Christiansen filed a patent for the iconic plastic brick with its stud-and-hole design.Since then,the company has made a staggering400billion Lego elements,or62bricks for every person on the planet.And if stacked on top of one another,the pieces would form10towers reaching all the way from the Earth to the Moon. But Lego's legacy lies less in numbers than in its creative influence.The colorful bricks have littered playroom floors for generations of families.But they have also spurred ingenuity among children that few toys can claim before and since.The company has always emphasized the importance of free-form play,and Lego's popularity can be attributed to the amount of imagination children use to build with the bricks.The Lego company was founded in1932by Danish carpenter Ole Kirk Christiansen,a carpenter from Billund who had a sideline in wooden toys.He named the company after an amalgamation of the Danish phrase"leg godt,"which means"play well."The basic eight-stud red Lego brick was first sold in Denmark in1949.But it took a further nine years for Ole Kirk's son,Godtfred Kirk, to file the patent for the versatile"Automatic Binding Brick"with its interlocking2x4studs.The plastic bricks are part of a unique system:tiny tubes inside give the knobs on top of other blocks more places to grip.They hold together well but can be taken apart easily by a child.And consistency has been key:the bricks produced today have the same bumps and holes,and can still interlock with those produced back in1958.Fifty years on and the Lego Group is the world's fifth largest toymaker in terms of sales,after Mattel,Hasbro,Bandai and MGA Entertainment.Over the years,the Lego group has built up the brand.It developed the larger Duplo series in the1960s for younger children who had trouble handling the original tiny Lego bricks(Duplo is still going strong too).In1968,the company opened its first Legoland theme parks,near its Billund birthplace.Parks in Windsor,England,Carlsbad,California and Günzburg,Germany followed,each using around 50million bricks to create replicas of monuments and landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower,Mount Rushmore,and the Sydney Opera House.Each park receives around1.4million visitors per year.But over the past decade,the group has struggled to keep pace with changing toy trends:the basic plastic bricks find it particularly tough to compete with games consoles like XBox and PlayStation to attract kids'attention.After years of eroding sales,the company posted its first-ever losses in1998.Radical remedies were needed to restore the brick's reputation.Tie-ins helped:the company's link-up with Star Wars revived the brand,and even led to its own video games:Lego Star Wars II sold1.1million units in its first week of release in2006.If you can't beat'em,join'em,it would seem.In recent years,a series of brutal job cuts,asset sales and cost-cutting measures have pruned the company down.Staff numbers have fallen from6,000in2004to some4,500today.The Legoland parks were sold in2005to Merlin Entertainments,part of the Blackstone private equity group,which owns Madame Tussauds and Sea Life.And critically,distribution,packaging and production has been outsourced to Eastern Europe and Mexico.As a result,the Lego Group turned a$374million loss in2004into a$281million profit in2006.The group itself is only planning low-key celebrations of the patent anniversary:a special-edition of its1950s-style Town Plan set with three gold bricks,and a worldwide building contest with a grand finale at Legoland Billund.And for most Google users—itself a website which keeps building and growing in size—the homepage spelling of the company name in Lego blocks Monday will come across as just another of the web giant's quirks.But for the millions who grew up on the brick—and the millions more still fitting them together—that lunchtime visit to the patent office proved priceless.。