国际关系学院考研翻译硕士英语真题2013
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2011年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2012年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2013年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2014年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2015年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2016年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解
2011年国际关系学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解一、词语翻译:英译汉(每题1分,总共15分) 1.European monetary integration
【答案】欧洲货币整合
2.fuel economic growth
【答案】拉动经济增长
3.junk bond
【答案】垃圾债券
4.caller ID telephone
【答案】来电显示
5.parkinsonism
【答案】帕金森
6.solar cell plate
【答案】太阳能电池板
7.open-ended fund
【答案】开放型基金
8.Gall up Poll
【答案】盖洛普民意测验
9.conditions-based withdrawal
【答案】有条件撤军。
2013翻译硕士MTI各校真题汇总2013翻译硕士各校真题汇总2013考研已经过去,各种尘埃即将落定。
先把各个学校的真题回忆版本汇总给后来人一个复习方向。
也算给考研生活画上一个圆满的句号。
感谢网友的及时回忆,谢谢给位的奉献。
欢迎补充!愿各位取的好成绩!1、2013复旦大学MTI专业课真题回忆版基础英语。
今年的基础英语稍微有些变化,第一题仍然是无选项完型,20个空,第二题是改错,和第一题是属于一篇文章的,二十行二十个错误,第三题是词汇和语法,词汇题比去年增加了不少,第四题是阅读理解四篇一共15个小题,最后一篇稍微有些深度,上来第一句是boresom 其实是讲现代社会摧毁理性和真理的。
然后作文25分就最后一篇阅读理解发表一下自己的看法。
翻译。
背了一堆翻译词汇今年竟然一个词汇翻译都没有,就一个汉译英70分与一个英译汉80分。
英译汉是一篇医学文章,里面什么胆囊啊肠啊的生词一大堆。
汉译英是文言文啊亲,我旦不学好啊,跟着北大学考文言文额。
原文如下:世有三乐,真乐也。
一曰人伦之乐,二曰心地之乐,三曰讲习之乐。
孟子曰:“父母俱存,兄弟无故,一乐也。
”此人伦之乐也;“仰不愧于天,俯不怍于人,二乐也。
”此心地之乐也;“得天下英才而教育之,三乐也。
”此讲习之乐也。
人伦之乐自父母兄弟之外,妻室欲其同甘苦,子孙欲其师教,宗族欲其和睦,女之适人者欲其得所归结,自人伦而推之,有一败人意则非乐也。
心地之乐岂止俯仰无愧怍而已,其道德必与圣贤合、与天地并,可也;道德未同乎圣贤、未同乎天地,不可以已也。
讲习之乐何止于得英才而教育,凡学问德行之有胜乎吾者,吾方且师之,虽受人之教育亦乐矣。
此三者,天下之真乐。
不此之乐,而以外物为乐,乐未一二,而忧已八九。
世俗以为乐,识者不贵也。
百科知识中国四大发明,欧债危机,金砖四国,莫言,生态难民,莎士比亚,君主立宪制,euro tunnel,thedeclaration of independence,DNA,伦敦奥运会,秦始皇陵兵马俑,论语,大中华文库,Encyclopedia Britannica,a nation on wheels,还有一个masps 还是什么的这个不知道,数了数17个还有8个想不起来了,这个是一个2分,一共五十分。
3,对国际组织和国际法的看法不同.理想主义强调国际组织和国际法的重要性,视之为维护国际关系秩序的唯一有效工具,认为国际法和国际组织秩序代表了全人类的真正利益;现实主义认为,法律与政治相比并不是道德些,离开权力均势,国际组织体系也常常名存实亡.4,对社会和世界的看法不同.理想主义强调研究社会和世界应该如何,对客观世界抱盲目乐观态度;现实主义信奉实证原则,强调人类应该面对争斗事实,不可陷入和谐的空想,.5,对未来的看法不同。
理想主义崇尚利他主义,认为未来的目标是实现普遍裁军和建立民主的世界政府,但在如何实现这一目标上束手无策,总之持一种乐观态度;现实主义认为利他主义是一种空想,历史的悲剧正是来自人的权欲与野心,未来的目标无论多么美好,由于受到这种利己主义的局限,只能部分的实现,总之持悲观态度.6,国家的目标不同.理想主义认为国家的目标很多,诸如安全,经济发展,人权,正义;现实主义认为国家的目标就是生存和安全.7,军事力量的作用不同.理想主义认为军事力量的作用有限,而现实主义认为非常重要.8,道德作用的不同。
理想主义认为非常重要,而现实主义认为无关紧要.9,国家战略不同.理想主义是集体安全,现实主义是自助和结盟.10,关于系统变迁。
理想主义认为会逐渐摆脱现实主义,而现实主义则认为系统变迁不会发生. 第一次论战后,现实主义开始确立起主导地位.现实主义对理想主义的批判在国际关系学科内澄清了实然与应然的关系问题,划清了学术研究与道德伦理研究的范畴,为国际关系学科趋向"科学化"和成为独立学科奠定了基础.第四讲:新现实主义(结构现实主义)Neorealism新现实主义学派是第二次论战的延伸和演变的产物,它是以传统现实主义为基础,力求对其进行科学的修正和发展,主张在方法论上实现传统主义学派和科学行为主义学派的渗透与融合。
1979年肯尼斯。
华尔兹《国际政治理论》一书的出版标志着新现实主义的兴起。
2013年全国硕士研究生招生考试英语(二)(科目代码:204)☆考生注意事项☆1.答题前,考生须在试题册指定位置上填写考生编号和考生姓名;在答题卡指定位置上填写报考单位、考生姓名和考生编号,并涂写考生编号信息点。
2.考生须把试题册上的“试卷条形码”粘贴条取下,粘贴在答题卡的“试卷条形码粘贴位置”框中。
不按规定粘贴条形码而影响评卷结果的,责任由考生自负。
3.选择题的答案必须涂写在答题卡相应题号的选项上,非选择题的答案必须书写在答题卡指定位置的边框区域内。
超出答题区域书写的答案无效;在草稿纸、试题册上答题无效。
4.填(书)写部分必须使用黑色字迹签字笔书写,字迹工整、笔迹清楚;涂写部分必须使用2B铅笔填涂。
5.考试结束,将答题卡和试题册按规定交回。
(以下信息考生必须认真填写)考生编号考生姓名2013年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语(二)试题Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the followin g text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)Given the advanta g es of electronic mone y, y ou mi g ht think that we would move quickl y to the cashless societ y in which all payments are made electronicall y. 1 , a true cashless societ y is probabl y not around the comer. Indeed, predictions have been 2 for two decades but have not y et come to fruition. For example, Business Week predicted in 1975 that electronic means of payment would soon "revolutionize the very 3 of mone y itself," onl y to 4 itself several y ears later. Wh y has the movement to a cashless society been so 5 in comin g?Althou g h electronic means of payment ma y be more efficient than a payments s y stem based on paper, several factors work 6 the disappearance of the paper s y stem. First, it is very 7 to set up the computer, card reader, and telecommunications networks necessary to make electronic mone y the义form of pa y ment. Second, paper checks have the advanta g e that they 9 receipts, somethin g that many consumers are unwillin g to 10 . Third, the use of paper checks g ives consumers several da y s of "float"it takes several da y s 11 a check is cashed and funds are 12 from the issuer's account, which means that the writer of the check can earn interest on the funds in the meantime. 13 electronic pa y ments arc in皿ediate,the y eliminate the float for the consumer.Fourth, electronic means of pa y ment ma y 14 security and privac y concerns. We often hear media reports that an unauthorized hacker has been able to access a computer database and to alter information 15 there. The fact that this is not an_l_Q occurrence means that dishonest persons mi g ht be able to access bank accounts in electronic pa y ments s y stems and 17 from someone else's accounts. The 18 of this type of fraud is no eas y task, and a new field of computer science is developin g to」..2.securit y issues. A further concern is that the use of electronic means of payment leaves an electronic 20 that contains a lar g e amount of personal data. There are concerns that g overnment, emplo y ers, and marketers mi g ht be able to access these data, thereb y violatin g our privac y.1.[A] Moreover[B]However[C]Therefore[D]O therwise2.[A] off[B]back[C]over[D]around3.[A] power[B]conce pt[C]histo ry[D]role4.[A] reverse[B]resist[C]resume[D]reward5.[A] silent[B]sudden[C]slow[D]stead y6.[A] for[B]again st[C]with[D]on7.[A] expensive[B]imaginative [C] sensitive[D]productive8.[A] similar[B]ori gin al[ C]tem porary[D]dominant9.[A] collect[B]copy[C]provi de[D]print10.[A] give up[B]take over[ C]bring back[D]pass down11.[A] before[B]after[C]since[D]when12.[A] kept[B]borrowed[C]withdrawn[D]released13.[A] Unless[B]Because[C]Until[D]Thou gh14.[A] hide[B]express[C]ease[D]raise15.[A] analyzed[B]shared[C]stored[D]dis playe d16.[A] unsafe[B]unnatural[C]unclear[D]uncommon17.[A] steal[B]choose[C]benefit[D]return18.[A] consideration [B] prevention[C]manipulation[D]j ustification19.[A] call for20.[A] chunkPart A Directions:[B]fig ht against [ C] adapt to[B]chip[C]trail[D]cope w ith[D]path Section II Reading ComprehensionRead the following four texts. Answer the questions after each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1In an essa y entitled "Making It in America," the author Adam Davidson relates a joke from cotton country about just how much a modern textile mill has been automated: The average mill has onl y two emplo y ees toda y, "a man and a dog. The man is there to feed the dog, and the dog is there to keep the man awa y from the machines."D avidson's article is one of a number of pieces that have recentl y appeared making the point that the reason we have such stubbornl y high unemployment and declining middle-class incomes toda y is largel y because of the big drop in demand because of the Great Recession, but it is also because of the advances in both globalization and the information technology revolution, which are more rapidl y than ever replacing labor with machines or foreign workers.In the past, workers with average skills, doing an average job, could earn an average lifest y le. But, today, average is officiall y over. Being average just won't earn ou what it used to. It can't when so man y more emplo y ers have so much more yaccess to so much more above average cheap foreign labor, cheap robotics, cheap software, cheap automation and cheap genius. Therefore, everyone needs to find their extra their unique value contribution that makes them stand out in whatever is their field of emplo y ment.Yes, new technology has been eating jobs forever, and alwa y s will. But there's been an acceleration. As D avidson notes, "In the 10 y ears ending in 2009, [U.S.] factories shed workers so fast that they erased almost all the gains of the previous 70ears; roughl y one out of every three manufacturing jobs about 6 million in ytotal disappeared."There will alwa y s be change new jobs, new products, new services. But the one thing we know for sure is that with each advance in globalization and the I. T. revolution, the best jobs will require workers to have more and better education to make themselves above average.In a world where average is officiall y over, there are many things we need to do to support employment, but nothing would be more important than passing some kind of G. I. Bill for the 2l8t century that ensures that every American has access to posthigh school education.21.The joke in Paragraph 1 is used to illustrate.[A]the impact of technological advances[B]the alleviation of j ob pressure[C]the shrinkage of textile mills[D]the declme of middle-class mcomes22.According to Paragraph 3, to be a successful employee, one has to.[A]work on cheap software[B]ask for a moderate salary[C]adopt an average lifestyle[D]contribute something unique23.The quotation in Paragraph 4 explains that.[A]gains of technology have been erased[B]job opportunities are disappearing at a high speed[C]factories are making much less money than before[D]new jobs and services have been offered24.According to the author, to reduce unemployment, the most important is[A]to accelerate the I. T. revolution[B]to ensure more education for people[C]to advance economic globalization[D]to pass more bills in the 21st century25.Which of the following would be the most appropriate title for the text?[A]New Law Takes Effect.[B]Technology Goes Cheap.[C]Average Is Over.[D]Recession Is Bad.Text2A century a g o, the immigrants from across the Atlantic included settlers and sojourners. Alon g with the many folks lookin g to make a permanent home in the United States came those who had no intention to stay, and who would make some money and then g o home. Between 1908 and 1915, about 7 million people arrived while about 2 million departed. About a quarter of all Italian immi g rants, for example, eventually returned to Italy for g ood. They even had an affectionate nickname, "uccelli di passa gg io," birds of passa g e.Today, we are much more ri g id about immigrants. We divide newcomers into two cate g ories: le g al or ille g al, g ood or bad. We hail them as Americans in the makin g, or brand them as aliens to be kicked out. That framework has contributed mi g htily to our broken immigration system and the lon g political paralysis over how to fix it. We don't need more cate g ories, but we need to chan g e the way we think about cate g ories. We need to look beyond strict definitions of le g al and ille g al. To start, we can recognize the new birds of passa g e, those livin g and thrivin g in the gray areas. We mi g ht then be g in to solve our immigration challen g es.Crop pickers, violinists, construction workers, entrepreneurs, en g ineers, home health-care aides and physicists are amon g today's birds of passa g e. They are ener g etic participants in a g lobal economy driven by the flow of work, money and ideas. They prefer to come and g o as opportunity calls them. They can mana g e to have a job in one place and a family in another.With or without permission, they straddle laws, jurisdictions and identities with ease. We need them to ima g ine the United States as a place where they can be productive for a while without committin g themselves to stayin g forever. We need them to feel that home can be both here and there and that they can belon g to two nations honorably.Accommodatin g this new world of people in motion will require new attitudes on both sides of the immigration battle. Lookin g beyond the culture war lo g ic of ri g ht or wron g means openin g up the middle ground and understandin g that mana g in g immigration today requires multiple paths and multiple outcomes, includin g some that are not easy to accomplish le g ally in the existin g system.26."Birds of passage" refers to those who.[A]stay in a foreign country temporarily[B]leave their home countries for good[C]immigrate across the Atlantic[D]find permanent jobs overseas27.It is i mp lied in Paragraph 2 that the current immigration system in the US[A]needs new immigrant categories[B]has loosened control over immigrants[C]should be adapted to meet challenges[D]has been fixed via political means28.According to the author, today's birds of p assage want.[A]financial incentives[B]a global recognition[C]the freedom to stay and leave[D]opportunities to get regular jobs29.The author suggests that the birds of passage today should be treated.[A]as faithful partners[B]with legal tolerance[C]with economic favors[D]as mighty rivals30.The most appropriate title for this text would be.[A]Come and Go: Big Mistake[B]Living and Thriving: Great Risk[C]With or Without: Great Risk[D]Legal or Illegal: Big MistakeText3Scientists have found that althou g h we are prone to snap overreactions, if we take a moment and think about how we are likel y to react, we can reduce or even eliminate the ne g ative effects of our quick, hard-wired responses.Snap decisions can be important defense mechanisms; if we are jud g in g whether someone is dan g erous, our brains and bodies are hard-wired to react very quickl y, within milliseconds. But we need more time to assess other factors. To accuratel y tell whether someone is sociable, studies show, we need at least a minute, preferabl y five. It takes a while to jud g e complex aspects of personalit y, like neuroticism or open -mindedness.But snap decisions in reaction to rapid stimuli aren't exclusive to the interpersonal realm. Ps y cholo g ists at the Universit y of Toronto found that viewin g a fast-food lo g o for just a few milliseconds primes us to read 20 percent faster, even thou g h readin g has little to do with eatin g. We unconsciousl y associate fast food with speed and impatience and carry those impulses into whatever else we're doin g, Subjects exposed to fast-food flashes also tend to think a musical piece lasts too l on g.Yet we can reverse such influences. If we know we will overreact to consumer products or housin g options when we see a happ y face (one reason g ood sales representatives and real estate a g ents are alwa y s smilin g), we can take a moment before bu y in g. If we know female job screeners are more likel y to reject attractive female applicants, we can help screeners understand their biases or hire outside screeners.John Gottman, the marria g e expert, explains that we quickl y "thin slice" information reliabl y onl y after we ground such snap reactions in "thick sliced" lon gterm stud y. When Dr. Gottman reall y wants to assess whether a couple will sta y to g ether, he invites them to his island retreat for a much lon g er evaluation: two da y s, not two seconds.Our ability to mute our hard-wired reactions b y pausin g is what differentiates us from animals: do g s can think about the future onl y intermittentl y or for a few minutes. But historicall y we have spent about 12 percent of our da y s contemplatin g the lon g er term. Althou g h technology mi g ht chan g e the wa y we react, it hasn't chan g ed our nature. We still have the imaginative capacit y to rise above temptation and reverse the hi g h-speed trend.31.The time needed in making decisions may.[A]predetermine the accuracy of our judgment[B]prove the complexity of our brain reaction[C]depend on the importance of the assessment[D]vary according to the urgency of the situation32.0 u r react10n to a fast-food logo shows that snap dec1s10ns.[A]can be associative[B]are not unconscious[C]can be dangerous[D]are not impulsive33 T .o reverse the negative influences of snap dec1s10ns, we should.[A]trust our first impression[B]think before we act[C]do as people usually do[D]ask for expert advice34.John Gattman says that reliable snap reactions are based on.[A]critical assessment[B]"thin sliced" study[C]adequate information[D]sensible explanation35.The author's attitude toward reversing the high-speed trend is.[A]tolerant[B]optimistic[ C]uncertain[D]DoubtfulText4Europe is not a gender-equality heaven. In particular, the corporate workplace will never be completel y famil y-friendl y until women are part of senior management decisions, and Europe's top corporate-governance positions remain overwhelmingl y male. Indeed, women hold onl y 14 per cent of positions on European corporate boards.The European Union is now considering legislation to compel corporate boards to maintain a certain proportion of women—up to 60 per cent. This proposed mandate was born of frustration. Last y ear, European Commission Vice President Viviane Reding issued a call to voluntary action. Reding invited corporations to sign up for gender balance goals of 40 per cent female board membership. But her appeal was considered a failure: onl y 24 companies took it up.D o we need quotas to ensure that women can continue to climb the corporate ladder fairl y as the y balance work and famil y?"Personall y, I don't like quotas," Reding said recentl y. "But I like what the quotas do." Quotas get action: the y "open the wa y to equality and the y break through the glass ceiling," according to Reding, a result seen in France and other countries with legall y binding provisions on placing women in top business positions.I understand Reding's reluctance and her frustration. I don't like quotas either; the y run counter to m y belief in meritocrac y, governance b y the capable. But, when one considers the obstacles to achieving the meritocratic ideal, it does look as if a fairer world must be temporaril y ordered.After all, four decades of evidence has now shown that corporations in Europe as well as the US are evading the meritocratic hiring and promotion of women to top positions no matter how much "soft pressure" is put upon them. When women do break through to the summit of corporate power as, for example, Sheryl Sandberg recentl y did at Facebook the y attract massive attention precisel y because the y remain the exception to the rule.If appropriate public policies were in place to help all women whether CEOs or their children's caregivers and all families, Sandberg would be no more newsworth y than an y other highl y capable person hvmg m a more Just society.36.In the European corporate workplace, generally.[A]women take the lead[B]men have the final say[C]corporate governance is overwhelmed[D]senior management is family-friendly37.The European Union's intended legislation is.[A]a reflection of gender balance[B]a response to Reding's call[C]a reluctant choice[D]a voluntary action38.According to Reding, quotas may help women.[A]get top business positions[B]see through the glass ceiling[C]balance work and family[D]anticipate legal results39.The author's attitude toward Reding's appeal is one of[A]skepticism[B]objectiveness[ C]indifference[D]approval40.Women entering top management become headlines due to the lack of.[A]more social justice[B]massive media attention[C]suitable public policies[D]greater "soft pressure"PartBDirections:Read the following text and answer the questions b y choosing the most suitable subtitle from the list A G for each numbered paragraph (41 45). There are two extra subtitles which y ou do not need to use. Mark y our answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)[A]Live like a peasant[B]Balance y our diet[C]Shopkeepers are y our friends[D]Remember to treat y ourself[E]Stick to what y ou need[F]Planning is everything[G]Waste not, want notThe hugel y popular blog the Skint Foodie chronicles how Ton y balances his love of good food with living on benefits. After bills, Ton y has£60 a week to spend, £40 of which goes on food, but 10 y ears ago he was earning£130,000 a y ear working in corporate communications and eating at London's best restaurants at least twice a week. Then his marriage failed, his career burned out and his drinking became serious. "The communit y mental health team saved m y life. And I felt like that again, to a certain degree, when people responded to the blog so well. It gave me the validation and confidence that I'd lost. But it's still a da y-b y-da y thing." Now he's living in a council flat and fielding offers from literary agents. He's feeling positive, but he'11 carry on blogging not about eating as cheapl y as y ou can"there are so man y people in a much worse state, with barel y an y mone y to spend on food"but eating well on a budget. Here's his advice for economical foodies.41.Impulsive spending isn't an option, so plan y our week's menu in advance, making shopping lists for y our ingredients in their exact quantities. I have an Excel template for a week of breakfast, lunch and dinner. Stop laughing: it's not just cost effective but helps y ou balance y our diet. It's also a good idea to shop dail y instead ofweekl y, because, bein g human, y ou'll sometimes chan g e y our mind about what y oufanc y.42.This is where supermarkets and their anonymity come in hand y. With them, there's not the same embarrassment as when bu y in g one carrot in a little greengrocer. And if y ou plan properl y, y ou'll know that y ou onl y need, sa y, 350g of shin of beef and six rashers of bacon, not whatever wei g ht is pre-packed in the supermarket chiller.43.You ma y proudl y claim to onl y have frozen peas in the freezer—that's not g ood enou g h. Mine is filled with leftovers, bread, stock, meat and fish. Plannin g ahead should eliminate wasta g e, but if y ou have surplus ve g etables y ou'll do a ve g etable soup, and all fruits threatenin g to "g o off'will be cooked or juiced.44.Everyone sa y s this, but it reall y is a top tip for fru g al eaters. Shop at butchers, delis and fish-sellers regularl y, even for small thin g s, and be super friendl y. Soon ou'll feel comfortable askin g if the y've an y knuckles of ham for soups and stews, or ybeef bones, chicken carcasses and fish heads for stock which, more often than not, the y'll let y ou have for free.45.You won't be eatin g out a lot, but save y our pennies and once every few months treat y ourself to a set lunch at a g ood restaurant£1.75 a week for three months g ivesou£21more than enou g h for a three-course lunch at Michelin-starred Arbutus. It's y£16.95 there or£12.99 for a lar g e pizza from Domino's: I know which I'd rather eat.Section III Translation46.Directions:Translate the following text into Chinese. Write y our translation on the ANSWER SHEET. (15 points)I can pick a date from the past 53 y ears and know instantl y where I was, what happened in the news and even the da y of the week. I've been able to do this since I was four.I never feel overwhelmed with the amount of information m y brain absorbs. M y mind seems to be able to cope and the information is stored awa y neatl y. When I think of a sad memory, I do what everybod y does try to put it to one side. I don't think it's harder for me just because m y memory is clearer. Powerful memory doesn't make m y emotions an y more acute or vivid. I can recall the da y m y grandfather died and the sadness I felt when we went to the hospital the da y before. I also remember that the musical pla y Hair opened on Broadway on the same da y the y both just pop into m y mind in the same wa y.Section IV WritingPartA47.Directions:Suppose your class is to hold a charity sale for kids in need of help. Write your classmates an email to1)inform them about the details, and2)encourage them to participate.You should write about 100 words on the ANSWER SHEET.Do not use your own name. Use "Li Ming" insteadDo not write your address. (10 points)PartB48.Directions:Write an essay based on the following chart. In your writing, you should1)interpret the chart, and2)give your c omments.You should write about 150 words on the ANSWER SHEET. (15 points)2013年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语(二)试题Section I: Use of English (10 points)1 - 5: BDBAC6 - 10: BADCA11-15: ACBDC16-20: DABDCSection II: Reading Comprehension (50 points)21-25: ADBBC26-30: ACCBD31-35: D ABCB36-40: BCADC41-45: FEGCDSection III :Translation (15 Points)从过去的53年中任选一天,我都能立刻知道当时自己在哪里,新闻中发生了什么事情,甚至那天是周几。
2013年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语二试题(答案解析版)Section I Use of EnglishDirections: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points);敬人者化学教案人恒敬之”“要学会宽恕化学教案甚至是对曾经伤害过你的人化学教案因为只有放下才能得到真正Given the advantages of electronic money, you might think that we would move quickly to the cashless society in which all payments are made electronically. ___1___, a true cashless society is probably not around the corner. Indeed, predictions of such a society have been ___2___ for two decades but have not yet come to fruition. For example, Business Week predicted in 1975 that electronic means of payment “would soon revolutionize the very ___3___ of money itself,” only to ___4___ itself several years later. Why has t he movement to a cashless society been so ___5___ in coming?Although e-money might be more convenient and may be more efficient than a payments system based on paper, several factors work __6___ the disappearance of the paper system. First, it is very ___7___ to set up the computer, card reader, and telecommunications networks necessary to make electronic money the ___8___ form of payment. Second, paper checks have the advantage that they ___9___ receipts, something that many consumers are unwilling to ___10___. Third, the use of paper checks gives consumers several days of "float"-it takes several days ___11___ a check is cashed and funds are ___12___ from the issuer's account, which means that the writer of the check can earn interest on the funds in the meantime. ___13___ electronic payments are immediate, they eliminate the float for the consumer. Fourth, electronic means of payment ___14___ security and privacy concerns. We often hear media reports that an unauthorized hacker has been able to access a computer database and to alter information ___15___ there.Because this is not an ___16___ occurrence, unscrupulous persons might be able to access bank accounts in electronic payments systems and ___17___ funds by moving them from someone else’s accounts i nto their own. The___18___ of this type of fraud is no easy task, and a whole new field of computer science has developed to ___19___ security issues. A further concern is that the use of electronic means of payment leaves an electronic ___20___ that contains a large amount of personal data on buying habits. There are worries that government, employers, and marketers might be able to access these data, thereby encroaching on our privacy.时间先后顺序化学教案③后适宜用感叹号试卷试题5试卷试题B试卷试题【解析】A项的“拙作”是谦辞、1. [A] However [B] Moreover [C] Therefore [D] Otherwise2. [A] off [B] back [C] over [D] around3. [A] power [B] concept [C] history [D] role4. [A] reward [B] resist [C] resume [D] reverse5. [A] silent [B] sudden [C] slow [D] steady6. [A] for [B] against [C]with [D] on7. [A] imaginative [B] expensive [C] sensitive [D] productive8. [A] similar [B] original [C] temporary [D] dominant9. [A] collect [B] provide [C] copy [D] print10. [A] give up [B] take over [C] bring back [D] pass down11. [A] before [B] after [C] since [D] when12. [A] kept [B] borrowed [C] released [D] withdrawn13. [A] Unless [B] Until [C] Because [D] Though14. [A] hide [B] express [C] raise [D]ease15. [A] analyzed [B] shared [C] stored [D] displayed16. [A] unsafe [B] unnatural [C] uncommon [D] unclear17. [A] steal [B] choose [C] benefit [D] return18. [A] consideration [B] prevention [C] manipulation [D] justification19. [A] cope with [B] fight against [C] adapt to [D] call for20. [A] chunk [B] chip [C] path [D] trail文化活动试卷试题人有恒言曰:“百闻不如一见试卷试题”“读万卷书不如行万里路试卷试题”游学之益在于体验化学教案答案:1-5: ADBDC6-10: BBDBA11-15: ADCCC16-20: CABAD苞之生二十六年矣化学教案使蹉跎昏忽常如既往化学教案则由此而四十、五十化学教案岂有【答案详解】1. [标准答案] [A][考点分析] 本题考察逻辑关系[选项分析] 因为考察逻辑关系,所以需要我们先对填空前后的原文信息做定位分析:填空之后的信息为”a true cashless society is probably not around the corner .”(一个无现金社会不太可能马上出现),而文章之前的信息都是在说我们可能马上就进入一个无现金社会,两者之间出现了明显的转折关系,因此只有however符合题意。
2013硕士研究生考试(英语二)真题解析(1)Section I Use of English1. 答案 [A]考点本题考察逻辑关系解析空前作者讲到(鉴于电子货币的优势,你也许会认为,我们将快速步入非现金社会,实现完全电子支付。
)而空后说(真正的无现金社会很可能不会马上到来)这两句话语义是转折的,因此答案A。
B. moreover表递进 C. therefore 表结果 D. Otherwise表对比2. 答案 [D]考点上下文语义解析根据该句的 but 可知,其前后句子是转折关系。
后一句是说这种形式的社会并没有真正有成果出来,所以前一句应该为这样的预测已经进行了二十年。
其它选项不符合题意。
3. 答案 [B]考点上下文语义及名词辨析解析空格所在的句子意思为例如, 1975年《商业周刊》预测电子支付手段不久将(彻底改变货币本身的…)将四个选项带入,能够彻底改变的对象只能是金钱的概念(定义),而A(力量),C(历史),D(角色),语义都不恰当,并且如果选择 role的话,应该是复数roles,因为是金钱的作用不止一个,故答案选B。
4. 答案 [D]考点上下文语义及动词词义辨析解析根据 only 知道,空格处所填单词词义应与前一句的) revolutionize )(变革)发生同义替换,因此 ABCD 四个选项中只有 D. reverse (颠覆)符合。
A. reward 奖赏 B. resist 抵抗 C. resume 重新开始,继续。
5. 答案 [C]考点上下文语义及形容词词义辨析解析根据前面的句意得知,早在1975年就预测了无现金社会将到来,而实际上作者讲到(真正的无现金社会很可能不会马上到来),因此也得出这种变革是一个缓慢的过程,故答案选择C。
A. silent沉寂的,B. sudden突然的,D. steady稳定不变的。
6 .答案 [ B ]考点上下文语义及介词词义辨析解析填空所在段开头although 表明对上一段的让步关系,上一段的观点为人们进入无现金时代的速度变缓慢的原因。
SECTION A: Translate the following underlined part of the Chinese text into English.(原文)哲学家们以各种各样的方式解释世界。
哲学是言而不是行。
哲学家断乎改变不了自然与社会。
是不能也,非不为也。
哲学不是科学技术,不是生产力。
哲学是怀疑,是思虑,是静观,是探索。
严格来说,哲学不是解释宇宙,那是自然科学的事。
哲学家至多只能解释人生,解释自己,解释文本。
哲学也不是知,不是知识体系,不是几何学、物理学那样一大套公理、公式,可以解决实际生存问题。
哲学的精神永远是探究、怀疑、发问、沉思;而不是提供现成的答案。
哲学家有些不食人间烟火,他远离田野车间,甚至也不拿天文望远镜观察观察天体,而只是坐在静谧的书斋里读书、思考,思索那些具有终极意义、虚无缥缈的本体问题。
哲学家孤苦伶仃,独处一室之中。
面对古往今来的大哲学家遗留下来的问题,他苦苦沉思。
他唯一富有的是文本,哲学因而就是解释文本,而不是解释宇宙。
哲学家只是一味地同古往今来的灵魂交谈--他读书,是同古昔人物交谈;他写作,是同子孙后代交谈;他讲演,是同莘莘学子交谈;他沉思,是同自己交谈。
他长于洞见,洞见未来;他善于遐想,遐想无限;他耽于梦幻,幻游彼岸;他富于关怀,关怀永恒。
他同远在天涯的哲人和精神交谈,在这个意义上,他视通万里,思接千载。
他伟大,他不朽,他同古往今来的灵魂对话。
以哲学为命运的人应当准备在崎岖小路上独行,没有目的,也不会有黄金滚滚而来。
告别鲜花、头衔、掌声和奖品,钟情于思,就会有真哲学。
(参考译文)Philosophers interpret the world through a myriad of ways. Philosophy is more speculative than active. In no way do philosophers transform nature or society. This is not because they do not wish to, but because they are unable to. Philosophy does not work the way that science and technology do, and for this reason, philosophy does not represent a form of production force. What philosophy does represent are skepticism, reflection, contemplation, and exploration.Strictly speaking, philosophy does not attempt at explicating the universe, a responsibility that primarily resides with natural sciences. At their best, philosophers can only interpret life, interpret themselves, and interpret texts. Philosophy does not pretend to be knowledge, hence it does not aim at the construction of a system of knowledge, dissimilar to geometry or physics whose colossal framework of axioms and formulas can provide immediate solutions to the pragmatic problems of human survival. The essence of philosophy lies in eternal questing, questioning, inquiring, and meditating. Philosophy is under no obligation to furnish ready and handy answers. To some extent, philosophers tend to refrain from any secular involvements. A philosopher seldom frequents farmlands or factories, and he even never bothers to look through a telescope to make any observation of celestial bodies. He is only fond of staying in his personal library, in all its quietude, where he indulges himself in book-reading and in musing, pondering on those intangible ontological issues that he deems to be of ultimate significance. A philosopher is willing to surrender himself to utter loneliness and seclusion, confining himself to a room of his own, in a state of overwhelming solitude. In the face of the philosophical issues left over by great philosophical thinkers ancient and modern, he contemplates painstakingly. The only wealth to his possession is texts. Therefore, the task of philosophy is to interpret texts rather than to interpret the universe.A philosopher is solely concerned with conducting dialogues with the great souls from ancient antiquity to the contemporary era. In reading books, he converses with the ancients. In writing hisown books, he converses with the progeny. In delivering lectures, he converses with a multitude of young students. In contemplating, he converses with himself. He is adept at insights, penetrating into the future. He excels in speculations, speculating on the infinite. He indulges in reveries, traveling in the otherworld in unbounded fantasy. He abounds in sympathies, concerned about the eternal. He converses with the philosophers and the great minds in the remotest corners of the earth. In this sense, his vision extends into the infinite distance and his thoughts are connected with the past and the future. His vision and thoughts transcend all spatiotemporal boundaries whatsoever. He is great; he is immortal; because he is in permanent dialogue with the great souls of the past, the present and the future ……A person who pursues philosophy as his destiny must be ready to trudge along a lonely path replete with twists and turns, purposelessly and aimlessly. Nor should he expect to reap any materialistic rewards. He should be fully prepared to bid farewell to bouquets of flowers, honorary titles, applauses, and prizes in favor of committing himself solely to a life of meditation and contemplation. Only in such a state will true philosophy be born.SECTION B:Translate the following underlined part of the English text into Chinese Translate the following into Chinese(2001)Until early in this century, the isolationist tendency prevailed in American foreign policy. Then two factors projected America into world affairs: its rapidly expanding power, and the gradual collapse of the international system centered on Europe. The watershed presidencies marked this progression: Theodore Roosevelt's (1) and Woodrow Wilson's (2). These men held the reins of government when world affairs were drawing a reluctant nation into their vortex. Both recognized that America had a crucial role to play in world affairs though they justified its emergence from isolation with opposite philosophies.Roosevelt was a sophisticated analyst of the balance of power. He insisted on an international role for America because its national interest demanded it, and because a global balance of power was inconceivable to him without American participation. For Wilson, the justification of America's international role was messianic: America had an obligation, not to the balance of power, but to spread its principles throughout the world. During the Wilson's Administration, America emerged as a key player in world affairs, proclaiming principles which, while reflecting the truisms of American though, nevertheless marked a revolutionary departure for Old World diplomats. These principles held that peace depends on the spread of democracy, that states should be judged by the same ethical criteria as individuals, and that the national interest consists of adhering to a universal system of law.To hardened veterans of a European diplomacy based on the balance of power, Wilson's views about the ultimately moral foundations of foreign policy appeared strange, even hypocritical. Yet Wilsonianism has survived while history has bypassed the reservations of his contemporaries. Wilson was the originator of the vision of a universal world organization, the League of Nations, which would keep the peace through collective security rather than alliance. Though Wilson could not convince his own country of its merit, the idea lived on. It is above all to the drumbeat of Wilsonian idealism that American foreign policy has marched since his watershed presidency, and continues to march to this day.America's singular approach to international affairs did not develop all at once, or as the consequence of a solitary inspiration. In the early years of the Republic, American foreign policywas in fact a sophisticated reflection of the American national interest, which was, simply, to fortify the new nation's independence. Since no European country was capable of posing an actual threat so long as it had to contend with rivals, the Founding Fathers showed themselves quite ready to manipulate the despised balance of power when it suited their needs indeed, they could be extraordinarily skillful at maneuvering between France and Great Britain not only to preserve America's independence but to enlarge its frontiers. Because they really wanted neither side to win a decisive victory in the wars of the French Revolution, they declared neutrality. Jefferson defined the Napoleonic Wars as a contest between the tyrant on the land (France) and the tyrant of the ocean (England) -in other words, the parties in the European struggle were morally equivalent. Practicing an early form of nonalignment, the new nation discovered the benefit of neutrality as a bargaining tool, just as many an emerging nation has since.(参考译文)直到本世纪初,孤立主义倾向在外交政策中一直大行其道。
2013上大翻硕真题翻硕英语1,30个选择题。
生词很少,大多是容易忽视的语法和词汇比较,比如it's about time...it's high time...it's the first time...再比如regretful,regretable,regretting,regretted.....2,4篇阅读。
前两篇选择,后两篇问答。
p1是07年专八阅读真题textA,关于Welsh语言和民族resurgence的。
The Welsh language has always been the ultimate marker of Welsh identity, but a generation ago it looked as if Welsh would go the way of Manx. once widely spoken on the isle of Man but now extinct. Government financing and central planning, however, have helped reverse the decline of Welsh. Road signs and official public documents are written in both Welsh and English, and schoolchildren are required to learn both languages. Welsh is now one of the most successful of Europe’s regional languages, spoken by more than a half-million of the count ry’s three million people.The revival of the language, particularly among young people, is part of a resurgence of national identity sweeping through this small, proud nation. Last month Wales marked the second anniversary of the opening of the National Assembly, the first parliament to be convened here since 1404. The idea behind devolution was to restore the balance within the union of nations making up the United Kingdom. With most of the people and wealth, England has always had bragging rights. The partial transfer of legislative powers from Westminster, implemented by Tony Blair, was designed to give the other members of the club- Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales-a bigger say and to counter centrifugal forces that seemed to threaten the very idea of the union.The Welsh showed little enthusiasm for devolution. Whereas the Scots voted overwhelmingly for a parliament, the vote for a Welsh assembly scraped through by less than one percent on a turnout of less than 25 percent. Its powers were proportionately limited. The Assembly can decide how money from Westminster or the European Union is spent. It cannot, unlike its counterpart in Edinburgh, enact laws. But now that it is here, the Welsh are growing to like their Assembly. Many people would like it to have more powers. Its importance as figurehead will grow with the opening in 2003, of a new debating chamber, one of many new buildings that are transforming Cardiff from a decaying seaport into a Baltimore-style waterfront city. Meanwhile a grant of nearly two million dollars from the European Union will tackle poverty. Wales is one of the poorest regions in Western Europe- only Spain, Portugal, and Greece have a lower standard of living.Newspapers and magazines are filled with stories about great Welsh men and women, boosting self-esteem. To familiar faces such as Dylan Thomas and Richard Burton have been added new icons such as Catherine Zeta-Jones, the movie star, and Bryn Terfel, the opera singer. Indigenous foods like salt marsh lamb are in vogue. And Wales now boasts a national airline. Awyr Cymru. Cymru, which means “land of compatriots,” is the Welsh name for Wales. The red dragon, the nation’s symbol since the time of King Arthur, is everywhere- on T-shirts, rugby jerseys and even cell phone covers.“Until very recent times most Welsh people had this feeling of being second-class citizens,” saidDyfan Jones, an 18-year-old student. It was a warm summer night, and I was sitting on the grass with a group of young people in Llanelli, an industrial town in the south, outside the rock music venue of the National Eisteddfod, Wales’s annual cultural festival. The disused factory in front of us echoed to the sounds of new Welsh bands.“There was almost a genetic tendency for lack of confidence,” Dyfan co ntinued. Equally comfortable in his Welshness as in his membership in the English-speaking, global youth culture and the new federal Europe, Dyfan, like the rest of his generation, is growing up with a sense of possibility unimaginable ten years ago. “We used to think. We can’t do anything, we’re only Welsh. Now I think that’s changing.”(源自/view/2f88c61dff00bed5b9f31d5f.html)p2是讲网络个人信息隐私不安全的,比较好找,选项直接。
QE3CNNthe Eighteenth National Congress of the CPCUS pivot to AsiaIMFASEANThe Gaza Strip长三角中产收入陷阱纳米技术独立自主的和平外交政策钓鱼岛争端【想不起了待补充】英译汉Broken BRICs (毁了的“金砖四国)Why the Rest Stopped RisingBy Ruchir SharmaNovember/December 2012Over the past several years, the most talked-about trend in the global economy has been the so-called rise of the rest, which saw the economies of many developing countries swiftly converging with those of their more developed peers. The primary engines behind this phenomenon were the four major emerging-market countries, known as the BRICs: Brazil, Russia, India, and China. The world was witnessing a once-in-a-lifetime shift, the argument went, in which the major players in the developing world were catching up to or even surpassing their counterparts in the developed world.These forecasts typically took the developing world's high growthrates from the middle of the last decade and extended them straight into the future, juxtaposing them against predicted sluggish growthin the United States and other advanced industrial countries. Such exercises supposedly proved that, for example, China was on the verge of overtaking the United States as the world's largest economy-apoint that Americans clearly took to heart, as over 50 percent of them, according to a Gallup poll conducted this year, said they think that China is already the world's "leading" economy, even though the U.S. economy is still more than twice as large (and with a per capita income seven times as high).As with previous straight-line projections of economic trends, however-such as forecasts in the 1980s that Japan would soon be number one economically-later returns are throwing cold water on the extravagant predictions. With the world economy heading for its worst year since 2009, Chinese growth is slowing sharply, from doubledigits down to seven percent or even less. And the rest of the BRICs are tumbling, too: since 2008, Brazil's annual growth has droppedfrom 4.5 percent to two percent; Russia's, from seven percent to 3.5 percent; and India's, from nine percent to six percent.None of this should be surprising, because it is hard to sustainrapid growth for more than a decade. The unusual circumstances of the last decade made it look easy: coming off the crisis-ridden 1990s and fueled by a global flood of easy money, the emerging markets took off in a mass upward swing that made virtually every economy a winner. By 2007, when only three countries in the world suffered negative growth, recessions had all but disappeared from the international scene. But now, there is a lot less foreign money flowing into emerging markets. The global economy is returning to its normal state of churn, with many laggards and just a few winners rising in unexpected places. The implications of this shift are striking, because economic momentum is power, and thus the flow of money to rising stars will reshape the global balance of power.【译文出自网络,仅供参考】为何“其它国家”停止增长?全球经济中提到最多的趋势是所谓的“其它国家”的崛起。
2.[A] minor [B]objective [C] crucial [D] external3.[A] issue [B] vision [C] picture [D] moment4.[A] For example [B] On average [C] In principle [D] Above all5.[A] fond [B]fearful [C] capable [D] thoughtless6.[A] in [B] on [C] to [D] for7.[A] if [B]until [C] though [D] unless8.[A] promote [B]emphasize [C] share [D] test9.[A] decision [B] quality [C] status [D] success10.[A] chosen [B]stupid [C]found [D] identified11.[A] exceptional [B] defensible [C] replaceable [D] otherwise12.[A] inspired [B]expressed [C] conducted [D] secured13.[A] assigned [B]rated [C] matched [D] arranged14.[A] put [B]got [C]gave [D] took15.[A]instead [B]then [C] ever [D] rather16.[A]selected [B]passed [C] marked [D] introduced17.[A]before [B] after [C] above [D] below18.[A] jump [B] float [C] drop [D] fluctuate19.[A]achieve [B]undo [C] maintain [D]disregard20. [A] promising [B] possible [C] necessary [D] helpful答案:1-5: ADCAB6-10: BADDA11-15: DCBDB16-20: CACBC答案详解:2013年的完型填空是一篇选自《经济学人》名为A Question of Judgment的文章。
2013年国际关系学院英语专业(英美文学)真题试卷(总分:56.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、匹配题(总题数:1,分数:40.00)1. Ode on Melancholy2. Love"s Labour"s Lost3. The Holy Grail and Other Poems4. The Beautiful and Damned5. Wessex Tales6. The Great God Brown7. Rob Roy8. The People of the Abyss9. Ash Wednesday10. The American ScholarII. The Book of Snobs12. Robinson Crusoe13. The Purloined Letter14. The House of the Seven Gables15. My Antonia16. The Lost Girl17. Amelia18. The Rise of Silas Lapham19. The Titan20. Poor Richard"s Almanack(分数:40.00)(1).Benjamin Franklin(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (2).Thomas Hardy(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (3).Ralph Waldo Emerson(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (4).John Keats(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (5).Nathaniel Hawthorne(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (6).D.H. Lawrence(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (7).Edgar Allan Poe(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (8).Alfred Tennyson(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (9).Eugene O"Neill(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (10).William Shakespeare(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (11).Jack London(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (12).Henry Fielding(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (13).William Dean Howells(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (14).Theodore Dreiser(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (15).T.S.Eliot(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (16).F. Scott Fitzgerald(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (17).Daniel Defoe(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (18).Sir Walter Scott(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (19).William Makepeace Thackeray(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________(20).Willa Cather(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________二、填空题(总题数:6,分数:12.00)1.Symbolism is one of the most important characteristics of(1) 1"s work The Waste Land. The titles for the(2)2sections of the poem are themselves symbols. "The Burial of the (3) 3" obviously stands for the(4) 4of the western civilization.(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________2.By far the largest portion of Emily Dickinson"s poetry concerns(5) 1and(6) 2.(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________3.One of the great American(7) 1of the 1940s is Arthur(8) 2, who led the postwar new drama. He is best known as the author of "Death of a(9) 3". It is a sad version of the(10) 4dream.(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________4.W. H. Auden"s last important long poem is "The Age of(11) 1" published in(12) 2. The age refers to the(13) 3time, especially the time during and shortly after the(14) 4World War.(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________5.Charles Dickens, inspired by(15) 1 "s book French Revolution wished to write a novel on the historical event and the result was(16)" 2".(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________6.Fitzgerald was one of the great(17) 1 in American literature. T. S. Eliot read(18)" 2" three times and concluded that it was "the(19) 3that American fiction has taken since(20) 4".(分数:2.00)填空项1:__________________三、评论题(总题数:2,分数:4.00)7.Please read the following poem and make comments in about 300 words.(50 points)The Man He Killed"Had he and I but met By some old ancient inn, We should have sat us down to wet Right many a nipperkin!"but ranged as infantry,And staring face to face,I shot at him as he at me,And killed him in his place."I shot him dead because—Because he was my foe,Just so: my foe of course he was;That"s clear enough; although"He thought he"d enlist, perhaps,Off-hand like—just as I—Was out of work—had sold his traps —No other reason why."Yes; quaint and curious war is!You shoot a fellow downYou"d treat if met where any bar is,Or help to half-a-crown. "1. half-pint of ale2. Possessions(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________8.Please read the following story and make comments in about 500 words.(70 points)Big Two-Hearted River PART I The train went on up the track out of sight, around one of the hills of burnt timber. Nick sat down on the bundle of canvas and bedding the baggage man had pitched out of the door of the baggage car. There was no town, nothing but the rails and the burned-over country. The thirteen saloons that had lined the one street of Seney had not left a trace. The foundations of the Mansion House hotel stuck up above the ground. The stone was chipped and split by the fire, it was all that was left of the town of Seney. Even the surface had been burned off the ground. Nick looked at the burned-over stretch of hillside, where he had expected to find the scattered houses of the town and then walked down the railroad track to the bridge over the river. The river was there. It swirled against the log spires of the bridge. Nick looked down into the clear, brown water, colored from the pebbly bottom, and watched the trout keeping themselves steady in the current with wavering fins. As he watched them they changed their positions again by quick angles, only to hold steady in the fast water again. Nick watched them a long time. He watched them holding themselves with their noses into the current, many trout in deep, fast moving water, slightly distorted as he watched far down through theglassy convex surface of the pool its surface pushing and swelling smooth against the resistance of the log-driven piles of the bridge. At the bottom of the pool were the big trout. Nick did not see them at first. Then he saw them at the bottom of the pool, big trout looking to hold themselves on the gravel bottom in a varying mist of gravel and sand, raised in spurts by the current. Nick looked down into the pool from the bridge. It was a hot day. A kingfisher flew up the stream. It was a long time since Nick had looked into a stream and seen trout. They were very satisfactory. As the shadow of the kingfisher moved up the stream, a big trout shot upstream in a long angle, only his shadow marking the angle, then lost his shadow as he came through the surface of the water, caught the sun, and then, as he went back into the stream under the surface, his shadow seemed to float down the stream with the current unresisting, to his post under the bridge where he tightened facing up into the current. Nick"s heart tightened as the trout moved. He felt all the old feeling. He turned and looked down the stream. It stretched away, pebbly-bottomed with shallows and big boulders and a deep pool as it curved away around the foot of a bluff.… From the time he had gotten down off the train and the baggage man had thrown his pack out of the open car door things had been different. Seney was burned, the country was burned over and changed, but it did not matter. It could not all be burned. He hiked along the road, sweating in the sun, climbing to cross the range of hills that separated the railway from the pine plains.… As he smoked his legs stretched out in front of him, he noticed a grasshopper walk along the ground and up onto his woolen sock. The grasshopper was black. As he had walked along the road, climbing, he had started grasshoppers from with dust. They were all black. They were not the big grasshoppers with yellow and black or red and black wings whirring out from their black wing sheathing as they fly up. These were just ordinary hoppers, but all a sooty black in color. Nick had wondered about them as he walked without really thinking about them. Now, as he watched the black hopper that was nibbling at the wool of his sock with its fourway lip he realized that they had all turned black from living in the burned-over land. He realized that the fire must have come the year before, but the grasshoppers were all black now. He wondered how long they would stay that way. Carefully he reached his hand down and took hold of the hopper by the wings. He turned him up, all his legs walking in the air, and looked at his jointed belly. Yes, it was black too, iridescent where the back and head were dusty. "Go on, hopper," Nick said, speaking out loud for the first time. "Fly away somewhere. He tossed the grasshopper up into the air and watched him sail away to a charcoal stump across the road.… The ground rose, wooded and sandy, to overlook the meadow, the stretch of river and the swamp. Nick dropped his pack and rod case and looked for a level piece of ground. He was very hungry and he wanted to make his camp before he cooked. Between two jack pines, the ground was quite level. He took the ax out of the pack and chopped out two projecting roots. That leveled a piece of ground large enough to sleep on. He smoothed out the sandy soil with his hand and pulled all the sweet fern bushes by their roots. His hands smelled good from the sweet fern. He smoothed the uprooted earth. He did not want anything making lumps under the blankets. When he had the ground smooth, he spread his blankets. One he folded double, next to the ground. The other two he spread on top. With the ax he slit off a bright slab of pine from one of the stumps and split it into pegs for the tent. He wanted them long and solid to hold in the ground. With the tern unpacked and spread on the ground, the pack, leaning against a jack pine, looked much smaller. Nick tied the rope that served the tent for a ridgepole to the trunk of one of the pine trees and pulled the tent up off the ground with the other end of the rope and tied it to the other pine. The tent hung on the rope like a canvas blanket on a clothesline. Nick poked a pole he had cut up under the back peak of the canvas and then made it a tent by pegging out the sides. He pegged the sides out taut and drove the pegs deep, hiring them down into the ground with the flat of the ax until the rope loops were buried and the canvas was drum tight. Across the open mouth of the tent Nick fixed cheesecloth to keep out mosquitoes. He trawled inside under the mosquito bar with various things from the pack to put at the head of the bed under the slant of the canvas. Inside the tent the light came through the brown canvas. It smelled pleasantly of canvas. Already there was something mysterious and homelike. Nick was happy as he crawled inside the tent. He had not been unhappy all day. This was different though. Now things were done. There had been this to do. Now it was done. It had been a hard trip. He was very tired. That was done. He had made his camp. He was settled. Nothing could touch him. It was a good place to camp. He was there, in the good place. He was in his home where he had made it. Now he was hungry. Nick was hungry. He did not believe he had ever been hungrier. He opened and emptied a can at pork and beans and a can of spaghetti into the flying pan. " I"ve got a right to eat this kind of stuff, if I"m willing to carry it, " Nick said. His voice sounded strange in the darkening woods. He did not speak again. Nick drove another big nail and hung up the bucket full of water. He dipped the coffee pot half full, put some more chips under the grill onto the fire and put the pot oil. He could not remember which way he made coffee. He could remember an argument about it with Hopkins, but not which side he had taken. He decided to brine it to a boil. He remembered now that was Hopkins"s way. He had once argued about everything with Hopkins. While he waited for the coffee toboil, he opened a small can of apricots. He liked to open cans. He emptied the can of apricots out into a tin cup. While he watched the coffee on the fire, he drank the juice syrup of the apricots, carefully at first to keep from spilling, then meditatively, sucking the apricots down. They were better than fresh apricots. The coffee boiled as he watched. The lid came up and coffee and grounds ran down the side of the pot. Nick took it off the grill. It was a triumph for Hopkins. He put sugar in the empty apricot cup and poured some of the coffee out to cool. It was too hot to pour and he used his hat to hold the handle of the coffee pot. He would not let it steep in the pot at all. Not the first cup. It should be straight. Hopkins deserved that. Hop was avers, serious coffee drinker. He was the most serious man Nick had ever known. Not heavy, serious. That was a long time ago Hopkins spoke without moving his lips. He had played polo. He made millions of dollars in Texas. He had borrowed carfare to go to Chicago when the wire came that his first big well had come in. He could have wired for money. That would have been too slow. They called Hop"s girl the Blonde Venus. Hop did not mind because she was not his real girl. Hopkins said very confidently that none of them would make fun of his real girl. He was right. Hopkins went away when the telegram came. That was on the Black River. It took eight days for the telegram to reach him. Hopkins gave away his 22-caliber Colt automatic pistol to Nick. He gave his camera to Bill. It was to remember him always by. They were all going fishing again next summer. The Hop Head was rich. He would get a yacht and they would all cruise along the north shore of Lake Superior. He was excited but serious. They said good-bye and all felt bad. It broke up the trip. They never saw Hopkins again. That was a long time ago on the Black River. Nick drank the coffee, the coffee according to Hopkins. The coffee was bitter. Nick laughed. It made a good ending to the story. His mind was starting to work. He knew he could choke it because he was tired enough. He spilled the coffee out of the pot and shook the grounds loose into the fire. He lit a cigarette and went inside the tent. He took off his shoes and trousers, sitting on the blankets, rolled the shoes up inside the trousers for a pillow and got in between the blankets. Out through the front of the tent he watched the glow of the fire when the night wind blew. It was a quiet night. The swamp was perfectly quiet. Nick stretched under the blanket comfortably. A mosquito hummed close to his ear. Nick sat up and lit a match. The mosquito was on the canvas, over his head Nick moved the match quickly up to it. The mosquito made a satisfactory hiss in the flame. The match went out. Nick lay down again under the blanket. He turned on his side and shut his eyes. He was sleepy. He felt sleep coming. He curled up under the blanket and went to sleep.PART II In the morning the sun was up and the tent was starting to get hot. Nick crawled out under the mosquito netting stretched across the mouth of the tent, to look at the morning. The grass was wet on his hands as he came out. The sun was just up over the hill. There was the meadow, the river and the swamp. There were birch trees in the green of the swamp on the other side of the river.The river was clear and smoothly fast in the early morning. Down about two hundred yards were three logs all the way across the stream. They made the water smooth and deep above them. As Nick watched, a mink crossed the river on the logs and went into the swamp. Nick was excited. He was excited by the early morning and the rivet; He was really too hurried to eat breakfast, but he knew he must. He built a little fire and put on the coffee pot. While the water was heating in the pot he took an empty bone and went down over the edge of the high ground to the meadow. The meadow was wet with dew and Nick wanted to catch grasshoppers for bait before the sun dried the grass. He found plenty of good grasshoppers. They were at the base of the grass, stems. Sometimes they clung to a grass stem. They were cold and wet with the dew, and could not jump until the sun warmed them. Nick picked them up, taking only the medium-sized brown ones, and put them into the bottle. He turned over a log and just under the shelter of the edge were several hundred hoppers. It was a grasshopper lodging house. Nick put about fifty of the medium browns into the bottle. While he was picking up the hoppers the others warmed in the sun and commenced to hop away. They flew when they hopped. At first they made one flight and stayed stiff when they landed, as though they were dead. Nick knew that by the time he was through with breakfast they would be as lively as ever. Without dew in the grass it would take him all day to catch a bottle full of good grasshoppers and he would have to crush many of them, slamming at them with his hat. He washed his hands at the stream. He was excited to be near it. Then he walked up to the tent. The hoppers were already jumping stiffly in the grass. In the bottle, warmed by the sun, they were jumping in a mass. Nick put in a pine stick as a cork. It plugged the mouth of the bottle enough, so the hoppers could not get out and left plenty of air passage.… Holding the rod in his right hand he let out line against the pull of the grasshopper in the current. He stripped off line from the reel with his left hand and let it run free. He could see the hopper in the little waves of the current. It went out of sight. There was a tug on the line. Nick pulled against the taut line. It was his first strike. Holding the now living rod across the current, he hauled in the line with his left hand. The rod bent in jerks, the trout pulling against the current. Nick knew it was a small one. He lifted the rod straight up in the air. It bowed with the pull. He saw the trout in the water jerking with his head and body against the shifting tangent of the line in the stream. Nick took the line in his left hand and pulled the trout, thumping tiredly against the current, tothe surface. His back was mottled the clear, water-over-gravel color, his side flashing in the sun. The rod under his right arm, Nick stooped, dipping his right hand into the current. He held the trout, never still, with his moist right hand, while he unhooked the barb from his mouth, then dropped him back into the stream. He hung unsteadily in the current, then settled to the bottom beside a stone. Nick reached down his hand to touch him, his arm to the elbow under water. The trout was steady in the moving stream resting on the gravel, beside a stone. As Nick"s fingers touched him, touched his smooth, cool, underwater feeling, he was gone, gone in a shadow across the bottom of the stream. He"s all right, Nick thought. He was only tired.… Now the water deepened up his thighs sharply and coldly. Ahead was the smooth dammed-back flood of water above the logs. The water was smooth and dark; on the left, the lower edge of the meadow; on the right the swamp. Nick leaned back against the current and took a hopper from the bottle. He threaded the hopper on the hook and spat on him for good luck. Then he pulled several yards of line from the reel and tossed the hopper out ahead onto the fast, dark water. It floated down towards the logs, then the weight of the line pulled the bait under the surface. Nick held the rod in his right hand, letting the line run out through his fingers. There was a long tug. Nick struck and the rod came alive and dangerous, bent double, the line tightening, coming out of water, tightening, all in a heavy, dangerous, steady pull. Nick felt the moment when the leader would break if the strain increased deep and the swamp looked solid with cedar trees, their trunks close together, their branches solid. It would not be possible to walk through a swamp like that. The branches grew so low. You would have to keep almost level with the ground to move at all. You could not crash through the branches. That must be why the animals that lived in swamps were built the way they were, Nick thought. He wished he had brought something to read. He felt like reading. He did not feel like going on into the swamp. He looked down the river. A big cedar slanted all the way across the stream. Beyond that the river went into the swamp. Nick did not want to go in there now. He felt a reaction against deep wading with the water deepening up under his armpits, to hook big trout in places impossible to land them. In the swamp the banks were bare, the big cedars came together overhead, the sun did not come through, except in patches; in the fast deep water, in the half-light, the fishing would be tragic. In the swamp fishing was a tragic adventure. Nick did not want it. He didn"t want to go up the stream any further today. He took out his knife, opened it and stuck it in the log. Then he pulled up the sack, reached into it and brought out one of the trout. Holding him near the tail, hard to hold, alive, in his hand, he whacked him against the log. The trout quivered, rigid. Nick laid him on the log in the shade and broke the neck of the other fish the same way. He laid them side-by-side on the log. They were fine trout. Nick cleaned them, slitting them from the vent to the tip of the jaw. All the insides and the gills and tongue came out in one piece. They were both males; long gray-white strips of milt, smooth and clean. All the insides clean and compact, and let the line go.… The leader had broken where the hook was tied to it. Nick took it in his hand. He thought of the trout somewhere on the bottom, holding himself steady over the gravel, far down below the light, under the logs, with the hook in his jaw. Nick knew the trout"s teeth would cut through the snell of the hook. The hook would imbed itself in his jaw. He"d bet the trout was angry. Anything that size would be angry. That was a trout. He had been solidly hooked. Solid as a rock. He felt like a rock, too, before he started off. By God, he was a big one. By God, he was the biggest one I ever heard of. Nick climbed out onto the meadow and stood, water running down his trousers and out of his shoes, his shoes squelchy. He went over and sat on the logs. He did not want to rush his sensations any. He sat on the logs, smoking, drying in the sun, the sun warm on his back, the river shallow ahead entering the woods, curving into the woods, shallows, light glittering, big water-smooth rocks, cedars along the bank and white birches, the logs warm in the sun, smooth to sit on, without bark, gray to the touch; slowly the feeling of disappointment left him. It went away slowly, the feeling of disappointment that came sharply after the thrill that made his shoulders itch. It was all right now. His rod lying out on the logs, Nick tied a new hook on the leader, pulling the gut tight until it crimped into itself in a hard knot.… Ahead the river narrowed and went into a swamp. The river became smooth and coming out all together. Nick took the offal ashore for the minks to find. He washed the trout in the stream. When he held them back up in the water, they looked like live fish. Their color was not gone yet. He washed his hands and dried them on the log. Then he laid the trout on the sack spread out on the log, rolled them up in it, tied the bundle and put it in the landing net. His knife was still standing, blade stuck in the log. He cleaned it on the wood and put it in his pocket. Nick stood up on the log, holding his rod, the landing net hanging heavy, then stepped into the water and splashed ashore. He climbed the bank and cut up into the woods, to ward the high ground. He was going back to camp. He looked back. The river just showed through the trees. There were plenty of days coming when he could fish the swamp.(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________。
2013广外MTI真题回忆下面说一下2013年各科考试的具体内容吧,政治就不说了,现在应该到处有真题和标准答案看。
1. (211)翻译硕士英语(满分100)第一部分: 单选30个,共30分;考察词汇和语法。
词汇语法差不多各占一半。
(个人感觉难度不及专四,比较重基础,口语好的可以一边默读一边写,感觉对了的应该是对的.题目考得比较细,比如我记得第一个题考了so far,只要你认识,就是选这个啦。
有个题考了dispite(=in spite of )其中会给出dispite,in spite ,despite of之类的选项。
还有一个题目就要求理解句子意思才能做对,利用语法排除后选项剩下surprisingly和not surprisingly,所以句意还是要明白的。
个人觉得单项30个,其中好几个连起来看很像一篇完型填空,因为有一两个不认识的词老是出现,记忆中出现过黑奴这样的字眼。
第二部分: 阅读Section A: 两篇文章,每篇文章5个选择题,共10题,20分。
(第一篇文章关于恐龙化石,这个文章前三问都能在原文明确找到,第四问就是选下面哪个是错误的,我选了D,因为D选项把原文的likely说成了will,说得太绝对了,另外三个在文中也能找到,只是需要点时间把文章全看完。
第五问问了这篇文章的主题,好像也不是很难,每个选项都很短,而且ABCD意思差别挺大的。
第二篇文章关于英国Stratford的文化旅游,就是莎士比亚的住址,大意是:在那里有两类人,一类通过戏剧表演啊什么的努力维持莎翁的文学艺术之类的,另一类通过带游客去一些地点赚钱,两类人意见不一样,然后还讲了前一类人可能得到当地的什么钱支柱事业发展,但是第二类人不同意或者是认为不应该给前一类人这个钱,第二类人给出的理由是戏剧表演的门票上涨了,因此第一类人的收入上升了等等原因,这个地方出了个题,说第二类人不同意第一类人得到这个钱的原因是?另外考的题目还有这两类人的分歧是因为?作者这句话(文中的某句话)的意思是?总之这篇文章也不难,都在文章中明明白白地看得到)个人认为这两篇文章和笔译三级中的阅读题目难度相似,答案出法也类似。
2013年北京语言大学211翻译硕士英语考研试题翻译硕士英语考研试题((回忆版回忆版))一、grammar and vocabulary (20*1.5)覆盖面几乎都是语法,有几个词汇题,语法以考察非谓语动词、主谓一致、虚拟语气为主,另涉及到一些固定短语的搭配,但都不难,单词的辨析也不是很难,结合前三年的回忆版,我觉得以后大家在复习这道题型时主要还是以基础语法为主,复习专四那样复习就够了。
二、阅读阅读((20*2)1.前三篇文章的选择题基本上都有1道词汇题(文中词汇,问其近义词),三个词汇分别是despendent, prevalent, pandemic ,其他的题型就是定位于原文段落中的句子的理解、还有问整篇文章是关于什么的,还有就是下列选项哪个是正确的。
A .是racial discrimination 和social violence 的文章B .是facial expression 和 emotion 讲的是世界不同文化的人们即使言语不通也会有某些共同表情,而且不同表情对心理的影响不同C .貌似是专四真题或者是模拟题,是关于亚非拉地区传染病防治的2.第四道阅读题为回答问题型,两道大题,其中第一道大题有两问,整篇文章是将文中划线部分用自己的话表达出来。
EDW ARD THOMAS was a late starter to poetry. “I couldn’t write a poem to save my life,” he declared aged 35, when a “literary hack” of minor biographies and travel memoirs, struggling to support a wife and three children. A year later, and three years before he was killed by a passing shell in the Arras offensive in the first world war, he had written and published some of the finest poems to come out of Britain at the beginning of the 20th century.What changed Thomas from a middling prose writer to a dazzling poet is the central theme of Matthew Hollis’s engaging new book, which won two awards for biography when it came out in Britain last year and is just now being published in America. Mr Hollis, a poet and editor, focuses on the last five years of Thomas’s life before he died in 1917.His book begins in London, where Thomas visits a new bookshop dedicated to poetry that had just opened in “shady Bloomsbury”. Around this shop circled the poets that made up literary London at that time: Ezra Pound, an American, who would greet startled visitors to his flat in a purple dressing gown; W.B. Yeats, an Irish poet and playwright who shunned newfangled electricity in favour of candlelight for his evening readings; and Rupert Brooke, a dashing young English poet, who would die a soldier in 1915 from an infection caught while stationed near Greece, and whose poetry sold 250,000 copies in the decade after his death.Less glamorous or eccentric than these figures, Thomas was a prolific and occasionally acerbic book reviewer, six feet tall, “slim, loose-limbed and vigorous”, who struggled with near-suicidal depression. He had married while still an undergraduate at Oxford and his relationship with his wife Helen was a troubled one. He often spent time away on the long journeys needed for his travel books, such as the “The Icknield Way”.Mr Hollis is adept at evoking the atmosphere of the time, and at negotiating the complicated friendships and squabbles between these poets. But it is when Thomas meets Robert Frost, a“Yankee” poet determined to be published in Britain that his book comes to life. It was Frost—a stocky, quick-tempered figure—who persuaded Thomas to write poems, and who believed that “words exist in the mouth, not in books”. Once Thomas decided to write verse, he did so quickly. Spurred on by Frost, and by the oncoming threat of war, at one point he wrote nearly a poem a day, including his much loved “Adlestrop” with its “lazed, heat-filled atmosphere…of that last summer before the war”. Mr Hollis re-creates Thomas’s process of writing by comparing the differing drafts of his poems, giving life to his process of composition, and charting the correspondence between Thomas and Frost once the latter had moved back to America.In many ways, Thomas was a difficult, reticent figure, who was quite capable of signing off letters to his mother “Yours ever, Edward Thomas”. Even after he had enrolled in the Artists Rifles regiment, he remained painfully shy about his work, hiding his poetry among calculations on the trajectory of shells, or disguising it as prose. This may be one reason why Mr Hollis tends to address his subject formally throughout his book, frequently by his full name, and does not delve—beyond polite speculation—into the various extramarital romances Thomas may have had. Those who want such details will have to go elsewhere. Instead, Mr Hollis captures something far greater than a man’s personal life, and far more elusive: the desire and struggle to write, even when you begin, as Thomas put it, “at 36 in the shade”.1.Describe Edward Thomas's personal detail and his literary career2.Explain the sentences in line三、写作Define the word "integrity" and explain its importance in our social life(题目是”integrity“,问其为何在社会生活中很重要)。
2013外交学院翻译硕士MTI考研试题(回忆版)政治就不多说了,说说外交的三门:英语基础,英语翻译和百科吧。
英语基础:20道选择题,一篇改错10分,5篇阅读30分,一篇问答10分,作文30分。
个人感觉比较有难度的是20道选择题,其他的话按英语八级的标准来复习。
PS:没看过2笔的书,看到网上有人说选择题是2笔的水平。
英语翻译:词汇互译无力吐槽,英汉个人感觉挺难的有ADB,EAEA,Amex,还有Affirmative Action ,absent without leave,还有几个记不清了,么借壳上市啊或政治类的重复建设。
篇章翻译的话有一定难度,英汉是关于美国佬deny climate change 的一篇文章,比较地道,里面有些单词要靠猜的。
汉英的话是说中国出了一本书《中国人可以说不》引起了很大反响,美国人怀疑其作者的意图,文章讽刺了美国人推行的所谓的言论自由。
这两篇都有一点难度,而且汉英的接近600字,时间挺紧的。
字写的也挺丑,没底。
百科:考了歼十五,罗阳,辽宁舰,莎士比亚,英伦三岛,歌德,林纾,朱生豪,田汉,曹禺,阴历,阳历,阴阳历,东盟峰会,金边,东盟宪章,欧债危机,两个百年,两个翻一番。
应用文写作题目就满满两面纸了,奇葩!!!是一个场景的对话,几个人在谈有关商务上的事,涉及到各方的基本意见,然后就其中一个人的基本意见向另外一个人写封商务信函,其实那个基本意见就那两三句话,完全是要靠自己各种编,发挥无限想象力。
作文题目是译事的不宜,给了一段材料说译者不能死忠原文,要提升自身功底,不能喧宾夺主,扯了好长一段话,然后让你根据受到的启发,写800字。
扯了好多,超过八百字了。
再详细补充一下:选择题几乎全是考词汇的,(考前买了那个考研手册和真题,有10,11年10多间高校的真题,但选择题的话外交今年算是挺那个的了)就连为数不多的一两道考which ,that 句子也是两三行那么长,绝对木有那么简单。
北京科技大学翻译硕士英语学位MTI考试真题2013年(总分:150.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、英汉互译短语翻译(总题数:15,分数:30.00)1.Producer Price Index (PPI)(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 2.Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 3.cap and trade(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 4.middle income trap(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 5.electoral college(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 6.glass ceiling(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 7.Engle Coefficient(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 8.停火协议(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 9.摇摆州(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 10.单位国内生产总值能源消耗(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 11.扩大内需(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 12.高速铁路(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 13.转变经济发展方式(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 14.资源节约型、环境友好型社会(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 15.循环经济(分数:2.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________二、将下列段落译为汉语(总题数:1,分数:25.00)16.As China"s economy has boomed over the past 30 years, the number of young people going into private business has grown accordingly. "Diving into the sea" of commerce, or xia hai as it is known, became accepted as the way to make money and get ahead, and interest in government jobs declined. Over the past decade, though, in an extraordinary reversal, young jobseekers have been applying in droves for government posts, even as the economy has quadrupled in size.On November 25th the national civil-service examinations will take place, and about 1.4m people will sit them, 20 times more than a decade ago. Of that number, only 20, 800 will be hired by government (millions more sit the equivalent provincial exams with similarly long odds of being hired). This increase is due in part to a surge in the number of university students entering an intensely competitive market for jobs—nearly 7m graduated this year, compared with 1.5m a decade ago. It is also thanks to health, pension and (sometimes) housing benefits, which are seen as generous and permanent in a society with an underfunded safety net—a modern version of the unbreakable Maoist "iron rice-bowl" of state employment.(分数:25.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________三、将下列短文译为汉语(总题数:1,分数:35.00)17.China has long fretted that it lacks a great modern literary voice with international appeal. In 1917 Chen Duxiu, an influential intellectual and later founding member of the Communist Party, asked: "Pray, where is our Chinese Hugo, Zola, Goethe, Hauptmann, Dickens or Wilde?" In recent years this has developed into a full-blown "Nobel Complex". For a period in the 1980s the quest for a Nobel Prize in literature was made official policy by the party, eager for validation of its growing power and cultural clout.Now, at last, the Chinese have something to crow about. On October 11th Mo Yan, a Chinese writer, won the 2012 prize. The Nobel committee lauded what it called the "hallucinatory realism" of his works, which mix surreal plots with folk tales and modern history.Mr. Mo writes within a system of state censorship. He is widely read and respected within China. He is also a Communist Party member and vice-chairman of the state-run China Writers" Association. When the Nobel award was announced, Chinese television channels interrupted their programming to announce the news. Thousands of China"s microbloggers congratulated Mr. Mo. A publisher under the Ministry of Education says it was already planning to include a Mo Yan novella in a school textbook.(分数:35.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________四、将下列段落译为英语(总题数:1,分数:25.00)18.欧洲应对欧债问题走在正确的道路上,当前关键是把各项政策措施落到实处。
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国际关系学院2013年翻译硕士MTI真题及答案一、词语翻译:英译汉(每题1分,总共15分)1、reciprocity in trade2、Ramadan3、infortainment4、aircraft carrier5、non-performing loan6、cost performance7、state fund allotment8、outsource9、free-lance professionals10、home game11、IAEA12、FTP13、TEFL14、OPEC15、SCO二、词语翻译:汉译英(每题1分,总共15分)1、应试教育2、诺贝尔奖得主3、知识产权4、不结盟运动5、城乡低保6、对口支援7、扶贫、脱贫8、灰色收入9、关税壁垒10、拳头产品11、试用期12、民办教师13、入口老龄化14、中央纪律检查委员会15、山寨手机三、英汉互译:英译汉(每篇60分,总共60分)People in China generally agree that it is important to celebrate the country’s rich hisiory,but its culture police think there is too much of iht wrong kind of celebrating going on.Two agencies, the Ministry of Cnltxxrc and the Siate Administration of Cultural Heritage,have banned the promotion of‘negative historical figures or literary worksf for tourism purposes,theoretically ending a longstanding practice by Chinese cities of playing up their ties to racy cultural icons like the lustful Ximen Qing through festivals,theme parks and merchandise.A few lucky destinations in China,like Mao’s hometown of Shaoshan in Hunan province,are blessed with the notoriety of a state-approved celebrity,allowing them io rake in tourism dollars.But for most Chinese towns,bringing in tourists is hard work,which is made easier if they can stake a claim to someone famous,whether reaL mythical or literary.Disputes can flare up among towns claiming to be the original homes of the same popular character.Just before the Ministry of Culture announced the new rules,Loufan county in Shanxi declared itself hometown of the Monkey King,challenging the same claim made first by Lianyugang City in Jiangsu,according to a recent article on Xinhua’s English-language website.Critics say that this kind of cultural infighting'”isembarrassing to China,especially when attracting foreign dollars is the motive.It is better if these cities manage and protect their own cultural heritage and intangible cultural resources, rather than compete with each other and humiliate themselves.In the past,tourist stunts by Chinese towns have been heavily frowned upon by the public.A sex theme park in southwestern China was demolished before it even opened,after inciting widespread condemnation.Earlier this year,public outcry forced government officials in Zhangjiajie to back away from plans to rename a local mountain TAvatar Hallelujah Mountain1after the popular Hollywood movie.The latest crackdown,however,goes further than any one campaign and promises to lay out strict guidelines for what is appropriate cultural celebration in the coming weeks.四、英汉互译:汉译英(每篇60分,总共60分)近些年来,中国与印度经济均实现了迅猛增长。
理科生考这个的确鸭梨山大啊!!!
百科知识与写作
名词解释,一共20个:物流PM2.5 卖家市场无罪推定天宫一号启蒙运
动朦胧诗西学东渐道家玄奘资治通鉴本初子午线沙文主义丝绸之
路利玛窦3k党听证会CI战略弹劾还有一个忘了。
但是十八大和莫言神马的一个都没考,郁闷!!!
写作应用文类似10年还是11年的,还是要拨款。
大作文材料是“获取熊胆”引起的各种争论,要求写作文。
英汉翻译基础
词汇:英译汉我全会写所以一个没记
汉译英很多不会所以都记住了!!!:本地化时间表审校钉子户房产证商品房停车位物业税社会保险体系人才战略人才政策廉租房强国战
略高雅艺术秒杀(我准备的那些十八大啊!!!你们在哪里啊!!!)
英译汉两篇短文:第一个是关于美国女性数量超过男性的,第二个是关于。
忘了!!!但是都不难,这是真的!
汉译英是《中国文化》读本的介绍,自己去找找吧!
基础英语
阅读理解好像有一篇我做过原题。
整体很简单。
作文是因为杭州一个孩子不让做被扇脸,于是,让座与否成了讨论的热点。
“offer seats”听大家说政治很难,可是我没怎么复习,所以我不觉得难不难。
囧。
英语(二)Section I Use of English Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points) Given the advantages of electronic money, you might think that we would move quickly to the the cashless cashless cashless society society society in in in which which which all all all payments payments payments are are are made made made electronically. electronically. 1 a a true true true cashless cashless society society is is is probably probably probably not not not around around around the the the corner. corner. Indeed, Indeed, predictions predictions predictions have have have been been 2 for for two two decades but have not yet come to fruition. For example, Business Week predicted in 1975 that electronic means of payment would soon "revolutionize the very 3 of money itself," only only to to 4 itself itself several several several years years years later. later. later. Why Why Why has has has the the the movement movement movement to to to a a a cashless cashless cashless society society society been been so 5 in coming? Although Although electronic electronic electronic means means means of of of payment payment payment may may may be be be more more more efficient efficient efficient than than than a a a payments payments payments system system based on paper, several factors work 6 the disappearance of the paper system. First, it is very 7 to set up the computer, card reader, and telecornmunications networks necessary to to make make make electronic electronic electronic money money money the the 8 form form of of of payment payment payment Second, Second, Second, paper paper paper checks checks checks have have have the the advantage advantage that that that they they 9 receipts, receipts, something something something thai thai thai many many many consumers consumers consumers are are are unwilling unwilling unwilling to to 10 . Third, Third, the the the use use use of of of paper paper paper checks checks checks gives gives gives consumers consumers consumers several several several days days days of of of "float" "float" "float" - - - it it it takes takes takes several several days 11 11 a check is cashed and funds are a check is cashed and funds are 12 from the issuer's account, which means that the the writer writer writer of of of the the the check check check can can can cam cam cam interest interest interest on on on the the the funds funds funds in in in the the the meantime. meantime. 13 electronic payments arc immediate, they eliminate the float for the consumer. Fourth, Fourth, electronic electronic electronic means means means of of of payment payment payment may may 14 security security and and and privacy privacy privacy concerns. concerns. concerns. W e W e often often hear media reports that an unauthorized hacker has been able to access a computer database and to alter information 15 there. The fact that this is not an 16 occurrence means that dishonest dishonest persons persons persons might might might be be be able able able to to to access access access bank bank bank accounts accounts accounts in in in electronic electronic electronic payments payments payments systems systems and 17 from someone else's accounts. The 18 of this type of fraud is no easy task, and a new field of computer science is developing to 19 security issues. A further concern is that the use of e lectronic means of payment leaves an electronic 20 that contains a large amount amount of of of personal personal personal data. data. data. There There There are are are concerns concerns concerns that that that government, government, government, employers, employers, employers, and and and marketers marketers might be able to access these data, thereby violating our privacy. 1. [A] However [B] Moreover [C] Therefore [D] Otherwise 2. [A] off [B] back [C] over [D] around 3. [A] power [B] concept [C] history [D] role 4. [A] reward [B] resist [C] resume [D] reverse 5. [A] silent [B] sudden [C] slow [D] steady 6. [A] for [B] against [C] with [D] on 7. [A] imaginative [B] expensive [C] sensitive [D] productive 8. [A] similar [B] original [C] temporary [D] dominant 9. [A] collect [B] provide [C] copy [D] print 10. [A] give up [B] take over [C] bring back [D] pass down 11. [A] before [B] after [C] since [D] when 12. [A] kept [B] borrowed [C] released [D] withdrawn 13. [A] Unless [B] Until [C] Because [D] Though 14. [A] hide [B] express [C] raise [D]ease 15. [A] analyzed [B] shared [C] stored [D] displayed 16. [A] unsafe [B] unnatural [C] uncommon [D] unclear 17. [A] steal [B] choose [C] benefit [D] return 18. [A] consideration [B] prevention [C] manipulation [D] justification 19. [A] cope with [B] fight against [C] adapt to [D] call for 20. [A] chunk [B] chip [C] path [D] trail Section II R eading Comprehension Reading Comprehension Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (40 points) Text 1 In an essay entitled “Making It in America”, the author Adam Davidson relates a joke from cotton about just how much a modern textile mill has been automated: The average mill only two employees today,” a man and a dog . The man is there to feed the dog is there to keep the man away from the machines.” Davidson‟s article article is is is one one one of of of a a a number number number of of of pieces pieces pieces that that that have have have recently recently recently appeared appeared appeared making making making the the point that the reason we have such stubbornly high unemployment and declining middle-class incomes today is also because of the advances in both globalization and the information technology revolution, which are more rapidly than ever replacing labor with machines or foreign worker. In In the the the past, past, past, workers workers workers with with with average average average skills, skills, skills, doing doing doing an an an average average average job job ,could could earn earn earn an an an average average lifestyle ,But ,today ,average is officially over. Being average just won‟t earn you what it used to. It can‟t when so many more employers have so much more access to so much more above average cheap foreign labor, cheap robotics, cheap software, cheap automation and cheap genius. Therefore, everyone needs to find their extra-their unique value contribution that makes them stand out in whatever is their field of employment. es, Y es, new new new technology technology technology has has has been been been eating eating eating jobs jobs jobs forever, forever, forever, and and and always always always will. will. will. But But But there‟s there‟s been been an an acceleration. acceleration. As As As Davidson Davidson Davidson notes,” notes,” notes,” In In In the the the 10 10 10 years years years ending ending ending in in in 2009, 2009, 2009, [U.S.] [U.S.] [U.S.] factories factories factories shed shed workers so fast that they erased almost all the gains of the previous 70 years; roughly one out of every three manufacturing jobs-about 6 million in total -disappeared. There will always be changed-new jobs, new products, new services. But the one thing we know for sure is that with each advance in globalization and the I.T. revolution, the best jobs jobs will will will require require require workers workers workers to to to have have have more more more and and and better better better education education education to to to make make make themselves themselves themselves above above average. In a world where average is officially over, there are many things we need to do to support employment, but nothing would be more important than passing some kind of G .I.Bill for the 21st century that ensures that every American has access to poet-high school education. 21. The joke in Paragraph 1 is used to illustrate_______ [A] the impact of technological advances [B] the alleviation of job pressure [C] the shrinkage of textile mills [D] the decline of middle-class incomes 22. According to Paragraph 3, to be a successful employee, one has to______ [A] work on cheap software [B] ask for a moderate salary [C] adopt an average lifestyle [D] contribute something unique 23. The quotation in Paragraph 4 explains that ______ [A] gains of technology have been erased [B] job opportunities are disappearing at a high speed [C] factories are making much less money than before [D] new jobs and services have been offered 24. According to the author, to reduce unemployment, the most important is_____ [A] to accelerate the I.T. revolution [B] to ensure more education for people [C] ro advance economic globalization [D] to pass more bills in the 21st century 25. Which of the following would be the most appropriate title for the text? [A] New Law Takes Effect [B] Technology Goes Cheap [C] Average Is Over [D] Recession Is Bad Text 2 A A century century century ago, ago, ago, the the the immigrants immigrants immigrants from from from across across across the the the Atlantic Atlantic Atlantic inclued inclued inclued settlers settlers settlers and and and sojourners. sojourners. Along with the many folks looking to make a permanent home in the United States came those those who who who had had had no no no intention intention intention to to to stay, stay, stay, and and and 7millin 7millin 7millin people people people arrived arrived arrived while while while about about about 2 2 2 million million departed. About a quarter of all Italian immigrants, for exanmle, eventually returned to Italy for good. They even had an affectionate nickname, “uccelli di passaggio,” birds of passage. Today, we we are are are much much more more rigid rigid about about immigrants. immigrants. W e divide divide nemcomers nemcomers into into two two categories: legal or illegal, good or bad. We hail them as Americans in the making, or our broken immigrantion system and the long political par alysis over how to fix it. We don‟t need more categories, but we need to change the way we think about categories. We need to look beyond strick definitions of legal and illegal. To start, we can recognize the new birds of passage, those living and thriving in the gray areas. We might then begin to solve our immigration challenges. Crop pickers, violinists, construction workers, entrepreneurs, engineers, home health-care aides and physicists are among today‟s birds of passage. They are energetic participant s in a global economy driven by the flow of work, money and ideas .They prefer to come and go as as opportunity opportunity opportunity calls calls calls them them them , They , They can manage to have a job in one place and a family in another. With or without permission, they straddle laws, jurisdictions and identities with ease. We need them to imagine the United States as a place where they can be productive for a while without committing themselves to staying forever. We need them to feel that home can be both here and there and that they can belong to two nations honorably. Accommodating Accommodating this this this new new new world world world of of of people people people in in in motion motion motion will will will require require require new new new attitudes attitudes attitudes on on on both both sides sides of of of the the the immigration immigration immigration battle .Looking battle .Looking beyond beyond the the the culture culture culture war war war logic logic logic of of of right right right or or or wrong wrong means opening up the middle ground and understanding that managing immigration today requires requires multiple multiple multiple paths paths paths and and and multiple multiple multiple outcomes. outcomes. outcomes. Including Including Including some some some that that that are are are not not not easy easy easy to to accomplish legally in the existing system. 26 “Birds of passage” refers to those who____[A] immigrate across the Atlantic. [B] leave their home countries for good. [C] stay in a foregin temporaily. [D] find permanent jobs overseas. 27 It is implied in paragraph 2 that the current immigration stystem in the US____ [A] needs new immigrant categories. [B] has loosened control over immigrants. [C] should be adopted to meet challenges. [D] has been fixeed via political means. 28 According to the author, today‟s birds of passage want___[A] fiancial incentives. [B] a global recognition. [C] opportunities to get regular jobs. [D] the freedom to stay and leave. 29 The author suggests that the birds of passage today should be treated __ [A] as faithful partners. [B] with economic favors. [C] with regal tolerance. [D] as mighty rivals. 30 选出最适合文章的标题选出最适合文章的标题[A] come and go: big mistake. [B] living and thriving : great risk. [C] with or without : great risk. [D] legal or illegal: big mistake. Text 3 Scientists Scientists have have have found found found that that that although although although we we we are are are prone prone prone to to to snap snap snap overreactions, overreactions, overreactions, if if if we we we take take take a a moment and think about how we are likely to react, we can reduce or even eliminate the negative effects of our quick, hard-wired responses. Snap decisions can be important defense mechanisms; if we are judging whether someone is dangerous, our brains and bodies are hard-wired to react very quickly, within milliseconds. milliseconds. But But But we we we need need need more more more time time time to to to assess assess assess other other other factors. factors. factors. To To To accurately accurately accurately tell tell tell whether whether someone someone is is is sociable, sociable, sociable, studies studies studies show, show, show, we we we need need need at at at least least least a a a minute, minute, minute, preferably preferably preferably five. five. five. It It It takes takes takes a a while to judge complex aspects of personality, like neuroticism or open-mindedness. But snap decisions in reaction to rapid stimuli aren‟t exclusive to the interpersonal realm. Psychologists at the University of Toronto found that viewing a fast-food logo for just a few milliseconds primes us to read 20 percent faster, even though reading has little to do with eating. eating. W e W e unconsciously unconsciously unconsciously associate associate associate fast fast fast food food food with with with speed speed speed and and and impatience impatience impatience and and and carry carry carry those those impulses into whatever else we‟re doing, Subjects exposed to fast -food flashes also tend to think a musical piece lasts too long. Yet we can reverse such influences. If we know we will overreact to consumer products or housing options when we see a happy face (one reason good sales representatives and real estate agents are always smiling), we can take a moment before buying. If we know female job screeners are more likely to reject attractive female applicants, we can help screeners understand their biases-or hire outside screeners. John John Gottman, Gottman, Gottman, the the the marriage marriage marriage expert, expert, expert, explains explains explains that that that we we we quickly quickly quickly “thin “thin “thin slice” slice” slice” info info information rmation reliably only after we ground such snap reactions in “thick sliced” long -term study. When Dr. Gottman really wants to assess whether a couple will stay together, he invites them to his island retreat for a muck longer evaluation; two days, not two seconds. Our Our ability ability ability to to to mute mute mute our our our hard-wired hard-wired hard-wired reactions reactions reactions by by by pausing pausing pausing is is is what what what differentiates differentiates differentiates us us us from from animals: animals: doge doge doge can can can think think think about about about the the the future future future only only only intermittently intermittently intermittently or or or for for for a a a few few few minutes. minutes. minutes. But But historically historically we we we have have have spent spent spent about about about 12 12 12 percent percent percent of of of our our our days days days contemplating contemplating contemplating the the the longer longer longer term. term. Although technology might change the way we react, it hasn‟t changed our nature. We still have the imaginative capacity to rise above temptation and reverse the high-speed trend. 31. The time needed in making decisions may____. [A] vary according to the urgency of the situation [B] prove the complexity of our brain reaction [C] depend on the importance of the assessment [D] predetermine the accuracy of our judgment 32. Our reaction to a fast-food logo shows that snao decisions____. [A] can be associative [B] are not unconscious [C] can be dangerous [D] are not impulsive 33. Toreverse the negative influences of snap decisions,we should____. [A] trust our first impression [B] do as people usually do [C] think before we act [D] ask for expert advice 34. John Gottman says that reliable snap reaction are based on____. [A] critical assessment [B]……thin sliced ‟‟study[C] sensible explanation [D] adequate information 35. The author‟s attitude toward reversing the high -speed trend is____. [A] tolerant [B] uncertain [C] optimistic [D] doubtful Text 4 Europe is not a gender-equality heaven.In particular, the corporate workplace will never be completely completely family family family——friendly friendly until until until women women women are are are part part part of of of senior senior senior management management management decisions,and decisions,and Europe,s top corporate-governance positions remain overwhelmingly male .indeed,women hold only 14 percent of positions on Europe corporate boards. The Europe Union is now considering legislation to compel corporate boards to maintain a certain proportion of women-up to 60 percent.This proposed mandate was born of frustration. Last year, Europe Commission Vice President Viviane Reding issued a call to voluntary voluntary action. action. action. Reding Reding Reding invited invited invited corporations corporations corporations to to to sign sign sign up up up for for for gender gender gender balance balance balance goal goal goal of of of 40 40 percent percent female female female board board board membership. membership. membership. But But But her her her appeal appeal appeal was was was considered considered considered a a a failure: failure: failure: only only only 24 24 companies took it up. Do we need quotas to ensure that women can continue to climb the corporate Ladder fairy as they balance work and family? “Personally, “Personally, I I I don‟t don‟t like like quotas,” quotas,” quotas,” Reding Reding Reding said said said recently. recently. recently. “But “But “But i i i like like like what what what the the the quotas quotas quotas do.” do.” Quotas get action: they “open the way to equality and they break through the glass ceiling,” according according to to to Reding, Reding, Reding, a a a result result result seen seen seen in in in France France France and and and other other other countries countries countries with with with legally legally legally binding binding provisions on placing women in top business positions. I I understand understand understand Redi Redi Reding‟s ng‟s reluctance reluctance--and and her her her frustration. frustration. frustration. I I I don‟t don‟t like like quotas quotas quotas either; either; either; they they they run run counter to my belief in meritocracy, government by the capable. Bur, when one considers the obstacles to achieving the meritocratic ideal, it does look as if a fairer world must be temporarily ordered. After all, four decades of evidence has now shown that corporations in Europe as the US are evading the meritocratic hiring and promotion of women to top top position position position—— no matter how much “soft pressure ” is put upon them. When women do brea k through to the summit of corporate corporate power--as, power--as, power--as, for for for example, example, example, Sheryl Sheryl Sheryl Sandberg Sandberg Sandberg recently recently recently did did did at at at Facebook Facebook Facebook——they attract massive attention precisely because they remain the exception to the rule. If If appropriate appropriate appropriate pubic pubic pubic policies policies policies were were were in in in place place place to to to help help help all all all women---whether women---whether women---whether CEOs CEOs CEOs or or or their their children‟s caregivers --and all families, Sandberg would be no more newsworthy than any --and all families, Sandberg would be no more newsworthy than any other highly capable person living in a more just society. 36. In the European corporate workplace, generally_____. [A] women take the lead [B] men have the final say [C] corporate governance is overwhelmed [D] senior management is family-friendly 37. The European Union‟s intended legislation is ________.[A] a reflection of gender balance [B] a reluctant choice [C] a response to Reding‟s call[D] a voluntary action 38. According ti Reding, quotas may help women ______. [A] get top business positions [B] see through the glass ceiling [C] balance work and family [D] anticipate legal results 39. The author‟s attitude toward Reding‟s appeal is one of _________. [A] skepticism [B] objectiveness [C] indifference [D] approval 40. Women entering top management become headlines due to the lack of ______. [A] more social justice [B] massive media attention [C] suitable public policies [D] greater “soft pressure”Part B Directions: You are going to read a list of headings and a text. Choose the most suitable heading from the the list list list A-F A-F A-F for for for each each each numbered numbered numbered paragraph paragraph paragraph (41-45).Mark (41-45).Mark (41-45).Mark your your your answers answers answers on on on ANSWER ANSWER SHEET1. (10 points) [A] Live like a peasant [B] Balance your diet [C] Shopkeepers are your friends [D] Remember to treat yourself [E] Stick to what you need [F] Planning is evervthing [G] Waste not, want not The hugely popular blog the Skint Foodie chronicles how Tony balances his love of good food with living on benefits. After bills, Tony has ?60 a week to spend, ?40 of which goes on on food, food, food, but but but 10 10 10 years years years ago ago ago he he he was was was earning earning earning ?130,000 ?130,000 ?130,000 a a a I I I year year year working working working in in in corporate corporate communications and eating at London's betft restaurants'" at least twice a week. Then his marriage marriage failed, his failed, his career burned out and his drinking became serious. "The community mental mental health health health team team team saved saved saved my my my life. life. life. And And And I I I felt felt felt like like like that that that again, again, again, to to to a a a certain certain certain degree, degree, degree, when when people responded to the blog so well. It gave me the validation and confidence that I'd lost. But it's still a day-by-day thing." Now he's living in a council flat and fielding offers from literary literary agents. agents. agents. He's He's He's feeling feeling feeling positive, positive, positive, but but but he'll he'll he'll carry carry carry on on on blogging blogging blogging - - - not not not about about about eating eating eating as as cheaply cheaply as as as you you you can can can - - - "there "there "there are are are so so so many many many people people people in in in a a a much much much worse worse worse state, state, state, with with with barely barely barely any any money to spend on food" - but eating well on a budget. Here's his advice for economical foodies. 41._____________________ Impulsive spending isn't an option, so plan your week's menu in advance, making shopping lists for your ingredients in their exact quantities. I have an Excel template for a week of breakfast, lunch and dinner. Stop laughing: it's not just cost effective but helps you balance your diet. It's also a good idea to shop daily instead of weekly, because, being-human, you'll sometimes change your mind about what you fancy. 42____________________________________________________________ This is where supermarkets and thci; anonymity come in handy. With them, there's not the same embarrassment as when buying one carrot in a little greengrocer. And if you plan properly, you'll know that you only need, say, 350g of shin of beef and six rashers of bacon, not whatever weight is pre-packed in the supermarket chiller. 43_________ You may proudly claim to only have frozen peas in the freezer - that's not good enough. Mine is filled with leftovers, bread, stock, meat and fish. Planning ahead should eliminate wastage, but if you have surplus vegetables you'll do a vegetable soup, and all fruits threatening to "go off' will be cooked or juiced. 44___________________________________ Everyone says this, but it really is a top tip for frugal eaters. Shop at butchers, delis and fish-sellers regularly, even for small things, and be super friendly. Soon you'll feel comfortable asking if they've any knuckles of ham for soups and stews, or beef bones, chicken carcasses and fish heads for stock which, more often than not, Theyil let you have for free. 45__________________ You won't be eating out a lot, but save your pennies and once every few months treat yourself to a set lunch at a good restaurant - ?1.75 a week for three months gives you ?21 - more than" enough for a three-course lunch at Michelin-starred Arbutus. It's ?16.95 there - or ?12.99 for a large pizza from Domino's: I know which I'd rather eat. Section III T ranslation Translation Directions: Translate the following text from English into Chinese. Write your translation on ANSWER SHEET 2. (15 points) I can pick a date from the past 53 years and know instantly where I was , what happened in the news and even the day of the week. I‟ve been able to do this since I was four.I never feel overwhelmed with the amount of information my brain absorbs my mind seems to be able to cope and the information is stored away reatly. When I think of a sad memory, I I do do do what what what everyone everyone everyone does- does- does- try try try to to to put put put it it it to to to one one one side. side. side. I I I don‟t don‟t think think it‟s it‟s harder harder for for for me me me just just because because my my my memory memory memory is is is clearer. clearer. clearer. Powerful Powerful Powerful memory memory memory doesn‟t doesn‟t make make my my my emotions emotions emotions any any any more more acture or vivid. I I can recall the day can recall the day my my grandfather died grandfather died and the sadness I felt when we went to the hosptibal the day before. I also remember that the musical paly Hamopened on the Broadway on the same day- they both just pop into my mind in the same way. Section IV W riting Writing 47. 47. Suppose Suppose Suppose your your your class class class is is is to to to hold hold hold a a a charity charity charity sale sale sale foe foe foe kids kids kids in in in need need need of of of help. help. help. Write Write Write your your classmates an email to 。