大连外国语大学翻译硕士MTI2013年真题
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汉语写作与百科知识一、名词解释:给出一段话,然后对应几个选择题。
1、1~5题:古代尚黄,黄色常常被视为君权的象征,这首先起源于古代农业民族敬土思想。
安阴阳学说,黄色在五行中为土,这种土是居于宇宙中央的“中央土”,故在五行中,“土为尊”。
此后这种思想又于儒家大一统思想柔和在一起,认为以汉族为主体的统一王朝就是这样一个处于“中央土”的帝国,而有别于周围的“四夷”,这样“黄色"通过土就与“正统”,“尊崇”联系起来,为君主的统治提供了“合理性”的论证。
再加上古代又有“龙战于野,其血玄黄”的说法,而君主又以龙为象征,黄色与君主就发生了更为直接的联系。
这样,黄色就象征着君权神授,神圣不可侵犯。
周代以黄钺为天子权利象征,隋代以后皇帝要穿黄龙袍,黄色成为君主独占的御用颜色。
1.阴阳,古代以何为阴,何为阳?答案选择:剧烈运动着的、外向的、上升的、温热的、明亮的,都属于阳;相对静止着的、内守的、下降的、寒冷、晦暗的,都属于阴。
2.四夷包括什么?答案:东夷、西戎、南蛮、北狄。
3.黄钺的形状像什么?答案:斧4.隋朝持续了多少年?答案:38年5.五行相克指的是:答案:木克土,土克水,水克火,火克金,金克木2、6~15 题,一个关于乒乓球外交的,题目包括:6.罗斯福就任了几届美国总统?答案:2届7.1972年访华,中美关系开始正常化的美国总统是谁?答案:尼克松8.貌似还有一个说“小球带动大球”,这里面乒乓球的第一届冠军是谁?9.美国宣布独立的时间:1776年10.封建王朝最后一个皇帝是谁:溥仪3、16~25题:马可·波罗小时候,他的父亲和叔叔到东方经商,来到元大都并朝见过蒙古帝国的忽必烈大汗,还带回了大汗给罗马教皇的信。
他们回家后,小马可·波罗天天缠着他们讲东方旅行的故事。
这些故事引起了小马可·波罗的浓厚兴趣,使他下定决心要跟父亲和叔叔到中国去。
1271年,马可·波罗17岁时,父亲和叔叔拿着教皇的复信和礼品,带领马可·波罗与十几位旅伴一起向东方进发了。
2020年-2021年大连外国语学院翻译硕士MTI考研真题及考研参考书育明教育506大印老师联合各大翻硕名校导师及考研状元联合整理2019年9月10日星期日【温馨解析】翻译硕士MTI专业,是一个比较适合于非英语专业学生报考的研究生考研专业,尤其是对于非英语专业的考生而言,一定要把握住汉语写作与百科知识(参考《汉语写作与百科知识》,首都师范大学出版社,2019年版)以及政治这两门课,因为这是加分项,是可以凸显优势的两门课所以,一定要重视。
此外,每个院校考察的汉语写作与百科知识的侧重点是不同的,比如北大侧重中国古代文学及历史,北外侧重考察时政热点。
而且从翻译硕士英语和英语翻译基础而言,考察的也不同(参考《翻译硕士MTI常考词汇》,首都师范大学出版社,2020年版;《翻译硕士考研真题解析》,首都师范大学出版社,2020年版)。
比如,北大侧重于现当代文学的翻译,北二外侧重经济管理类的翻译等。
目录一、2020年翻译硕士MTI考研真题及考研笔记(2020年考研状元整理)二、2021年翻译硕士MTI考研复习技巧及名师指导:词汇、翻译技巧、汉百与写作三、2021年全国150所翻译硕士MTI院校考研参考书、报名人数、复试线、报录比及参考书具体内容一、2020年翻译硕士MTI考研真题及考研笔记参考书:1.《英译中国现代散文选》,张培基(三册中至少一册),上海外语出版社,20072.《高级翻译理论与实践》,叶子南,清华大学出版社,20013.《汉语写作与百科知识》,李国正,首都师范大学出版社,20194.《非文学翻译理论与实践》,李长栓,中国对外翻译出版公司,20085. 《翻译硕士MTI常考词汇》,李国正,首都师范大学出版社,2020考研笔记:■词汇:[1]熟悉不少于英语专业八级(如GRE)要求的词汇量,具有大学英语四级[CET-4]至大学英语六级[CET-6](4000-5000)的积极词汇,较为熟练掌握这些词汇的用法;[2]熟悉政治、经济、文化、法律领域的一般概念及其英语表达。
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。
大连外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题词条互译carbon sinktrade balancesinking fundMDGUNCTADWIPOvirual pneumoniaWorld Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control The Doctrine of MeanGlobal environment facilityNikkei Index二氧化硫戛纳国际电影节直辖市外交豁免儒林外史春秋清明上河图商务参赞缺席审判中国证监会现货交易百科三北工程雾霾天气水土流失生态系统经济河西走廊黄土高原绿洲《水浒传》文学现实主义汉乐府李白唐代绝句新体诗宋词词牌三国闪米特语系古埃及达摩克利斯之剑博弈文化专业课复习方法对于报考本专业的考⽣来说,由于已经有了本科阶段的专业基础和知识储备,相对会⽐较容易进⼊状态。
但是,这类考⽣最容易产⽣轻敌的⼼理,因此也需要对该学科能有⼀个清楚的认识,做到知⼰知彼。
跨专业考研或者对考研所考科⽬较为陌⽣的同学,则应该快速建⽴起对这⼀学科的认知构架,第⼀轮下来能够把握该学科的宏观层⾯与整体构成,这对接下来具体⽽丰富地掌握各个部分、各个层⾯的知识具有全局和⽅向性的意义。
做到这⼀点的好处是节约时间,尽快进⼊⼀个陌⽣领域并找到状态。
很多初⼊陌⽣学科的同学会经常把注意⼒放在细枝末节上,往往是浪费了很多时间还未找到该学科的核⼼,同时缺乏对该学科的整体认识。
其实考研不⼀定要天天都埋头苦⼲或者从早到晚⼀直看书,关键的是复习效率。
要在持之以恒的基础上有张有弛。
具体复习时间则因⼈⽽异。
⼀般来说,考⽣应该做到平均⼀周有⼀天的放松时间。
四轮复习法第⼀轮复习:每年的2⽉̶̶8⽉底这段时间是整个专业复习的⻩⾦时间,因为在复习过程遇到不懂的难题可以尽早地寻求帮助得到解决。
这半年的时间相对来说也是整个专业复习压⼒最⼩、最清闲的时段。
考⽣不必要在这个时期就开始紧张。
大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题汉语写作与百科知识大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题英语翻译基础大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题翻译硕士英语学弟学妹们好我是14级大外考生方向是英语翻硕初试成绩400+ 已录取有10 11 12 1314年的初试真题、复试真题、考研笔记、考研资料、常用参考书电子版出售。
学弟学妹们需要的话,可以通过qq 联系我one one six four four six five six one one 1164465611。
考研过程中有什么问题,也都可以问我的。
翻硕考研参考书电子版:学弟学妹需要的需要的话,q我。
《10 11年各校真题》《环球时代:MTI50所院校真题集合》《叶朗:中国文化读本》《散文佳作108篇》《林青松:中国文学与中国文化知识应试指南》《最新汉英特色词汇词典》《英语笔译常用词语应试手册2、3级通用》《唐静:翻译硕士(MTI)考研手册》《唐静:翻译硕士(MTI)真题汇编》《程裕祯:中国文化要略(第二版)》《新东方专八词根联想记忆乱序版》《张培基:英汉翻译教程》《张培基:英译中国现代散文选1》《张培基:英译中国现代散文选2》《张培基:英译中国现代散文选3》《张培基:英译中国现代散文选4》《王晓梅:不可不知的2000个文化常识》《卢晓江:自然科学史十二讲》《英语笔译综合能力3级》《外研社:张道真实用英语语法》《中国译协:论英汉翻译技巧》《李学平:通过翻译学英语》《刘重德:文学翻译十讲》一些关于大外翻硕的常见问题整理了一下:1,考二外吗?大外翻硕初试不考二外,复试考,不过只有20分的听力,而且……2,大外翻硕口译和笔译有什么区别?口译难吗?大外翻硕口译笔译初试内容都一样。
复试总分270分,其中综合英语200分,面试50分,二外听力20分。
……3,大外好考吗?我觉得大外与其他几所专门的外国语院校相比,还是比较好考的。
目 录2010年大连外国语大学357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解2011年大连外国语大学357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解2012年大连外国语大学357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解2010年大连外国语大学357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解一、将下列短语译成汉语(1)UNDP: United Nations Development Program【答案】联合国开发计划署(2)TMD: theater missile defense (system)【答案】战区导弹防御(系统)(3)OTC: Over the Counter【答案】非处方(药)(4)IMF【答案】国际货币基金组织(5)NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration 【答案】美国国家航空和宇宙航行局(6)GPS Global Position System【答案】全球定位系统(7)cruise missile【答案】巡航导弹(8)irrevocable letter of credit【答案】不可撤销信用证(9)critical pressure【答案】临界电压(10)insulating board【答案】绝缘板(11)refugee camp【答案】难民营(12)intellectual property right【答案】知识产权(13)notary public office【答案】公证处(14)financial deficit【答案】财政赤字(15)Reuters【答案】(英国)路透社二、将下列短语译成英语(1)多次入境签证【答案】Multiple entry visa(2)反导弹卫星【答案】Anti missile satellite(3)国际标准化组织【答案】international organization for standardization (4)对外经济贸易委员会【答案】Foreign economy and Trade Committee(5)中国民航【答案】Civil Aviation Administration of China; CAAC (6)臭氧层【答案】ozone layer(7)跳台跳水【答案】platform diving(8)载人宇宙飞船【答案】manned spaceship(9)候机大厅【答案】The lobby of the airport(10)国务院【答案】the Sate Council(11)(美国)联邦储备委员会【答案】Federal Reserve Board(12)联合国儿童基金会【答案】UNICEF(13)物联网【答案】Internet of things(14)核心利益和重大关切【答案】Core interests and major concerns(15)中国远洋运输总公司【答案】China Ocean Shipping Company三、将下列短文译成汉语PASSAGE 1The Obama administration on Monday plans to announce a campaign to pressure mortgage companies to reduce payments for many more troubled homeowners, as evidence mounts that a $75 billion taxpayer-financed effort aimed at stemming foreclosures is foundering.“The banks are not doing a good enough job,” Michael S. Barr, Treasury’s assistant secretary for financial institutions, said in an interview Friday.“Some of the firms ought to be embarrassed, and they will be.”(选自《纽约时报》)【参考译文】奥巴马政府计划在周一宣布一项给抵押放款公司施压使其减少对更多的陷入困境的私房所有者放贷的运动。
⼤连外国语⼤学⽇语翻译硕⼠⼝译真题、初试复试考试科⽬育明教育2015年考研指导⽅案考研最重要的就是⽅法、规划、模考⼤连外国语⼤学专业初试复试考试科⽬055106⽇语⼝译13①101思想政治理论②213翻译硕⼠⽇语③359⽇语翻译基础④448汉语写作与百科知识复试:①综合⽇语(笔试)②⼆外听⼒③综合⾯试真题信息及辅导请联系QQ:947948911或TEL:180********《育明教育:150分考研专业课答题攻略》(⼀)名词解释1.育明考研名师解析名词解释⼀般都⽐较简单,是送分的题⽬。
在复习的时候要把重点名词夯实。
育明考研专业课每个科⽬都有总结的重要名词,不妨作为复习的参考。
很多⾼校考研名词解释会重复,这就要考⽣在复习的同时要具备⼀套权威的、完整的近5年的真题,有近10年的最好。
2.育明考研答题攻略:名词解释三段论答题法定义——》背景、特征、概念类⽐、案例——》总结/评价第⼀,回答出名词本⾝的含义。
⼀般都可以在书本找到。
第⼆,从名词的提出的背景、它的特征、相似概念⽐较等⽅⾯进⾏简述。
第三,总结,可以做⼀下简短的个⼈评价。
3.育明教育答题⽰范例如:“战略⼈⼒资源管理”第⼀,什么是战略⼈⼒资源管理(这是答案的核⼼)第⼆,它的⼏个特征,并简单做⼀下解释。
第三,和职能⼈⼒资源管理,⼈事管理等进⾏对⽐。
4.危机应对如果出现没有遇到的名词解释,或者不是很熟悉的名词解释,则尽量把相关的能够想到的有条理的放上去,把最有把握的放在第⼀部分,不要拘泥于以上的答案框架。
5.育明考研温馨提⽰第⼀,名词解释⼀般位于试卷的第⼀部分,很多考上刚上考场⾮常的兴奋,⼀兴奋就容易下笔如流⽔,⼀不⼩⼼就把名词解释当成了简答题。
结果后⾯的题⽬答题时间⾮常紧张。
第⼆,育明考研咨询师提醒⼤家,在回答名词解释的时候以150-200字为佳。
如果是A4的纸,以5-8⾏为佳。
按照每个⼈写字的速度,⼀般需要5分钟左右。
(⼆)简答题1.育明考研名师解析简答题⼀般来说位于试题的第⼆部分,基本考察对某些重要问题的掌握程度。
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。
翻译硕士英语学位MTI考试天津外国语大学2013年真题(总分100,考试时间90分钟)Ⅰ.Choose the one answer that best explains the underlined word or phrase in the sentence. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET1. One purpose of the conferences was to foster a dialogue between opposing sides in the arms race, and the speakers often included scientists and government officials in charge of the unclear arms programs in their own countries.A. startB. bring upC. developD. involve2. Modern infomercials usually relied on celebrity endorsement rather than high-pressure salesmen to lent credibility to their products.A. mobilityB. trustC. capabilityD. loyalty3. An epidemic of Ebola virus in Africa prompted increased awareness of the potential dangers of so-called hot viruses, which cause deadly and virtually untreatable diseases in humans and other animals.A. almostB. mostlyC. totallyD. completely4. In Saudi Arabia, a monarchy where conservative Islam prevails and no modified system of law exists, women"s mobility is strongly curtailed.A. strengthenedB. improvedC. liftedD. reduced5. The contemporary botanical garden has many urgent tasks, the conservation of plant resources being paramount.A. tolerableB. deplorableC. extremeD. supreme6. Also of concern was the fact that many consumers lacked sufficient information and awareness to protect themselves in the marketplace and to make knowledgeable buying choices.A. diligentB. intelligentC. remarkableD. understandable7. Many countries had already removed the distinction between widows and widowers as regards eligibility for survivors" benefits, and some were extending protection to other single parents.A. indicationB. referenceC. differenceD. relationship8. The soft economy did not slow the inexorable growth of TV and radio outlets in the U. S.A. impossible to stopB. likely to increaseC. impossible to happenD. unreasonably low9. Where do **e from? For years astronomers have postulated a comet storehouse beyond the orbit of Pluto.A. simulatedB. assumedC. stimulatedD. assimilated10. A favorably moist rainy season through late July deteriorated during August and September across the eastern Sahel, leaving below-normal seasonal rainfall amounts in most areas.A. courageouslyB. probablyC. advantageouslyD. terribly11. Disagreement continued on ways to meet the undertaking to reduce carbon dioxide emissions given in the UN Convention on Climate Change.A. productionB. reproductionC. deductionD. seduction12. Another exceptionally tough trading year for the world airline industry saw passenger numbers rise an average of 5.7% but the profit made per seat—the yield—decline as wild discounting took place in vicious fare wars.A. victoriousB. vigorousC. tolerantD. violent13. During the past few years archaeologist William Kelso delved into contemporary accounts of the settlement and searched for telltale postholes and palisades in the sandy soil.A. descriptionB. accuracyC. acquisitionD. destination14. With advances in xerography and desktop publishing, the fanzines became slicker and more visually appealing.A. movingB. availableC. attractiveD. destructive15. Greenpeace spokes-people attributed the cutbacks to a drop in annual fund-raising.A. subjugatedB. allocatedC. safeguardedD. regarded16. In Paris a record 81 international designers unveiled spring/summer collections, which resulted in fashion confusion.A. underlinedB. uncoveredC. undetectedD. presented17. The British newspaper industry continued to consolidate, with larger chains buying smaller ones rather than individual newspapers.A. constituteB. strengthenC. contaminateD. lengthen18. The ultimate verdict on welfare reform, however, would not be in for years. In some high-poverty areas, efforts were hampered both by politics and by a lack of jobs and funds for support services.A. hinderedB. tamperedC. doubledD. interfered19. Both Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola moved into categories they had previously ignored, after seeing their potential cultivated by others. Bottled and canned tea experienced a renaissance.A. survivalB. approvalC. disapprovalD. revival20. The other cause of unemployment is deep in the modem structure of the welfare state. This places on the employer a substantial labor cost in addition to wages, the provision of pension and health benefits in particular but other costs as well.A. considerateB. considerableC. subsequentD. successiveⅡ. In each of the following sentences, there are four underlined parts, marked with A, B, C and D. Identify the part that is grammatically incorrect. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. 1. Trends in new product development in the U. S. (largely) mirrored those in Europe, (with) low-fat introduction continuing, (although) at a (reducing) rate.A. largelyB. withC. althoughD. reducing2. The major international auction houses (posted) annual earnings that pointed to a (healthy) art market, though (the one) not as robust as (that of) the frenetic 1980s.A. postedB. healthyC. the oneD. that of3. (Like) a motion picture, which presents (moving) images on a flat surface, a cyberspatial environment would convey realistic (detail) in three dimensions and (to) all five senses.A. LikeB. movingC. detailD. to4. The rules laid the foundation for a major (restructuring) in gas pipeline operations by requiring pipelines to charge (separately) for each of their services and by making them available (on equal basis) to anyone (desiring) to use them.A. restructuringB. separatelyC. on equal basisD. desiring5. Dissatisfaction (with) the economic relationships (of) industrialized and less industrialized countries led to proposals (for) environmental (trade-offs).A. withB. ofC. forD. trade-offs6. Overall, the question of treatment was (unlikely) to be settled quickly. There was no doubt (that) some stones, especially sapphires (from) Montana, (were permanent improved) by heating.A. unlikelyB. thatC. fromD. were permanent improved7. In China discoveries (from) more than 100 sites (along with) the Yangtze River showed that rice (cultivation) began 11,500 years ago (rather than) 8,000.A. fromB. along withC. cultivationD. rather than8. Demand (of) new equipment rose (as) business improved. Unlike Airbus, Boeing had already been operating (at full capacity) and could not immediately (meet demand).A. ofB. asC. at full capacityD. meet demand9. The strong U. S. dollar continued to attract North American visitors to (overseas) destinations, (while) the long-delayed Japanese economic recovery and setbacks in Southeast Asian economies (caused) the Asia-Pacific region to (under-perform).A. overseasB. whileC. causedD. under-perform10. Curriculum reforms in India took a more (nationalistic) turn (as) a (growing) number of foundation-sponsored private schools supplemented the government syllabus (by) studies of Indian culture, music, philosophy, and Sanskrit language.A. nationalisticB. asC. growingD. byⅢ. Below each of the following four passages you will find questions or incomplete statements about the passage. Each statement or question is followed by lettered words or expressions. Select the word or expression that most **pletes or answers each question in accordance with the meaning of the passage. Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET**mon gifts, necessity makes pertinence and beauty every day, and one is glad when an imperative leaves him no option: since if the man at the door has no shoes, you have not to consider whether you could procure him a paint-box. And it is always pleasing to see a man eat bread, or drink water, in the house or out of doors, so it is always a great satisfaction to supply these first wants. Necessity does everything well. In our condition or universal dependence it seem heroic to let the petitioner be the judge of his necessity, and to give all that is asked, though at great inconvenience. If it be a fantastic desire, it is better to leave to others the office of punishing him. I can think of many parts I should prefer playing to that of the Furies(复仇三女神). Next to things of necessity, the rule for a gift, which one of my friends prescribed, is that we might convey to some person that which properly belonged to his character, and was easily associated with him in thought. But our tokens of compliment and love are for the most part barbarous. Rings and other jewels are not gifts, but apologies for gifts. The only gift is a portion of yourself. You must bleed for me. Therefore the poet brings him poem; the shepherd, his lamb; the farmer, corn; the miner, a gem; the sailor, coral and shells; the girl, a handkerchief of her own sewing. This is right and pleasing, for it restores society in so far to the primary basis, when a man"s biography is conveyed in his gift, and every man"s wealth is an index of his merit. But it is a cold lifeless business when you go to the shops to buy me something which does not represent your life and talent, but a goldsmith"s. This is fit for kings, and rich men who represent kings, and a false state of property, to make presents of gold and silver stuffs, as a kind of symbolical sin-offering, or payment of blackmail.1. According to the author, what is the best gift to the man at the door who has no shoes?A. a paint-boxB. flowersC. foodstuffD. shoes2. Among the following behaviors, which may be not treated as being heroic when we are faced with the petitioner?A. To fulfill his primary needs when you are not available for those requirementsB. To grant him whatever is requestedC. Always being pleasing to supply his first wantsD. To let him have a fantastic desire3. Does the author agree to play the role of the Furies when someone has an unattainable desire?A. Yes, he doesB. NoC. He has no idea about thatD. It depends on the situation the author is involved in4. The italicized word "apologies" refer to ______.A. an expression of regretB. defenseC. a poor exampleD. equivalent5. According to the rule for a gift, what should a painter bring as a gift?A. his painting brushB. his paint-boxC. his pictureD. his paint bucketBeing told I would be expected to talk here, I inquired what sort of a talk I ought to make. They said it should be something suitable to youth something didactic, instructive, or something in the nature of good advice. Very well, I have a few things in my mind which I have often longed to say for the instruction of the young; for it is in one"s tender early years that such things will best take root and be most enduring and most valuable. First, then, I will say to you, my young friends and I say it beseechingly—Always obey your parents, when they are present. This is the best policy in the long run, because if you don"t they will make you. Most parents think they know better than you do, and you can generally make more by humoring that superstition than you can by acting on your own better judgment.Be respectful to your superiors, if you have any, also to strangers, and sometimes to others. If a person offends you, and you are in doubt as to whether it was intentional or not, do not resort to extreme measures; simply watch your chance and hit him with a brick. That will be sufficient. If you shall find that he had not intended any offense, come out frankly and confess yourself in the wrong when you struck him; acknowledge it like a man and say you didn"t mean to. Yes, always avoid violence; in this age of charity and kindliness, the time has gone by for such things. Leave dynamite tothe low and unrefined.6. According to the passage, why do people have to listen to some instructive advice when they were young?A. Because these advice are given by the elderly who have plenty of experienceB. Because these didactic advice are suitable to youthC. Because they should always obey the elderlyD. Because the youth would retain the impressive words and never treat them with obliviousness7. What is the author"s suggestion concerning the parents" words?A. Their words are merely superstitionB. Their words may help you accomplish more in your lifeC. Their words could prevent you from making your own judgmentD. Their words may offend you8. The italicized word "humoring" means ______.A. putting into a good moodB. making concessions toC. entertainingD. having the power to evoke laughter9. Among the following kinds of response, which is not the proper behaviour when you are offended by others?A. To grasp a proper chance and make a counterattackB. To decide whether the offender"s behavior is performed with purpose or notC. Always being reluctant to strike backD. To resort to a furious return for the offense10. The italicized term "the low and unrefined" means ______.A. the lower classB. the barbarianC. people lacking cultivationD. the poorMost gulls don"t bother to learn more than the simplest facts of flights how to get from shore to food and back again. For most gulls, it is not flying that matter, but eating. For this gull, though, it was not eating that mattered, but flight: More than anything else, Jonathan Livingston Seagull loved to fly. This kind of thinking, he found, is not the way to make oneself popular with other birds. Even his parents were dismayed as Jonathan spent whole days alone, making hundreds of low-level glides, experimenting."Why, Jon, why?" his mother asked. "Why is it so hard to be like the rest of the flock, Jon? Why can"t you leave low flying to the pelicans (鹈鹕), the albatross (信天翁)? Why don"t you eat? Son, you"re bone and feathers!""I don"t mind being bone and feathers, mom. I just want to know what I can do in the air and what I can"t, that"s all. I just want to know.""See here, Jonathan," said his father, not unkindly. "Winter isn"t far away. Boats will be few, and surface fish will be swimming deep. If you must study, —then study food, and how to get it. This flying business is all very well, but you can"t eat a glide. You know. Don"t you forget that the reasons you fly is to eat. "Jonathan nodded obediently. For the next few days he tried to behave like the other gulls: he really tried, screeching and fighting with the flock around the piers(码头) and fishing boats, diving on scraps of fish and bread. But he couldn"t make it work.It"s all so pointless, he thought, deliberately, dropping a hard-won anchovy (鳀类鱼) to a hungry old gull chasing him. "I could be spending all this time learning to fly. There"s so much to learn!" ..."Why aren"t there more of us here? Why, where I came from there were...""...thousands and thousands of gulls. I know." Sullivan shook his head. "The only answer I can see, Jonathan, is that you are pretty well a one-in-a-million bird. Most of us came along ever so slowly. We went from one world into another that was almost exactly like it, forgetting right away where we **e from not caring where we were headed, living for the moment. Do you have any idea how many lives we must have gone through before we even got the first idea that there is more to life than eating, or fighting, or power in the flock? A thousand lives, Jon, ten thousand! And then another hundred lives until we began to learn that there is such a thing as perfection, and another hundred again to get the idea that our purpose for living is to find that perfection and show it forth"11. Which of the following choices is not the difference between most seagulls and Jonathan Livingston Seagull?A. Most seagulls just learned how to get food through flightB. Jonathan Livingston Seagull enjoyed flying businessC. For most seagulls, the final destination of flying was not to be starvedD. To fly and to eat were **mon goals of most seagulls12. What was other seagulls" attitude toward Jonathan"s devotion into flight?A. They wanted to learn from Jonathan Livingston Seagull in practicing flight skillsB. His parents encouraged Jonathan Livingston Seagull to improve his techniquesC. They felt shameful when they saw the low flying by Jonathan Livingston SeagullD. They could not understand why Jonathan Livingston Seagull spent energy and time experimenting slides13. Which of the following choices is NOT Jonathan"s father"s advice when he saw Jonathan gliding?A. He reminded Jonathan of the reason why seagulls flyB. He sternly forced Jonathan to learn to get foodC. He told Jonathan that gliding is invalid to get food for seagullsD. He didn"t deny the advantages of flying business14. Did Sullivan agree with Jonathan"s practice?A. Yes, he didB. No, he didn"tC. He had no idea about thatD. He was uncertain about that15. According to Sullivan, what was one"s life goal?A. To learn about the existence of perfectionB. To struggle to obtain perfectionC. To pursue perfection and manifest it in yourselfD. To go through difficulties and know more about lifePsychologically there are two dangers to be guarded against in old age. One of these is undue absorption in the past. It does not do to live in memories, in regrets for the good old days, or in sadness about friends who are dead. One"s thoughts must be directed to the future, and to things about which there is something to be done. This is not always easy; one"s own past is a gradually increasing weight. It is easy to think to oneself that one"s emotions used to be more vivid than they are and one"s mind more keen. If this is true it should be forgotten, and if it is forgotten it will probably not be true.The other thing to be avoided is clinging to youth in the hope of sucking vigor from its vitality. When your children are grown up they want to live their own lives, and if you continue to be as interested in them as you were when they were young, you are likely to become a burden to them, unless they are unusually callous. I do not mean that one should be without interest in them, but one"s interest should be contemplative and, if possible, philanthropic, but not unduly emotional. Animals become indifferent to their young as soon as their young can look after themselves, but human beings, owing to the length of infancy, find this difficult.I think that a successful old age is easiest for those who have strong impersonal interest involvingappropriate activities. It is in this sphere that long experience is really fruitful, and it is in this sphere that the wisdom born of experience can be exercised without being oppressive. It is no use telling grownup children not to make mistakes, both because they will not believe you, and because mistakes are an essential part of education. And you must realize that you must not expect that they will enjoy **pany.Some old people are oppressed by the fear of death. But I think for an old man who has known human joys and sorrows, and has achieved whatever work it was in him to do, the fear of death is somewhat abject and ignoble. The best way to **e it—so at least it seems to me—is to make your interest gradually more impersonal, until bit by bit the wails of the ego recede, and your life becomes increasingly merged in the universal life. An individual human existence should be like river—small at first, gradually grows, wider, and in the end, without any visible break, they become merged in the sea, and painlessly lose their individual being. The man who in old age can see his life in this way, will not suffer from the fear of death, since the things he cares for will continue. And if, with the decay of vitality, weariness increases, the thought of rest will not be **e.I should wish to die while still at work, knowing that others will carry on what I can no longer do and content in the thought that what was possible has been done.16. Which of the following choices is not the danger to be avoided in old age?A. Being mired in memoriesB. Showing lamentation about the pastC. Having no interests in personal benefitsD. Being dependent upon the next generation17. According to the passage, why do human beings always show their undue care for their children?A. Human beings are creatures of emotionB. Human beings don"t treat their children as a burdenC. Human beings" early stage of growth is a little longerD. Human beings are not callous animals18. According to the passage, what role does experience play in one"s life?A. Experience may prevent children from making mistakes or going astrayB. Experience may keep you in appropriate activities and ensure **fortable in remaining yearsC. Experience may produce profound knowledge and ensure a successful old ageD. Experience may find itself wasted on dead man19. In what manner will the youth consider the elderly?A. They will always find **panionship of the elderly ungratefulB. They look up to the elderly and admire the elderlyC. **panionship of persons of their own age is an onerous burdenD. They always ask for material services from their parents20. Which of the following choices is not the proper way that the man in old age should treat his life?A. To **e the fear of deathB. He isn"t satisfied with what he has done on his deathbedC. His life is only a trivial part of the universal lifeD. He wants to have a rest as he grows olderⅣ. Directions: The following excerpt is taken from China Daily. The primary purpose of this passage is intended to provide a source of inspiration for writing rather than tempt you into copying the same thing in **position.1. To vigorously promote fairness in education. Hu Jintao, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, said in his report to the 18th National Congress that educational resources will focus on rural and remote areas poor families and non-Ham ethnic groups.Hu said that efforts will also be made to promote equal education for the children of migrant workers and to increase financial aid to poverty-stricken families for their children"s education. The central government has been making efforts in this direction over the past decade. But what has been done is far from enough to bridge the gap between the quality of education in urban and rural areas. That is why Hu"s report particularly mentioned the shift in focus to the underdeveloped and disadvantaged areas.Despite the free nine-**pulsory education for all rural students there is still a long way to go before students in rural areas will be able to receive education of a similar quality to that enjoyed by their urban counterparts. The teaching facilities and incomes of teachers in rural areas, poverty-stricken areas in particular, leave a lot to be **pared with their urban counterparts.Rural students who receive free university education are required to return to teach in rural schools for a certain period of time before they leave for other jobs, but preferential policies are needed to encourage good teachers to teach in rural areas and financial aid is needed to improve the physical condition of students.Write an argumentative essay of about 400 words on the following topicEqual Education for Rural Students and Their Urban Counterparts。
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。
大连外国语学院英语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)注:1、未标明课程类型的均为专业选修课。
2、二外日语1班8B510,二外日语2班8B512,二外日语三班8B514,二外法语1班8B515,二外法语2班8B513,二外德国语8B517,二外俄语8A707,二外韩国语8B511,二外西语8A707大连外国语学院2011级MTI(英语口笔译)研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)大连外国语学院2010级MTI(英语笔译)研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)二外俄语8A707,二外韩国语8B509, 二外西语8A707大连外国语学院日语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)2、二外英语1班8B503,二外英语2班8B502,二外英语3班8B505,二外英语4班8B507,二外英语5班8B508,二外英语6班8B511大连外国语学院翻译硕士(日语)研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)注:二外英语1班8B503,二外英语2班8B502,二外英语3班8B505,二外英语4班8B507,二外英语5班8B508,二外英语6班8B511大连外国语学院俄语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)2011级8B507注:二外英语1班8B503,二外英语2班8B502,二外英语3班8B505,二外英语4班8B507,二外英语5班8B508,二外英语6班8B5112010级8B510大连外国语学院俄语系翻译硕士(MTI)课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)2011级 8B502大连外国语学院俄语系阿语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)2011级 8A709注:二外英语1班8B503,二外英语2班8B502,二外英语3班8B505,二外英语4班8B507,二外英语5班8B508,二外英语6班8B511 大连外国语学院法语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)注:二外英语1班8B503,二外英语2班8B502,二外英语3班8B505,二外英语4班8B507,二外英语5班8B508,二外英语6班8B511 大连外国语学院韩国语研究生课程表(2011-2012学年第一学期)注:1、《韩国传统文化研究》为外聘知名专家课,授课者为韩国成均馆大学名誉教授崔博光,于10月18日至24日集中一周上课。
2013年辽宁大学外国语学院357英语翻译基础考研真题及详解I. Translate the following phrases into E nglish or Chinese. (2×20=40)1. ideological difference【答案】意识形态分歧2. foreign exchange reserve【答案】外汇储备3. marginal civilization【答案】边缘文明4. anti-abnormal competition statute【答案】反不正当竞争法规5. the principle of equality and mutual benefit【答案】平等互利原则6. artificial intelligence【答案】人工智能7. state assets【答案】国有资产8. territorial sea【答案】领海9. GATT(General Agreement on T ariffs and Trade) 【答案】关税及贸易总协定10. aircraft carrier【答案】航空母舰11. 民生【答案】people’s livelihood12. 分期付款【答案】installment13. 政治体制改革【答案】reform of the political structure14. 社会转型期【答案】social transformation period15. 科教兴国【答案】develop the country through science and education16. 双贏战略【答案】win-win strategy17. 落地签证【答案】visa on arrival18. 创业资金【答案】venture capital19. 主流文化【答案】mainstream culture20. 科学发展观【答案】the Scientific Outlook on DevelopmentII. Translate the following sentences into Chinese. (5×5=25)1. Quality is wealth. More is not better. Better is better. You don’t need a biggerhouse; you need a different floor plan. You don’t need more stuff; you need stuff you will actually use. Eco-friendly designs and nontoxic materials already exist, and there’s plenty of for innovation. You may pay more for things like long-lasting, energy-efficient LED light bulbs, but they will save real money over the long term. 【答案】质量就是财富。
[考研类试卷]2013年对外经济贸易大学翻译硕士(MTI)汉语写作与百科知识真题试卷.doc[考研类试卷]2013年对外经济贸易大学翻译硕士(MTI)汉语写作与百科知识真题试卷一、单项选择题1 中唐是唐诗流派纷呈的时代,除以白居易、张籍、王建等为代表的原白诗派外,主要有大历、贞元年间的一派诗人,包括刘长卿、韦应物和“大历十才子”,其中( )曾自称为“五言长城”,他的五绝诗《逢雪宿芙蓉山主人》。
(A)张籍(B)韦应物(C)刘长卿(D)王建2 在北宋诗人中,( )自成一家,当时其诗就被称为“山谷体”,他是江西诗派的创始人。
(A)骆宾王(B)王勃(C)杨炯(D)黄庭坚3 词究其本来性质而言,是歌辞,是广义上的诗歌的一种。
晚唐的词人中以( )最为著名,他是花间词派的创始人之一。
(A)温庭筠(B)自居易(C)刘禹锡(D)张志和4 元代杂剧是中国戏曲史上第一个高峰,标志着中国古代戏曲真正走向了成熟。
杂剧( )的故事来源于唐代白居易的诗《井底引银瓶》,这部杂剧是白朴最成功的剧作。
(A)《倩女离魂》(B)《墙头马上》(C)《救风尘》(D)《汉宫秋》5 南戏是南曲戏文的简称,它最初流行于浙东沿海一带,故又称“温州杂剧”、《永嘉杂剧》或《永嘉戏曲》。
南戏的形式在元末明初逐步定型。
高明的( )向来被称为“南戏之祖”。
(A)《琵琶记》(B)《赵贞女》(C)《王魁》(D)《荆钗记》6 清代是中国古代文学的最后一个时期。
在诗歌方面,明末清初诗坛上,( )是影响最大的诗人。
他的诗歌主张在重“性情”的同时,也重“学问”,具有向宋诗回复的意味,代表作有《初学集》《有学集》等。
(A)蒲松龄(B)李玉(C)李汝珍(D)钱谦益7 盛唐时期的边塞诗也负有盛名,( )的诗作《燕歌行》是唐代边塞诗的压卷之作。
(A)李宝嘉(B)吴沃尧(C)高适(D)曾朴8 中国现当代文学是现代文学和当代文学的合称,文学史上一般认为:从1917年到“五四”文学革命开始到1949年中华人民共和国成立之前的中国文学为中国现代文学,中华人民共和国成立之后一直到现在的中国文学被称为中国当代文学。
大连外国语大学翻译硕士日语考研专业硕士考研真题
地球温暖化防止は、人類にとって21世紀に取り組むべき最大の課題の一つとなろう。
人類は、産業革命以後、既に膨大な量の二酸化炭素を排出してきた。
発展
の遅れた地域の焼き畑農業もあるが、その大部分は先進国によるものである。
今後も人口の大きい途上国の経済発展が加わり、専門研究機関の予測によると、排出抑制策を実施しなければ、100年後の排出量は現状の3倍を大きく上回ると見られる。
気候変動に関する政府間パネルは地球温暖化防止に向けて、21世紀末の温室効果ガスの排出量を現状以下にする必要があるとしている。
【答案】
防止全球变暖将成为21世纪人类必须解决的最大的课题之一。
工业革命后,人类便已排放了大量的二氧化碳。
虽然这其中包含发展相对落后地区在农田焚烧秸秆排出的二氧化碳,但主要还是来自发达国家。
加上今后人口众多的发展中国家也要发展经济,据研究部门预测,若不实施抑制排放的相关政策,百年后二氧化碳的排放量将会超过如今的三倍以上。
因此,联合国政府间气候变化专门委员会有必要针对防止全球变暖,将21世纪末的温室气体排放量维持在现状之下。
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。
2013年上海海事大学攻读硕士学位研究生入学考试试题(重要提示:答案必须做在答题纸上,做在试题上不给分)答题要求:例如1---5:AAAAA 6---10:BBBBB考试科目:翻译硕士英语Part I. Vocabulary and Structure (30 points; 0.5 point for each item)Directions: There are 60 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D Choose the ONE that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letteron the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.1. You and I could hardly understand each other, _______ ?A. could IB. couldn’t youC. could weD. couldn’t we2. We often advise him not to drink more wine _______ is good for his health.A. asB. thanC. thatD. but3. I didn’t call the hotel to make a room reservation, but I _______ .A. may haveB. must haveC. should haveD. shall have4. It was not until midnight _______ the camping site.A. that they have reachedB. that they did not reachC. did they reachD. did they not reach5. Thomas Jefferson’s achievements as an architect rival his contributions _______ a politician.A. suchB. moreC. asD. than6. _______ is generally accepted, economic growth is determined by the smooth development ofproduction.A. WhatB. ThatC. ItD. As7. Space exploration promises to open up many new territories for human settlement, as well as_____the harvest of mineral resources.A. leads toB. to lead toC. leading toD. lead to8. Someday, solar power collected by satellite s ______ the earth may give us all the energy we need for an expanding civilization.A. circledB. to circleC. circlingD. circles9. In this experiment, they are wakened several times during the night, and asked to report what they _______.A. had just been dreamingB. are just dreamingC. have just been dreamingD. had just dreamt10. Her terror was so great ______somewhere to escape; she would have run for her life.A. only ifB. that there had only beenC. that had there only beenD. if there were only11. Some women ________a good salary in a job instead of staying home, but they decided notto work for the sake of the family.A. must makeB. should have madeC. would makeD. could have made12. A light with no more power than _______by an ordinary electric light bulb becomesintensely strong as it is concentrated to a pinpoint-sized beam.A. as is producedB. that producedC. that is producedD. produced13. For most people the sea was remote, and with the exception of early intercontinental travelersor others who earned a living from the sea, there was little reason to ask many questions about it, let alone _______what lay beneath the surface.A. askingB. askC. to askD. be asked14. Even if they are on sale, these refrigerators are equal in price to, if not more expensive than,_____ at the other store.A. anyoneB. the othersC. thatD. the ones15. The atmosphere is as much a part of the earth as _____its soil and the water of its lakes,rivers and oceans.A. areB. isC. doD. has16. From now on, when anyone in our ranks who has done some useful work dies, ______soldieror cook, we should have a funeral ceremony and a memorial meeting in his honor.A. no matter he isB. whether he has beenC. be heD. whether be he17. In 1921 Einstein won the Nobel Prize, and was honored in Germany until the rise ofNazism_______he was driven from Germany because he was a Jew.A. thenB. andC. whenD. before18. Physics is the present-day equivalent of _____used to be called natural philosophy fromwhich most of present-day science arose.A. thatB. allC. whichD. what19. _____ the population of working age increased by 1 million between 1981 and 1986, today itis barely growing.A. WhereasB. Even ifC. AfterD. Now that20. By the first decade of the 21st century, international commercial traffic _____vastly beyondtoday’s levels.A. will be expected to extendB. will have been expected to extendC. is expected to be extendedD. is expected to have extended21. His features were agreeable; his body, _____slight of build, had something of athleticoutline.A. somehowB. asC. thoughD. somewhat22. We advocate ______the economic, cultural and religious traditions of all national minorities.A. to respectB. to be respectedC. respectingD. having respected23. There are two horses at the ends of a rope ____with all their might in opposite directions.A. pullingB. pullC. pulledD. to pull24. Today the Tennessee Valley is one of the richest areas in the world. But if things _____asthey were it would now be a desert.A. had leftB. were leftC. had been leftD. had been leaving25. After twenty years abroad, William came back only ____ how his hometown was damagedin an earthquake.A. to find outB. finding outC. to have found outD. to be finding out26. Relaxation, ______ fresh air, pure water and clean food, is essential to a sound mind andhealthy body.A. much less thanB. no less thanC. no more thanD. any less than27. It is far better to do well a bit of work which is well ___a large fortune.A. worthy to be done than haveB. worth doing than to haveC. worthwhile to do than haveD. worthy of doing than have28. Understanding the cultural habit of another nation, especially _____containing as manydifferent subcultures as the United States, is a complex task.A. oneB. the oneC. thatD. such29. Whether or not the next plan will yield any positive results ____to be seen.A. remainB. remainsC. is remainedD. have remained30. If ever again ___happens an accident like this, we will have only ourselves to blame.A. itB. soC. thereD. that31. The younger person’s attraction to stereos cannot be explained only ________ familiaritywith technology.A. in quest ofB. by means ofC. in terms ofD. by virtue of32. Attempts to persuade her to stay after she felt insulted were ________.A. in no wayB. on the contraryC. at a lossD. of no avail33. By signing the lease we made a ________ to pay a rent of $150 a week.A. conceptionB. commissionC. commitmentD. confinement34. To prevent flooding in winter, the water flowing from the dam is constantly ________ by acomputer.A. gradedB. managedC. conductedD. monitored35. Many people think of deserts as ________ regions, but numerous species of plants andanimals have adapted to live there.A. virginB. barrenC. voidD. wretched36. The original elections were declared ________ by the former military ruler.A. voidB. vulgarC. surplusD. extravagant37. They stood gazing at the happy ________ of children playing in the park.A. perspectiveB. viewC. landscapeD. scene38. An obvious change of attitude at the top towards women’s status in society will ________through the current law system in Japan.A. permeateB. probeC. violateD. grope39. When he realized he had been ________ to sign the contract by intrigue, he threatened tostart legal proceedings to cancel the agreement.A. elicitedB. excitedC. deducedD. induced40. These areas rely on agriculture almost ________, having few mineral resources and aminimum of industrial development.A. respectivelyB. extraordinarilyC. incrediblyD. exclusively41. When he finally emerged from the cave after thirty days, John was ________ pale.A. enormouslyB. startlinglyC. uniquelyD. dramatically42. Thank you for applying for a position with our firm. We do not have any openings at thistime, but we shall keep your application on ________ for two months.A. pileB. segmentC. sequenceD. file43. It will be safer to walk on the streets because people will not need to carry large amounts ofcash; virtually all financial ________ will be conducted by computer.A. transactionsB. transmissionsC. transitionsD. transformations44. The ________ of a cultural phenomenon is usually a logical consequence of some physicalaspects in the life style of the people.A. implementationB. manifestationC. demonstrationD. expedition45. The new technological revolution in American newspapers has brought increased ________,a wider range of publications and an expansion of newspaper jobs.A. manipulationB. reproductionC. circulationD. penetration46. The directions were so ________ that it was impossible to complete the assignment.A. ingeniousB. ambitiousC. notoriousD. ambiguous47. Because a degree from a good university is the means to a better job, education is one of themost ________ areas in Japanese life.A. sophisticatedB. competitiveC. considerateD. superficial48. If a person talks about his weak points, his listener is expected to say something in the way of________.A. persuasionB. remedyC. encouragementD. compromise49. Her interest in redecorating the big house kept her ________ for a whole week.A. constrainedB. dominatedC. restrictedD. occupied50. If we ________ our relations with that country, we’ll have to find another supplier of rawmaterials.A. diffuseB. diminishC. terminateD. preclude51. Movie directors use music to ________ the action on the screen.A. contaminateB. complimentC. contemplateD. complement52. His career was not noticeably ________ by the fact that he had never been to college.A. preventedB. restrainedC. hinderedD. refrained53. When trapped in drifting sands, do not struggle, or you will be ________ in deeper.A. absorbedB. pushedC. heavedD. sucked54. To ________ for his unpleasant experiences he drank a little more than was good for him.A. commenceB. compromiseC. compensateD. compliment55. All visitors are requested to ________ with the regulations.A. complyB. agreeC. assistD. consent56. The captain ________ the horizon for approaching ships.A. scannedB. scrutinizedC. exploredD. swept57. The vast majority of people in any given culture will ________ to the established standardsof that culture.A. confineB. conformC. confrontD. confirm58. Under the guidance of their teacher, the pupils are building a model boat ________ by steam.A. towedB. tossedC. propelledD. pressed59. Having finished their morning work, the clerks stood up behind their desks, ________themselves.A. stretchingB. extendingC. prolongingD. expanding60. The doctors don’t ________ that he will live much longer.A. manifestB. articulateC. anticipateD. monitorPart II. Reading Comprehension ( 40 points;1 point for each question in the first four passages, and 2 points for each question in the last twopassages)Directions: There are 6 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You shoulddecide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single linethrough the center.Passage1Your first culture shock came after you left your home country and needed to adjust to the United States. It is now important to learn cultural information about your company, so that you will fit in and perform successfully. The people who make up this environment have their own customs, habits and expectations of each new employee. Gathering information that is formal (policy) and informal (traditions) will help you learn the professional norms and become fully accepted.Policies are corporate documents describing procedures, rules, and standards that guide decision making and conduct. They are similar to official laws that govern a country. Some sources of such written company information include the annual report, product or service brochures, technical and procedural manual, employee directory and the company newsletter. Organizational traditions are usually unwritten hut common practices that have evolved over time. They set the tone and philosophy of the particular corporation, just as the customs of a country do. The best way to learn such information is to observe and talk with others such as your supervisor and co-workers.You can supplement ideas from formal introductory materials given you earlier. Explore with fellow employees those behaviors that may be tolerated but frowned upon. Ask your supervisor for feedback to avoid typical traps that could cause your co-workers to reject you as a professional. Keep this guide nearby, and refer to it often in private. Reviewing formal company procedures, handouts, written notes, ideas, comments from bosses and colleagues, together with materials in this handbook, will help you make a more healthy cultural adjustment.61. What is the purpose to learn cultural information?A. To know the U.S. A. better.B. To work better in the new environment.C. To make more money.D. To improve one’s English.62. According to the passage, _______ is not the policy’s function.A. describing procedures, rules and standardsB. governing a countryC. helping to guide decision making and conductD. writing down the company’s information63. _______ is the best way to learn the organizational traditions.A. To read the policiesB. To study the philosophyC. To study a country’s customsD. To observe and communicate with the colleagues and boss.64. How to make a more healthy cultural adjustment?A. Read this passage often.B. Discuss the organizational culture with your colleagues.C. Gather and review the formal and informal information in the corporation.D. Ask your boss for help.65. The passage is written to _______.A. help readers to understand the organization’s cultureB. explain the culture shockC. analyze the policies and traditionsD. help readers to work better with their supervisor and co-workersPassage 2Scientists have known since 1952 that DNA is the basic stuff of heredity. They've known its chemical structure since 1953. They know that human DNA acts like a biological computer program some 3 billion bits long that spells out the instructions for making proteins, the basic building blocks of life.But everything the genetic engineers have accomplished during the past half-century is just a preamble to the work that Collins and Anderson and legions of colleagues are doing now. Collins leads the Human Genome Project, a 15-year effort to draw the first detailed map of every nook and cranny of gene in human DNA. Anderson, who pioneered the first successful human gene-therapy operations, is leading the campaign to put information about DNA to use as quickly as possible in the treatment and prevention of human diseases.What they and other researchers are plotting is nothing less than a biomedical revolution. Like Silicon Valley pirates reverse-engineering a computer chip to steal a competitor's secrets, genetic engineers are decoding life's molecular secrets and trying to use that knowledge to reverse the natural course of disease. DNA in their hands has become both a blueprint and a drug, a pharmacological substance of extraordinary potency that can treat not just symptoms or the diseases that cause them but also the imperfections in DNA that make people susceptible to a disease.And that's just the beginning. For all the fevered work being done, however, science is still far away from the Brave New World vision of engineering a perfect human— or even a perfect tomato. Much more research is needed before gene therapy becomes commonplace, and many diseases will take decades to conquer, if they can be conquered at all.In the short run, the most practical way to use the new technology will be in genetic screening. Doctors will be able to detect all sorts of flaws in DNA long before they can be fixed. In some cases the knowledge may lead to treatments that delay the onset of the disease or soften its effects. Someone with a genetic predisposition to heart disease, for example, could follow a low-fat diet. And if scientists determine that a vital protein is missing because the gene that was supposed to make it is defective, they might be able to give the patient an artificial version of the protein. But in other instances, almost nothing can be done to stop the ravages brought on by genetic mutations.66. It can be inferred from the text that Collins and Anderson and legions of colleagues _______.A. know that human DNA acts like a biological computer programB. have found the basic building blocks of lifeC. have accomplished some genetic discovery during the past half-centuryD. are making a breakthrough in DNA67. Collins and Anderson are cited in the text to indicate all the following EXCEPT that________.A. time-consuming effort is needed to accomplish the detailed map of gene in human DNAB. human gene-therapy operations may be applied to the patientsC. gene-therapy now is already generally used to the treatment and prevention of humandiseasesD. information about DNA may be used in the treatment and prevention of human diseases68. The word "pirate" (Line 2, Para. 3) means _______.A. one who robs at sea or plunders the land from the seaB. one who makes use of or reproduces the work of another without authorizationC. to plunderD. to make use of or reproduce ( another's work) without authorization69. We can draw a conclusion from the text that _______.A. engineering a perfect human is not feasible for the time beingB. it's impossible for scientists to engineer a perfect tomatoC. many diseases will never be conquered by human beingsD. doctors will be able to cure all sorts of flaws in DNA in the long run70. The best title for the text may be _______.A. The Basic Stuff of HeredityB. The Genetic RevolutionC. A Biomedical RevolutionD. How to Apply Genetic Technology Passage 3It was going to have roughly the effect of a neutron bomb attack on high streets and shopping malls. The buildings would be left standing but the people would vanish. Such was the superior efficiency of selling things via the Internet that brick-and-mortar stores would be unable to compete on price, choice or even service. Book and music sellers had already been “Amazoned”. Soon web-based “category-killers”, in everything from toys to pet supplies, would overwhelm their physical-world competitors. Shoppers would never be more than a mouse-click from the best deals. Traditional retailers, terrified of cannibalizing sales and destroying the value of their expensive properties, were already too late to meet the challenge. “In some categories,” said Mary Meeker, a seer of the Internet at Morgan Stanly, “it’s already game over.”These are convenient beliefs for anyone justifying some e-commerce share prices, but they are already mostly wrong. The reasons should surprise no one. The Internet is not a dominant technology but rather a network of people. It is a rich and highly flexible means of communicating that is rapidly achieving pervasiveness because more and more people find it eas y and convenient to use. But it is those people’s preferences that will count; and for most people, shopping is more than just a means to an end. Even if the Internet provided a perfectly efficient way to shop it would not provide a satisfactory alternative to the physical enjoyment of sniffing a ripe melon, say, or trying on a cashmere sweater.Of course, some products, such as music and banking, can be distributed electronically with success and cost saving. But most purchases cannot be reduced to digital code. And distributing physical goods is cumbersome and expensive. Behind even the most exciting user interface thereare old-fashioned warehouses and lorries, customers who decline to sit at home waiting for purchases to arrive, and goods that must be re-wrapped and expensively returned. No wonder that the cost of getting goods to customers’ homes so often soaks up the notional price advantages of e-commerce.What Internet shoppers have quickly realized is that the web is an addition to, and not a substitute for, their shopping habits. It is wonderful for gathering up-to-date information about products and prices. Cyber Dialogue, a research firm, estimates that in 1998 23m Americans sought information online, but then made their purchases offline, compared with only 17.7m who did the whole thing online.71. The author compares ________ of the online sale to the effect of neutron bomb attack.A. the efficiencyB. the choiceC. the priceD. the service72. According to Mary Meeker, ________.A. tradi tional retailers can’t compete with online ones on price, choice or serviceB. the battle between traditional retailers and online retailers is overC. online retailers have prevailed over traditional ones in the market of certain productsD. online ret ailers have destroyed the value of traditional retailers’ properties73. According to the passage, shopping for most people ________.A. is a flexible means of communicatingB. is not just a means to gaining an endC. does not provide an alternative to physical enjoymentD. provides a perfectly easy and efficient way of living74. The cost of goods delivery brings about the result that ________.A. distributing goods becomes troublesome and expensiveB. the notional price advantages of e-commerce are eliminatedC. old-fashioned warehouses and lorries have to be still in useD. goods must be wrapped again and expensively returned75. According to Cyber Dialogue, ________.A. online shopping will not replace the traditional shopping habitsB. customers seek information via the Internet more often than via any other meansC. Internet users prefer to seek information online without making real purchasesD. fewer and fewer people purchase what they want via the InternetPassage 4A friend who had lived in New York in the 1970s was recently here for a brief visit. I asked him what, in this ever-changing city, he found to be most startlingly changed. He thought for a minute before answering. “Probably the visible increase in prostitution,” he replies. M y astonishment at this comment was so palpable that he felt obliged to explain. “Haven’t you noticed,” he asked with surprise, “all these young women standing furtively in doorways? You never used to see that when I was here.”I couldn’t resist my laughter. “They’re not prostitutes, they’re smokers.” For indeed they are. More American office buildings no longer allow smoking on the premises, driving those who can’t resist the urge onto the streets. The sight of them, lounging on “coffee breaks” near the entrances to their workplace, puffing away has become ubiquitous. Since most new smokers apparently are women, my friend’s confusion was understandable. And there are more than eversince September II.Stress is probably better measured anecdotally than stati stically. I’m not aware of surveys on this matter, but anyone living in New York these days has stories of friends who, amid the scares of 9-11 and its aftermath, have sought solace in cigarettes. I used to go to a gym near Grand Central Terminal. Some days so many people stood outside, tensely smoking, that I assumed an evacuation had just been ordered. At least three friends who’d given up tobacco have lapsed back into the habit, claiming they couldn’t calm their nerves. Others have increased their previously reduced intakes. Some, in their quest for a crutch, have begun smoking for the first time. In Manhattan the frantic puff has become the preferred alternative to the silent scream.New Yorkers, of course, are coping in more imaginative ways, as well. A friend swears he knows someone who has stashed a canoe in his closet in case he needs to escape Manhattans by river. Another says he has moved a heavy object dart into his office so that he can smash the window if a firebomb makes the elevator or the stairs impassable. A woman working on one of the lower floors of her office building has acquired a rope long enough to lower herself to the ground; one who works at the top of a skyscraper tells me she’s looking into the purchase of a parachute. Still others have stocked up on such items of antiterrorist chic as flame-retardant ponchos, anthrax-antidote antibiotics and heavy-duty gas masks.Crackpot friends of friends, but surely not your own? Hardly. One close acquaintance, concerned about my welfare as an international civil servant, tells me I should not be going to work at the United Nations without ensuring that I have, in my desk drawer, a flashlight, spare batteries, a clean cloth and water to dampen it with, all to facilitate an efficient exit through smoke and darkness. Though touched by her solicitude, I have not yet taken her advice. But I believe her when she tells me that many others have, especially her female friends.Recent polls indicate that American women are, in fact, more stressed out than men. Over 50 percent in one national survey of 1,000 adults admitted to being “very” or “somewhat” worried in the wake of the terrorist assaults, according to the Pew Research Center. The anthrax scare may have receded. But recent incidents, from the airplane crash in the New York borough of Queens to the arrest of the London “shoe-bomber” to rumors of suitcase nukes, seem to have had permanently unsettling effects. Take food. A surprising number of people are apparently unable to touch their plates. (Some happily, discovering that fear is the best diet.) Others are eating too much, seeking reassurance in “comfort food.” Give the alternatives, smoking seems a reasonable refuge; after all, the long-term threat of cancer seems far more remote these days than the prospect of explosive incineration.And let us not forget other obsessive coping behaviors. A surge in compulsive shopping, drink and self medicating has been reported, along with exercising, buying music and movie-going. I haven’t checked the stock prices for Philip Morris recently, but I’m told it’s told it’s doing better than expected. As people deal with their fears, the newspapers tell us the economy is bouncing back. Could ordinary people’s coping mechanisms be helping spur a national recovery that, in the first weeks after September 11, had seemed a distant prospect? Few things could be more American than giving in to your weaknesses—and finding that makes the country stronger.76. The word “ubiquitous” in the sentence “The sight of them, lounging on coffee breaks’ nearthe entrances to their workplace puffing away, has become ubiquitous” (para.2) can best be replaced by _______.A. Noticeable all the timeB. present everywhereC. unique in natureD. unpleasant to all visitors77. In the sent ence “New Yorkers, of course, are coping in more imaginative ways, as well.”, theauthor mainly means _______.A. New Yorkers are full of imagination before terroristsB. New Yorkers are steadily confronting disastersC. New Yorkers are ready to combat all kinds of threatsD. New Yorkers are ingeniously prepared for possible threats78. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?A. American men are as stressed out as women before terrorist attacks.B. The stock prices for Philip Morris must be on the rise.C. The Coping behaviors under stress are widely varied and different.D. Smoking is considered a useful means to reduce stress.79. In writing the last sentence “Few things could be more American than giving in to yourweaknesses—and find ing that makes the country stronger.”, the author _______.A. reaches the conclusion of the passageB. tells her sincere and real thoughtC. adopts a satirical and paradoxical toneD. criticizes American weaknesses80. Which of the following best expresses the main point of the passage?A. Changing smoking habits over the past decadesB. Fight-flight mechanism in front of terrorismC. Compulsive response to long-term diseasesD. Distracted behaviors under stress from terrorismPassage 5More than just a revolutionary tool for indexing, analyzing, or transmitting content, digital technology is actually reshaping the creation of art and literature. “just as film emerged as the dominant artistic medium of the 20th century, the digital domain — whether it is used for visual art, music, literature or some other expressive genre —will be the primary medium of the 21st,”wrote New York Times columnist Matthew Mirapaul in early 1999. More and more writers, artists, and musicians are using computers and the Internet to enhance, animate, or completely remake their art, with unconventional and remarkable results.Publishing, a print-based business that to some people is beginning to represent the past, is attempting to adapt to the new digital world. Marc Aronson, a senior children’s book editor at the publishing house Henry Holt and a longtime student of the impact of changing technology on publishing, describes this impact as a kind of blurring or hybridization. “The keynote of the digital age is overlap, multiplic ity, synergy. The digital does not replace print, it subsumes it,”Aronson said. “Print becomes a form of the digital, just as the digital has a special place when it happens in print.” Especially in books for young people, he notes, more authors and artis ts are trying books with multiple story lines or told from various points of view.One strain of this new type of nonlinear writing is popularly known as hypertext fiction. At its simplest, hypertext fiction mimics the Choose Your Own Adventure books that became popular in the early 1980s. In these books, readers directed the story by choosing which page to。
2013北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士MTI考研试题(回忆版)版本1翻译硕士英语第一题单选30个,专四难度。
不过有的词拿不准啊…第二题4个阅读A :nuclear power是否是最佳能源。
5个选择,每个2分B :一个得癌症的女人为自己的保险金的斗争…5个选择,每个2分C :环太平洋板块和印度板块的地震带… 3个问答,每个4分D :suburban area 的优劣。
2个问答,每个4分第三题是作文。
Many people spend too much time on texting,…而不是face toface communication翻译基础1. 世界文化遗产2. 居留权3. 豆浆4. 国际日期变更线5. 白马王子6. 拆迁户7. 中国革命历史博物8. 国民生产总值9. 营业执照10. 总统候选人11. 中国科学院12. 双重国籍13. 白手起家英译汉1. Principle of reciprocity2. Maglev train(magneticallylevitated train) magnetic suspension train3. the crime of dereliction ofduty4. three-point shot percentage5. gender gap6. unemployment benefit7. local people’s procuratorate8. multilateral internationalconvention9. bilateral and multilateraleconomic cooperation10. black sheep今年有大变化!!!就两大段英译汉关于苏门答腊海啸,以及科学家对将来更大的灾难袭击美国海岸。
汉译英关于战胜生活,不颓废,认同个体和其他个体什么的,不难。
第一句就是经验随着年龄增长,知识和宽容随着经验增长百科1. 主观唯心主义包括什么2. 区分辩证法和形而上学的原理3. 信息的实质4. 人脑是什么5. 四大菜系6. 北四阁7. 四大名楼8. 四小名旦9. 乾隆的三希堂的三件名字帖《快雪时晴贴》《中秋帖》(王献之)《伯远帖》10. 中美关系正常化时中美两国领导人各是谁11. 2009年去世的是哪位世界歌手(迈克尔·杰克逊,流行之王)12. “修合无人见,存心有天知”说的是采药的13. 我国现存最古老最高的木结构塔是山西应县的释迦塔14. 轻度发酵的茶是青茶和白茶15. 2011年神舟八号和天宫一号成功分离16. 斯大林是苏联的共产党书记和部长会议主席17. 南北回归线是热带和温带的界限,18. 太阳直射点的边界19. 博鳌亚洲论坛发起人,每年在中国的哪里举办20. 马克思的两个理论成果21. 2020年六大经济体22. 哪个不符合辛亥革命前的社会场景:选项有看申报怒斥日本侵占台湾,坐中国自制铁路进京赶考,慈禧政变时在商务印书局工作等23. 四库全书哪个皇帝年间24. 七碗茶歌对茶进行了详尽的描述第二大题是应用文,某高校体育运动会的讲话稿。
大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题汉语写作与百科知识
大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题
英语翻译基础
大连外国语大学2013年翻译硕士研究生入学考试试题
翻译硕士英语
学弟学妹们好我是14级大外考生方向是英语翻硕初试成绩400+ 已录取有10 11 12 1314年的初试真题、复试真题、考研笔记、考研资料、常用参考书电子版出售。
学弟学妹们需要的话,可以通过qq 联系我one one six four four six five six one one 1164465611。
考研过程中有什么问题,也都可以问我的。
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一些关于大外翻硕的常见问题整理了一下:
1,考二外吗?
大外翻硕初试不考二外,复试考,不过只有20分的听力,而且……2,大外翻硕口译和笔译有什么区别?口译难吗?
大外翻硕口译笔译初试内容都一样。
复试总分270分,其中综合英语200分,面试50分,二外听力20分。
……
3,大外好考吗?
我觉得大外与其他几所专门的外国语院校相比,还是比较好考的。
因为……
4,大外初试和复试成绩各占多少比例?
初试共500分,复试共270分。
总分相加,按名次录取。
5,大外用提前联系导师吗?
这个事复试时应该想的问题。
不过,对于大外,复试时也不用想的。
因为招生工作和导师实行的是双轨制,就是根本联系不到导师,联系了据说也没用。
大外整个复式流程特别公正。
学弟学妹们只需专心学习,初试考个好成绩,直接傲视群雄,就不用担心复试了。
6,大外翻硕有参考书吗?
大外没有指定参考书学弟学妹们可以参考一下别的学校翻硕的参考书。
我去年看的书大约有:……
7,怎么利用真题?
我觉得真题最大的价值在于告诉我们,大外考试的题型,即怎么考,还有,考试侧重于哪个方面的,即考什么。
我们不是要把真题做n
遍,因为考重题的可能性非常渺茫。
最重要的是……
8,百科怎么准备?
百科包含的内容太多了,没有哪一本书可以包含所有。
所以……
9.词汇量要求怎么样,要不要背单词?
大外初试有30个选择题,就是考察单词。
我觉得这是翻译硕士英语中最难得一个题型。
……
10,什么时候开始的,现在开始晚吗?
我去年是暑假开始的,即7月份左右。
我的基础不太好,所以准备的特别认真。
不过,期间不想学的时候也很多,我觉得,应该学习时,
认认真真的学,玩时,放开心地肆无忌惮的玩。
不想学,就去逛街,洒脱点,考研没咱们想的那么可怕。
我们要心里上蔑视它,在实际学习中,重视它。
嘿嘿。
11,怎么对待政治这门神奇的课程?
我的政治考了82分,嘿嘿,挺满意地。
不过,我在政治上用的时间很多。
从暑假买了三本肖秀荣的书:精讲精练,100题,还有近10年真题。
……
12,怎么做翻译?翻译这科,150分啊,而且靠的是实力,短时间内速成是不大可能得,所以我非常重视翻译。
……
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