08北外复语同传试卷
北外历年英汉同声传译专业考研试题2001--2009
北京外国语大学2009年硕士研究生入学考试复语同声传译专业试卷 (1)北京外国语大学2008年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷(复语班) (6)北外2008年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (11)北外2007年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (16)北外2006年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (22)北外2005年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (27)北外2004年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (32)北外2003年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (36)北外2002年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (41)北外2001年英汉同声传译专业考研试题 (45)北京外国语大学2009年硕士研究生入学考试复语同声传译专业试卷I.将下列文章译成汉语(50分)India and China need help to grow, not hectoringEvery time there is a spike in oil prices, or when food costs more, or there is a renewed worry about carbon and climate change, academics, pundits, and the press immediately point to the high-consumption future of India and China.They are wrong to do so when we consider the causes of energy and food challenges, and, more importantly, when we think of the actions and policies needed to manage changes in coming decades. If it is questionable that India and China are to blame for the global energy crunch, it is even less acceptable to expect them to adhere to pleas to moderate their energy consumption.Historically, energy consumption has correlated with economic growth. The present debate over energy often focuses on two dimensions: climate change (from greenhouse gases), and the scarcity of fossil fuels.With growing populations and economies, India and China will certainly consume a growing fraction of global resources, but they consume only 3 per cent and 9 per cent, respectively, of the world's petroleum today. The global leader, the US, consumes just under a quarter.Looking at future options, why does it matter if India and China are or are not similar in terms of energy consumption and needs? Global treaties aim to modify future consumption, and mechanisms or formulae that are considered fair (and likely to be ratified) must be cognizant of differences. Given the differences in their systems, needs, and incentives, a proposal meant to appeal to both may not appeal to either. Without global participation, no solution is likely work.China already has the world's second-largest electricity grid, and, at current rates of growth, it will soon become the largest electricity producer in the world. Like India, most of this is based on coal, the least “green”of the leading fossil fuels.India's present installed electricity capacity is not in the same league. The result is that, for thecoming decade, it will not be able to grow at a rate anywhere near that of China. In absolute net growth, the US will add more than twice as much capacity than India in 2007-08.China's growth of energy consumption has been positive for its population. It has now provided electricity to an estimated 98 per cent of households, unlike India or Africa. India has not met its energy growth targets even in the absence of carbon constraints –can we realistically expect it to moderate due to global concerns when it will say it is not the prime polluter?(425)II.将下列短文译成汉语(25分)The Cause of EarthquakesThe earth is divided into three main layers - a hard outer crust, a soft middle layer and a center core. The outer crust is broken into massive, irregular pieces called "plates." These plates move very slowly, driven by energy forces deep within the earth. Earthquakes occur when these moving plates grind and scrape against each other.In California, the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate meet. The Pacific Plate covers most of the Pacific Ocean floor and the California coastline. The North American Plate stretches across the North American continent and parts of the Atlantic Ocean. The primary boundary between themis the San Andreas Fault. It is more than 650 miles long and extends 10 miles deep. Many smaller faults, such as the Hayward Fault, branch from the San Andreas Fault.The Pacific Plate grinds northwestward past the North American Plate at a rate of about two inches per year. Parts of the San Andreas Fault system adapt to this movement by a constant "creep" resulting in frequent, moderate, earth tremors. In other areas, movement is not constant and strain can build up for hundreds of years resulting in strong earthquakes when it is released.Unlike other natural disasters, there is no warning for earthquakes. Future earthquakes are a serious threat to Californians, which is why the Fire Department recommends preparing before an earthquake hits. (232)III. 将下列文章译成英语(50分)“将来韵韵考上‘北大’或‘牛津’,我可能都不会这么兴奋!”魏伦斯感慨道。
北外试题
2008年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷一、将下列段落译为汉语(25分)Outside Europe, the most important powers in 1939 were undoubtedly Japan and the United States. Japan was at the time already deeply involved in hostilities with China. After seizing the northern provinces of that country in 1931 and organizing them into the puppet state of Manchukuo, Japan had tried to protect its rich loot and to expand its influence in China by a series of interventions, particularly in the rest of northern China. These steps had not surprisingly produced a rising tide of anti-Japanese sentiments in China, which in turn led the Japanese to embroil themselves even more deeply into Chinese affairs. When this tendency to interfere in China was combined with a degree of internal confusion and incoherence within the Japanese government that made the Chinese warlords of the time look well organized, new trouble was almost certain to follow. (141 words)二、将下列短文译为汉语(50分)Inflation: China’s least wanted exportWhen inflation starts to kill people then it is a serious problem. Three people died and 31 were injured on Saturday in a stampede to buy cut-price cooking oil in the western Chinese city of Chongqing. China can no longer explain away inflation as a short-term result of floods and epidemics of animal disease ? nor can it ignore the strains its macroeconomic policies are producing.Cooking oil is a special case ? its price influenced by demand from China’s glut of new biofuel refineries ? but the broader price of food has risen in recent months by more than 15 per cent compared with a year earlier. Floods and other acts of God have had their effect, as has the global rise in wheat prices, but there are structural forces at work as well.Nor is inflation confined to food any longer: producer prices are creeping up. The PPI for manufactured goods was up 3.2 per cent in October ? many steel products rose by more than 10 per cent ? and the PPI is likely to go even higher when the recent 10 per cent hike in the controlled pump price of diesel feeds through. Given the likelihood that more state-controlled prices will have to rise, and given that the official inflation data do not properly capture important prices, such as the cost of education, the real situation may be even worse.That is a worry for th e rest of the world, used to enjoying the ―China price‖, a seemingly open-ended deflationary pressure on the world economy. The surge in Chinese inflation since June has barely fed through into export prices yet ? but it will. China’s currency has also bee n gently appreciating, but so far improvements in productivity have meant that Chinese manufacturers have not needed to raise export prices. If currency appreciation speeds up, that will change.The renminbi may have to rise faster because the tools that China is using to tackle inflation have not worked. Bank reserve requirements were hiked again over the weekend, to 13.5 per cent, but the strain on the banking sector’s profitability will start to tell. Interest rates have risen repeatedly, but with CPI inflation above 6 per cent, and benchmark lending rates only slightly higher, real interest rates are low. There must now be a low, but non-zero, probability that China opts for a one-off revaluation of the renminbi in order to ease its domestic monetary problems. That would be the right move. The adjustment would be easier both for China and for the rest of the world if the renminbi had not been kept so low for so long. But the pain of unwinding global imbalances will only get worse the longer they are left. (451 words)三、将下列段落译为英语(25分)科学发展观是协调的发展观。
08年北京中考英语试卷及答案
北京市2008年初中毕业学业考试英语(新课标卷)第1卷(共70分)一、听力部分,选择与对话内容相符的图片,将代表图片的字母填写在相应序号后的括号内。
每段~两遍(共6分,每小题1分)请看第一组的四幅图片。
听三段对话,完成第l至第3小题。
请看第二组的四幅图片。
听三段对话,完成第4至第6小题。
二、听对话和独自,根据对话和独白的内容,选择正确答案,每段对话或独自读两遍。
(共12分,每小题1.5分)现在请听一段对话,完成第7至第8小题。
7. What does the woman want?A. Apples.B. Coats.C. Books.8. How much does the woman pay?A. $2.B. $4.C. $8.现在请听一段对话,完成第9至第11小题。
9. Where did the girl go last night?A. To a schoolB. To a hospital.C. To a restaurant.10. What does the girl think of math?A. Interesting.B. DifficultC. Popular.11. Who will help the girl?A. The doctorB. The boy.C. The teacher.现在请听一段独白,完成第12至第14小题。
12. What is Mike doing?A. Having a competition with the visitorsB. leading a conversation about the visit.C. Making an introduction to the visit.13. When will they take the tour?A. Before class.B. In classC. After class.14. How many places are included in the tour?A. ThereB. FourC. Five.三、单项填空(共18分,每小题1分)从下列各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选择可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
北京外国语大学英语语言文学专业英美文学真题2008年.doc
北京外国语大学英语语言文学专业英美文学真题2008年(总分:149.99,做题时间:90分钟)一、Section Ⅰ Matching(总题数:1,分数:30.00)●Passage 1●1. Milton! Thou should"st be living at this hour:England hath need of thee: she is a fenOf stagnant waters: altar, sword and pen,Fireside, the heroic wealth of hall and bower,Have forfeited their ancient English dowerOf in ward happiness.●Passage 2●2. When I reached home, my sister was very curious to know all about Miss Havisham"s, and askeda number of questions. And I soon found myself getting heavily bumped from behind in the nape of the neck and the small of the back, and having my face ignominiously shoved against the kitchen wall, because I did not answer those questions at sufficient length.●Passage 3●3. I started across to the town from a little below the ferry landing, and the drift of the current fetched me in at the bottom of the town. I tied up and started along the bank. There was a light burning in a little shanty that hadn"t been lived in for a long time, and I wondered who had taken up quarters there. I slipped up and peeped in at the window. There was a woman about forty years old in there, knitting by a candle that was on a pine table.●Passage 4●4. In the midst of dinner my Mistress"s favorite cat leapt into her lap. I heard a noise behind me like that of a dozen stocking-weavers at work; and turning my head, I found it proceeded from the purring of this animal, who seemed to be three times larger than an ox, as I computed by the view of her head, and one of her paws, while her mistress was feeding and stroking her.●Passage 5●5. Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—I took the one less traveled by,And that has made all the difference.●Passage 6●6. The awful shadow of some unseen power,Floats though unseen amongst us, —visiting,This various world with as inconstant wing,As summer winds that creep from flower to flower.●Passage 7●7. Something there is that doesn"t love a wall,That sends the frozen ground swell under it,And spills the upper boulders in the sun,And makes gaps even two can pass abreast.●Passage 8●8. The scenery of Walden is on a humble scale, and though very beautiful, does not approach to grandeur, not can it much concern one who has not long frequented it or lived by its shore; yet this pond is so remarkable for its depth and purity as to merit a particular description.●Passage 9●9. The world is too much with us; late and soon,Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers;Little we see in Nature that is ours;We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!●Passage 10●10. Mr. Harthouse professed himself in the highest degree instructed and refreshed by this condensed epitome of the whole of Coketown question.●Authors●A. Henry David ThoreauB. William WordsworthC. Charles DickensD. Jonathan SwiftE. John MiltonF. Francis BaconG. Percy Bysshe ShelleyH. Robert FrostI. Mark TwainJ. William ShakespeareK. Emily DickinsonL. Christopher Marlowe(分数:30.00)二、Section Ⅱ Short Stor(总题数:1,分数:100.00)A Worn PathEudora WeltyIt was December—a bright frozen day in the early morning. Far out in the country there was an old Negro woman with her head tied red rag, coming along a path through the pinewoods. Her name was Phoenix Jackson. She was very old and small and she walked slowly in the dark pine shadows, moving a little from side to side in her steps, with the balanced heaviness and lightness of a pendulum in a grand father clock. She carried a thin, small cane made from an umbrella, and with this she kept tapping the frozen earth in front of her. This made a grave and persistent noise in the still air that seemed meditative like the chirping of a solitary little bird.She wore a dark striped dress reaching down to her shoe tops, and an equally long apron of bleached sugar sacks, with a full pocket: all neat and tidy, but every time she took a step she might have fallen over her shoelaces, which dragged from her unlaced shoes, she looked straight ahead. Her eyes were blue with age. Her skin had a pattern all its own of numberless branching wrinkles and as though a whole little tree stood in the middle of her forehead, but a golden color ran underneath, and thee two knobs of her cheeks were illumined by a yellow burning under the dark. Under the red rag her hair came down on her neck in the frailest of ringlets, still black, and with an odor like copper.Now and then there was a quivering in the thicket. Old Phoenix said, "Out of my way, all you foxes, owls, beetles, jack rabbits, coons and wild animals... Keep out from under these feet, little bob-whites. Keep the big wild hogs out of my path. Don"t let none of those come running my direction.I got a long way." Under her small black-freckled hand her cane, limber as a buggy whip, would switch at the brush as if to rouse up any hiding things. On she went. The woods were deep and still. The sun made the pine needles almost too bright to look at, up where the wind rocked. The cones dropped as light as feathers. Down in the hollow was the mourning dove—it was not too late for him.The path ran up a hill. "Seem like there is chains about my feet, time I get this far," she said, in the voice of argument old people keep to use with themselves. "Something always take a hold of me on this hill—pleads I should stay."After she got to the top she turned and gave a full, severe look behind her where she had come. "Up through pines," she said at length. "Now down through oaks."Her eyes opened their widest, and she started down gently. But before she got to the bottom of the hill a bush caught her dress.Her fingers were busy and intent, but her skirts were full and long, so that before she could pull them free in one place they were caught in another. It was not possible to allow the dress to tear. "I in the thorny bush," she said. "Thorns, you doing your appointed work. Never want to let folks pass, no sir. Old eyes thought you was a pretty little green bush."Finally, trembling all over, she stood free, and after a moment dared to stoop for her cane. "Sun so high!" she cried, leaning back and looking, while the thick tears went over her eyes. "The time getting all gone here."At the foot of this hill was a place where a log was laid across the creek."Now comes the trial," said Phoenix.Putting her right foot out, she mounted the log and shut her eyes. Lifting her skirt, leveling her cane fiercely before her, like a festival figure in some parade, she began to march across. Then she opened her eyes and she was safe on the other side."I wasn"t as old as I thought," she said.But she sat down to rest. She spread her skirts on the bank around her and folded her hands over her knees. Up above her was a tree in a pearly cloud of mistletoe. She did not dare to close her eyes, and when a little boy brought her a plate with a slice of marble-cake on it she spoke to him. "That would be acceptable," she said. But when she went to take it there was just her own hand in the air.So she left that tree, and had to go through a barbed-wire fence. There she had to creep and crawl, spreading her knees and stretching her fingers like a baby trying to climb the steps. But she talked loudly to herself: she could not let her dress be torn now, so late in the day, and she could not pay for having her arm or her leg sawed off if she got caught fast where she was. At last she was safe through the fence and risen up out in the clearing. Big dead trees, like black men with one arm, were standing in the purple stalks of the withered cotton field. Thee sat a buzzard."Who you watching?"In the furrow she made her way along."Glad this not the season for bulls," she said, looking sideways, "and the good Lord made his snakes to curl up and sleep in the winter. A pleasure I don"t see no two-headed snake coming around that tree, where it come once. It took a while to get by him, back in the summer."She passed through the old cotton and went into a field of dead corn. It whispered and shook and was taller than her head. "Through the maze now," she said, for there was no path.Then there was something tall, black, and skinny there, moving before her.At first she took it for a man. It could have been a man dancing in the field. But she stood still and listened, and it did not make a sound. It was as silent as a ghost."Ghost", she said sharply, "who be you the ghost of? For I have heard of nary death close by." But there was no answer—only the ragged dancing in the wind.She shut her eyes, reached out her hand, and touched a sleeve. She found a coat and inside that an emptiness, cold as ice."You scarecrow," she said. Her face lighted. "I ought to be shut up for good," she said with laughter. "My senses is gone. I too old. I the oldest people I ever know. Dance, old scarecrow," she said, "while I dancing with you".She kicked her foot over the furrow, and with mouth drawn down, shook her head once or twice in a little strutting way. Some husks blew down and whirled in streamers about her skirts. Then she went on, parting her way from side to side with the cane, through the whispering field.At last she came to the end, to a wagon track where the silver grass blew between the red ruts. The quail were walking around like pullets, seeming all dainty and unseen."Walk pretty," she said. "This the easy place. This the easy going."She followed the track, swaying through the quiet bare fields, through the little strings of trees silver in their dead leaves, past cabins silver from weather, with the doors and windows boarded shut, all like old women under a Spell sitting there. "I walking in their sleep," she said, nodding her head vigorously.In a ravine she went where a spring was silently flowing through a hollow log. Old Phoenix bent and drank. "Sweet gum makes the water sweet," she said, and drank more. "Nobody know who made this well, for it was here when I was born."The track crossed a swampy part where the moss hung as white as lace from every limb. "Sleep on, alligators, and blow your bubbles." Then the track went into the road.Deep, deep the road went down between the high green-colored banks. Overhead the live-oaks net and it was as dark as a cave.A black dog with a lolling tongue came up out of the weeds by the ditch. She was meditating, and not ready, and when he came at her she only hit him a little with her cane. Over she went in the ditch, like a little puff of milkweed.Down there her senses drifted away. A dream visited her, and she reached her hand up, but nothing reached down and gave her a pull. So she lay there and presently went to talking. "Old woman", she said to herself, "that black dog come up out of the weeds to stall you off and now there he sitting on his fine tail, smiling at you."A white man finally came along and found her—a hunter, a young man, with his dog on a chain. "Well, Granny!" he laughed. "What are you doing there?""Lying on my back like a June-bug waiting to be fumed over, mister," she said, reaching up her hand.He lifted her up, gave her a swing in the air, and set her down. "Anything broken, Granny?", "No, sir, them old dead seeds is spring enough," said Phoenix, when she had got her breath. "I thank you for your trouble.""Where do you live, Granny?" he asked, while the two dogs were growling at each other. "Away back yonder, sir, behind the ridge. You can"t even see it from here?""On your way home?""No sir, I going to town...""Why, that"s too far! That"s as far as I walk when I come out myself, and I get something for my trouble." He patted the stuffed bag he carried, and there hung down a little closed claw. It was one of the bobwhites, with its beak hooked bitterly to show it was dead. "Now you go on home, Granny!""I bound to go to town, mister", said Phoenix. "The time comes around."He gave another laugh, filling the whole landscape. "I know you old colored people! Wouldn"t miss going to town to see Santa Claus!"But something held old Phoenix very still. The deep lines in her face went into a fierce and different radiation. Without warning, she had seen with her own eyes a flashing nickel fall out of the man"s pocket onto the ground."How old are you, Granny?" he was saying."There is no telling, mister," she said, "no telling."Then she gave a little cry and clapped her hands and said, "Git on away from here, dog! Look! Look at that dog!" She laughed as if in admiration. "He ain"t scared of nobody. He a big black dog." She whispered, "Sic him!""Watch me get rid of that cur," said the man. "Sic him, Pete! Sic him!"Phoenix heard the dogs fighting, and heard the man running and throwing sticks. She even hearda gunshot. But she was slowly bending forward by that time, further and further forward, the lids stretched down over her eyes, as if she were doing this in her sleep. Her chin was lowered almost to her knees. The yellow palm of her hand came out from the fold of her apron. Her fingers slid down and along the ground under the piece of money with the grace and care they would have in lifting an egg from under a setting hen. Then she slowly straightened up, she stood erect, and the nickel was in her apron pocket. A bird flew by. Her lips moved, "God watching me the whole time. I come to stealing."The man came back, and his own dog panted about them. "Well, I scared him off that time," he said, and then he laughed and lifted his gun and pointed it at Phoenix.She stood straight and faced him."Doesn"t the gun scare you?" he said, still pointing it."No, sir, I seen plenty go off closer by, in my day, and for less than what I done," she said, holding utterly still.He smiled, and shouldered the gun. "Well, Granny," he said, "you must be a hundred years old, and scared of nothing. I"d give you a dime if I had any money with me. But you take my advice and stay home, and nothing will happen to you.""I bound to go on my way, mister," said Phoenix. She inclined her head in the red rag. Then they went in different directions, but she could hear the gun shooting again and again over the hill. She walked on. The shadows hung from the oak trees to the road like curtains. Then she smelled wood-smoke, and smelled the river, and she saw a steeple and the cabins on their steep steps. Dozens of little black children whirled around her. There ahead was Natchez shining. Bells were ringing. She walked on.In the paved city it was Christmas time. There were red and green electric lights strung and crisscrossed everywhere, and all turned on in the daytime. Old Phoenix would have been lost if she had not distrusted her eyesight and depended on her feet to know where to take her.She paused quietly on the sidewalk where people were passing by. A lady came along in the crowd, carrying an armful of red, green and silver wrapped presents; she gave off perfume like the red roses in hot summer, and Phoenix stopped her."Please, missy, will you lace up my shoe?" She held up her foot."What do you want, Grandma?""See my shoe," said Phoenix. "Do all right for out in the country, but wouldn"t look right to go in a big building." "Stand still then, Grandma," said the lady. She put her packages down on the sidewalk beside her and laced and tied both shoes tightly."Can"t lace"em with a cane," said Phoenix. "Thank you, missy. I don"t mind asking a nice lady to tie up my shoe, when I gets out on the street."Moving slowly and from side to side, she went into the big building, and into a tower of steps, where she walked up and around and around until her feet knew to stop.She entered a door, and there she saw nailed up on the wall the document that had been stamped with the gold seal and framed in the gold frame, which matched the cream that was hung up in her head."Here I be," she said. There was a fixed and ceremonial stiffness over her body."A charity cases, I suppose," said an attendant who sat at the desk before her.But Phoenix only looked above her head. There was sweat on her face, the wrinkles in her skin shone like a bright net."Speak up, Grandma," the woman said. "What"s your name? We must have your history, you know. Have you been here before? Want seems to be the trouble with you?"Old Phoenix only gave a twitch to her face as if a fly were bothering her."Are you deaf?" cried the attendant.But then the nurse came in."Oh, that"s just old Aunt Phoenix," she said. "She doesn"t come for herself she has a little grandson. She makes these trips just as regular as clockwork. She lives away back off the old Natchez Trace." She bent down. "Well, Aunt Phoenix, why don"t you just take a seat? We won"t keep you standing after your long trip." She pointed.The old woman sat down, bolt upright in the chair."Now, how is the boy?" asked the nurse.Old Phoenix did not speak."I said, how is the boy?"But Phoenix only waited and stared straight ahead, her face very solemn and withdrawn into rigidity. "Is his throat any better?" asked the nurse. "Aunt Phoenix, don"t you hear me? Is your grandson"s throating any better since the last time you came for the medicine?" With her hands on her knees, the old woman waited, silent, erect and motionless, just as if she were in armor."You mustn"t take up our time this way, Aunt Phoenix," the nurse said. "Tell us quickly about your grandson, and get it over. He isn"t dead, is he?"At last there came a flicker and then a flame of comprehension across her face, and she spoke. "My grandson. It was my memory had left me. There I sat and forgot why I made my long trip." "Forgot?" The nurse frowned. "After you came so far?"Then Phoenix was like an old woman begging a dignified forgiveness for waking up frightened in the night. "I never did go to school, I was too old at the Surrender," she said in a soft voice. "I"m an old woman without an education. It was my memory fail me. My little grandson, he is just the same, and I forgot it in the coming.""Throat never heals, does it?" said the nurse, speaking in a loud, sure voice to old Phoenix. By now she had a card with something written on it, a little list. Yes. Swallowed lye. When was it? —January—two, three years ago...Phoenix spoke unasked now. "No, missy, he not dead, he just the same. Every little while his throat begin to close up again, and he not able to swallow. He not get his breath. He not able to help himself. So the time come around, and I go on another trip for the soothing medicine.""All right. The doctor said as long as you came to get it, you could have it," said the nurse. "But it"s art obstinate case.""My little grandson, he sit up there in the house all wrapped up, waiting by himself," Phoenix went on. "We is the only two left in the world. He suffer and it don"t seem to put him back at all. He got a sweet look. He going to last. He wear a little patch quilt and peep out holding his mouth open like a little bird. I remember so plain now. I not going to forget him again, no, the whole enduring time. I could tell him from all the others in creation.""All right." The nurse was trying to hush her now. She brought her a bottle of medicine. Charity, she said, making a check mark in a book.Old Phoenix held the bottle close to her eyes, and then carefully put it into her pocket."I thank you," she said."It"s Christmas time, Grandma," said the attendant. "Could I give you a few pennies out of my purse?""Five pennies is a nickel," said Phoenix stiffly."Here"s a nickel," said the attendant.Phoenix rose carefully and held out her hand. She received the nickel and then fished the other nickel out of her pocket and laid it beside the new one. She stared at her palm closely, with her head on one side.Then she gave a tap with her cane on the floor."This is what come to me to do," she said. "I going to the store and buy my child a little windmill they sells, made out of paper. He going to find it hard to believe three such a thing in the world. I"ll march myself back where he waiting, holding it straight up in this hand."She lifted her free hand, gave a little nod, turned around, and walked out of the doctor"s office. Then her slow step began on the stairs, going down.(分数:99.99)(1).Summarize the plot of the following story in your own words (around 200 words).(分数:33.33)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (2).Make a brief comment on the characterization of Phoenix Jackson. (分数:33.33)__________________________________________________________________________________________ (3).Define the major theme of the following short story. (分数:33.33)__________________________________________________________________________________________三、Section Ⅲ Critical T(总题数:4,分数:20.00)1.Birds normally can fly.Tweety the Penguin is a bird.Therefore, Tweety can fly.(分数:5.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 2.You"ll never find any additives in our tobacco. What you see is what you get. Simply 100% whole-leaf natural tobacco. True authentic tobacco taste. It"s only natural.(分数:5.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 3.If we guillotine the king, then he will die.Therefore, if we don"t guillotine the king, then he won"t die.(分数:5.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 4.Everyone is selfish; everyone is doing what he believes will make himself happier. The recognition of that can take most of the sting out of accusations that you"re being "selfish". Why should you feel guilty for seeking your own happiness when that"s what everyone else is doing, too?(分数:5.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________。
英语专业专八口语考试2008年真题
英语专业专八口语考试2008年真题2008年12月考题Task One: Interpreting from English into ChineseDirections: Please do not do interpreting when you listen to the speech this time.A Toast by an American Professor at a Farewell Banquet for Foreign TeachersGood evening, ladies and gentlemen:I know that it will be hard to keep everyone’s attention while such a fine buffet awaits us, so I’ll attempt to be very brief.On behalf of the foreign teachers at Nanping University, I want to take this opportunity to thank all of the staff of Nanping University, especially the Foreign Affairs Office staff and our colleagues in our various departments, for all the ways you’ve assisted us during the 2007-2008 academic year and made us feel at home.I know that it’s not always easy to host foreign teachers. Because we’re strangers in China, we inevitably wind up creating a lot of extra work for all of you. Unlike Chinese teachers, we require a lot of orientation and assistance when we first arrive, and you’re called on to do everything from guiding us to the local department store to helping us get our computers set up. Then, as the semester starts, you have to answer endless questions about our courses and how we fit into the educational program here—questions that Chinese teachers wouldn’t need to ask. Of course, on top of all this are all the extra things you do to host us while we’re in China—celebrating Chinese holidays with us, taking us to visit interesting scenic sites, and introducing us to China’s find food tradition. Then at the end of theacademic year, many of us leave, and you have to get through the whole process again with the next new group of foreign teachers. Yet, year after year, you do all of this with diligence and grace.So tonight we wish to thank you for all the wonderful ways you host us—such as providing this fine banquet tonight. We also want to express our gratitude for the 100,000 yuan upgrade of our internet services that you paid for this year. However, we especially want to thank you for the many little things—and not so little things—that you do every day to help us in our lives here.May I propose a toast to Nanping University and to all of the people who make this a great place to live and work.When you listen this time, begin interpreting when you heara beep.1.On behalf of the foreign teachers at Nanping University, I want to take this opportunity to thankall of the staff of Nanping University, especially the Foreign Affairs Office staff and our colleagues in our various departments, for all the ways you’ve assisted us during the 2007-2008 academic year and made us feel at home.2.Unlike Chinese teachers, we require a lot of orientation and assistance when we first arrive, andyou’re call ed on to do everything from guiding us to the local department store to helping us get our computers set up.3.Of course, on top of all this are all the extra things you do to host us while we’re inChina—celebrating Chinese holidays with us, taking us to visit interesting scenic sites, and introducing us to China’s find food tradition.4.Then at the end of the academic year, many of us leave, andyou have to get through the wholeprocess again with the next new group of foreign teachers. Yet, year after year, you do all of this with diligence and grace.5.So tonight we wish to thank you for all the wonderful ways you host us—such as providing thisfine banquet tonight. We also want to express our gratitude for the 100,000 yuan upgrade of our internet services that you paid for this year.Task Two: Interpreting from Chinese into EnglishDirections: Please do not do interpreting when you listen to the speech this time.北京奥运经济研究会会长谈“北京奥运与北京经济”各位媒体记者朋友,大家上午好!非常高兴有这个机会和大家做个交流,谈谈奥运对北京经济的作用。
北京外国语大学2008年复语同传真题及答案
北京外国语大学2008年硕士研究生入学考试(复语班)一、将下列段落译为汉语(25分)Nevertheless, instead of expanding north, the Japanese moved south. By 1937, the conflict had spread to all of eastern China and the war had begun in earnest. Anti-Japanese feeling was exacerbated by the attack by the Japanese on Chinese soldiers and civilians at the Marco Polo Bridge, next to which was a vital railway line, in July 1937. Because of its strategic importance (it was only ten miles west of Beijing), Japanese troops in northern China had been conducting manoeuvres in the area. However, on 7 July 1937, after a Japanese night manoeuvre during which the Chinese had fired some shells, a Japanese soldier went missing. In retaliation, the Japanese attacked and war commenced. This may rightly be designated the first battle of the Second World War.By the end of July, Japanese soldiers had not only seized the bridge but taken control of the entire Tientsin–Peking region. The speed with which Japanese troops conquered parts of China was astounding. By 1938, Ca nton had ‘fallen’ and, despite notable military victories, including one in the town of Taierzhuang in southern Shantung, where 30,000 Japanese soldiers were killed by Nationalist Chinese troops, the Chinese were at a distinct disadvantage. The Japanese military was vastly superior. As late as 1940, China had only 150 military aircraft compared with the Japanese total of over 1,000. By the end of 1939, the whole of the north-eastern quarter of China was under Japanese occupation. Still, the Chinese did not surrender, forcing Japan to move still further inland, lengthening supply routes and stretching manpower to absolute limits. What followed was a war of attrition. (268 words)尽管如此,日本人没有选择在中国北方扩张,而是转而南下。
北外基础英语,同声传译试卷(历年题,转发)自己动手下载!98-04年的
1998年基础英语试卷Read the following passage:ARCHIBALD MACLEISH: Bicentennial of What?An address at the Bicentennial commemoration of the American Philosophical Society in PhiladelphiaIt is a common human practice to answer questions without truly asking them and the American bicentennial is merely the latest instance. Everyone knows what the Bicentennial celebrates: the 200th anniversary of the adoption, by the Continental Congress, of the Declaration of Independence. But no one asks what the Bicentennial is because no one asks what the Declaration was. The instrument of announcing American independence from Great Britain? Clearly that: but is that all it was? Is it only American independenc e from Great Britain we are celebrating on July 4, 1976——only the instrument which declared our independence? There have been other declarations of unilateral independence from Great Britain which no one is likely to remember for 200 years, much less to cel ebrate. “All men” ar e said in that document to be created equal and to have been endowed with certain unalienable rights. All governments are alleged to have been instituted among men to secure those rights ——to protect them. Are these, then, American rights? Doubtless——but only American? Is it the British Government which is declared to have violated them? Unquestionably——but the British Government alone? And the revolution against tyranny and arrogance which is here implied ——is it a revolution which American independence from the mediocre majesty of George III will win or is there something more intended? —— something for all mankind? ——for all the world?In the old days when college undergraduates still read history, any undergraduate could have told you that these are not rhetorical questions: that they were, from the beginning, two opinions about the Declaration and that they were held by (among others) the two great men who had most to do with its composition and its adoption by the Congress.John Adams, who supported the Declaration with all his formidable powers, inclined to the view that it was just what is called itself: a declaration of American independence. Thomas Jefferson, who wrote it, held the opposite opinion: it was a revolutionary p roclamation applicable to all mankind.“May it be the world”, he wrote to the citizens of Washington a few days before he died, “what I believe it will be: to some parts sooner, to others later, but finally to all, the signal of arousing men t o burst the chains…”And he went on in reverberating words: “The mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs for a favored few, booted and spurred, ready to ride them by the grace of God.”Moreover, these two great and famous men were not the only Presidents of the Republic to choose between the alternatives: A third, as great as either, speaking in Philadelphia at the darkest moment in our history —— bearing indeed the whole weight of that history on his shoulders as he spoke —— turned to the Declaration for guidance for himself and for his country and made his choice between the meanings.Mr. Lincoln had been making his way slowly eastward in February 1861 from Springfield to Washington to take the oat h of office as President of a divided people on the verge of Civil War. He had reached Philadelphia on the 21st of February where he had been told of the conspiracy to murder him in Baltimore as he passed through that city. He had gone to Independence Hall before daylight on the 22nd. He had found a crowd waiting. He had spoken to them.He had often asked himself. Mr. Lincoln said, what great principle or idea it was which had held the Union so long together. “It was not,” he said, as though re plying directly to John Adams, “the mere matter of the separation from the mother country.”It was something more. “Something in the Declaration,” they heard him say. “Something giving liberty not alone to the people of this country but hope t o the world.” “It was that which gave promise that in due time the weights should be lifted from the shoulders of all men.”Anyone else, any modern President certainly, would have said, as most of them regularly do, that his hope for the count ry was fixed in huge expenditures for arms, in the possession of overwhelming power. Not Mr. Lincoln. Not Mr. Lincoln even at that desperate moment. His hope was fixed in a great affirmation of belief made almost a century before. It was fixed in the commi tment of the American people, at the beginning of their history as a people, to “ a great principle or idea”: the principle or idea of human liberty —— of human liberty not for themselves alone but for mankind.It was a daring gamble of Mr. Lin coln‟s ——but so too was Mr. Jefferson‟s Declaration ——so was the cause which Mr. Jefferson‟sDeclaration had defined. Could a nation be founded on the belief in liberty? Could belief in liberty preserve it? Two America n generations argued that issue but not ours —— not the generation of the celebrants of the 200th anniversary of that great event. We assume, I suppose, that Mr. Jefferson‟s policy was right for him and right for Mr. Lincoln, because it was successful. But whatever we think about Mr. Lincoln‟ view of the Declaration, whatever we believe about the Declaration in the past, in other men‟s lives, in other men‟s wars, we do not ask ourselves, as we celebrate its Bicentennial, what it is today, what it is to us.Our present President has never intimated by so much as a word that such a question might be relevant —— that it even exists. The Congress has not debated it. The state and Federal commissions charged with Bicentennial responsibility express no opinions. Only the generation of the young, so far as I am informed, has even mentioned it, and the present generation of the young has certain understanble prejudices, inherited from the disillusionments of recent years, which color their comments…Express your view that the nation brought into being by hat great document was, and had no choice but be, a revolutionary nation, and you will be reminded that, but for the accidental discovery of a piece of tape on a door latch, the President of the United States in the Bicentennial year would have been Richard Nixon. And so it will go until you are told at last that the American Revolution is a figure o f obsolescent speech; that the Declaration has become a museum exhibit in the National Archives; and that, as for the Bicentenn ial, it is a year-long commercial which ought to be turned off.Well, the indignation of the young is always admirable regardless of its verbal excesses —— far more admirable, certainly, than the indifference of the elders. But, unfortunately, it is the indifference of the elders we have to consider. And not only because it is a puzzling, a paradoxical, indifference but because it is as disturbing as it is paradoxical.Does our indifference to the explicitly revolutionary purpose of the Declaration -our silence about Mr. Jefferson‟s interpretation of that purpose —— mean that we no longer believe in that purpose —— no longer believe in human liberty? Hardly?...But if this is so, if we still believe in the cause of human liberty, why do we celebrate the anniversary of the document which defined it for us without a thought for the meaning of the definition, then or now? Why have we not heard from our representatives and our o fficials on his great theme?Is it because, although the Republic continues to believe in human liberty for itself, it no longer hopes for it in the world? Because it no longer thinks such a hope “realistic”?...So far, indeed, is Mr. Jefferson‟s revolution from being obsolete that it is now the only truly revolutionary force in the age we live in. And not despite the police states but because of them.In 1945, when e had driven the Nazis out of Europe and the Japanese out of the Pacific in the name of human freedom and human decency, we stood at the peak, not only of our power as a nation but of our greatness as a people. We were more nearly ourselves, our true selves as the inheritors of Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, than we had ever been before. And yet within a few yea rs of that tremendous triumph, of the unexampled generosity of our nuclear offer to the world, of the magnificence of the marshall Plan, we were lost in the hysterical fears and ignoble deceits of Joe McCarthy and his followers and had adopted, as our foreign policy, the notion that if we “contained” the Russian initiative, we would some how or other be better off ourselves than if we pursued our historic pur pose as Jefferson conceived it.The result, as we now know, was disaster. And not only in Southeast Asia and Portugal and Africa but throughout the world, Containment put us in bed with every anti-Communist we could find including some of the most offensive despots then in business. It produced flagrantly subversive and shameful plots by American agencies against the duly elected governments of other countries. And it ended by persuading the new countries of the postwar world, the emerging nations, that he United States was to them and to their hopes what the Holy Alliance had been to us and ours 200 years before.I. Explain the following in your own words:1. All governments are alleged to have been instituted among men to secure those rights -to protect them.2. In the old days when college undergraduates still read history… (1) What is the implication of this statement? (2) How do you know?3. … who had most to do with its composition and its adoption by the Congress.4. May it be to the world, what I believe it will be: to some parts sooner, to o thers later, but finally to all, the signal of arousing men to burst the chains…5. The mass of mankind has not been born with saddles… by the grace of God.6. It was that which gave promise… from the shoulders of all men.7. It wasa daring gamble… which Mr. Jefferson‟s Declaration had defined. (1) What does “daring gamble” refer to? (2) What was the cause the Declaration had defined? 8. Our present president … that it even exists. 9. … you will be reminded… wo uld have been Richard Nixon. 10. … regardless of its verbal excesses 11. So far is Mr. Jefferson‟s revolution from being obsolete… but because of them. 12. And it ended by persuading… to us and ours 200 years before.II. What is the message the speaker wants to put across? III. Translate the following passage into English:“主人翁意识”,在我看来,也就是“所有者的意识”。
2008年北京第二外国语学院265俄语考研真题及详解【圣才出品】
2008年北京第二外国语学院265俄语考研真题及详解考试科目:俄语(第二外语)满分:100分I.Изменитеследующиесуществительныеиглаголыпотребованию.(15баллов)按要求写出下列词的变化形式。
(请先抄写原词,再给出变化形式。
)1.место(复数二格)【答案】место—мест2.аудитория(单数六格)【答案】аудитория—обаудитории3.путь(单数五格)【答案】путь—путем4.врач(复数二格)【答案】врач—врачам5.друг(复数一格)【答案】друг—друзья6.показать(命令式)【答案】показать—покажи(-те)7.вызвать(单数第一人称)【答案】вызвать—вызову8.работать(现在时主动形动词)【答案】работать—работающий9.прочитать(副动词)【答案】прочитать—прочитав10.переводить(被动形动词)【答案】переводить—переводимыйII.Прочитайтепредложенияивыберитеправильныйвариант.(30баллов)选择正确的答案。
(请注明题号。
)11.Нашалюбовь_____безгранина.А.кродинеВ.ородинеС.родины【答案】A【解析】句意为:我们对祖国的爱是无边无际的。
固定搭配:любовькчему译为“对……的爱”。
12.Ончеловек,способный_____.А.языкВ.поязыкуС.кязыку【答案】C【解析】句意为:他是一个有语言天赋的人。
固定搭配:способныйкчему译为“有……天赋/才能”。
13.Онлишьжелает_____—бытьучителем.А.одноВ.одногоС.одному【答案】B【解析】句意为:他只希望一件事——成为一名老师。
2008考研英语真题
2008考研英语真题一、听力理解(共四节,每小题1.5分,满分30分)第一节听下面5段对话。
每段对话后面有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。
听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。
每段对话仅读一遍。
听下面一段对话,回答第1-3题。
1. What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. The woman's new job.B. The man's work experience.C. The woman's interview.2. What did the man do before he went abroad?A. He was a salesman.B. He was a student.C. He was an engineer.3. Why did the man want to go abroad?A. To start his own business.B. To meet new people.C. To take up a new job.第二节听下面2段对话。
每段对话后面有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。
听每段对话前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟:听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。
每段对话读两遍。
听下面一段对话,回答第4至6题。
4. What does the woman ask the man to do?A. Accompany her to the concert.B. Buy her some concert tickets.C. Find someone to go to the concert with her.5. What did the man get for his birthday?A. A book.B. A ticket for the concert.C. A voucher for a music store.6. What does the man offer to do?A. Buy a new gift for the woman.B. Trade his gift with the woman.C. Give some money to the woman.听下面一段对话,回答第7至9题。
北京外国语大学 北外 2008年基础英语 考研真题及答案解析
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布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
布丁考研网,在读学长提供高参考价值的复习资料
北京外国语大学2008年考试英汉同声传译参考答案
北京外国语大学2008年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷(参考译文)一、将下列段落译为汉语(25分)译文:1939年,欧洲以外最重要的国家毫无疑问是日本和美国。
当时,日本已经深深卷入与中国的冲突之中。
1931年,日本占领了中国北方数省,并在此基础上建立了满洲国傀儡政权。
此后,日本在中国不断挑起事端,特别是侵犯东三省外的其他北方各省,以巩固其侵占的地区,扩大在华的影响。
日本的这些行为自然导致中国国内反日情绪日益高涨,而这种情绪又反过来使得日本进一步卷入中国事务。
在日本逐步扩大侵华行动的同时,其国内局势出现了一定程度的混乱,政府内部意见不一,这使得中国军阀政权相形之下显得组织有序。
在这一背景下,中日之间新的冲突几乎在所难免。
二、将下列短文译为汉语(50分)译文:通胀:最不想要的中国出口当通货膨胀开始致人死亡时,问题就严重了。
在中国西部城市重庆,周六发生了一起由抢购降价食用油引发的踩踏事件,导致3人死亡,31人受伤。
中国不能再将通胀简单归结为洪灾和动物疫情造成的短期影响,也不能再无视其宏观经济政策带来的压力。
虽然食用油是个特例——中国国内新上马了一大批生物燃料加工厂,带动对原材料需求,从而影响食用油价格——但最近几个月食品价格整体上涨,同比超过15%。
的确,洪灾及其他自然灾害、全球小麦价格上扬影响了了通胀,但结构性因素的影响同样不容忽视。
中国的通胀也不仅限于食品领域,生产资料价格也在上涨。
十月份,工业品出厂价格指数(PPI)上涨了3.2%,许多钢材产品的PPI涨幅更是超过了10%,而且考虑到国家控制的柴油零售价格最近上调了10%,受此影响,PPI 还有可能进一步攀升。
由于更多国家控制价格的产品可能被迫涨价,加上中国官方的通胀数据没有适当反映一些重要价格,比如教育成本,中国实际的通胀情况可能更糟。
这种通胀压力正是其他国家所担忧的。
世界各国以前一直享受着“中国价格”带来的实惠,廉价的中国产品为世界经济带来的似乎永远是通货紧缩的压力。
2008年高考试卷——英语(北京卷)解析版
2008 年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试(北京卷)英语第一部分:听力(共两节,满分第一节(共 5 小题;每小题30 分)1.5 分,满分7.5 分)听下面 5 段对话。
每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。
听完每段对话后,你都有A、 B、 C 三个选项中选出10 秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。
每段对话仅读一遍。
1.W hat did the man win in his dream?A.A holiday.B. A new car.C.Some money.2.W ill the woman come to the party?A.Maybe.B.N oC.C ertainly3.H ow long has the woman been an author?A.About 30 years.B.A bout 40 years.C.A bout 70 years.4.W hat does the woman want?A.A radio.B.S ome pens.C.S ome batteries.5.W hat is the woman doing?A.Asking for information.B.A sking for an apology.C.A sking for help.第二节(共15 小题;每小题 1.5 分,满分22.5 分)听下面5 段对话或独白。
每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A 、B 、 C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。
听完每段对话或独白前后,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题 5 秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5 秒钟的作答时间。
每段对话读两遍。
6How many coats does the woman. want?A. 25.B. 30.C. 50.7 . What is the order number forgloves?A. P25G5.B. P26T5.C. P28D5.听第 7 段材料,回答第 8、 9 题。
北外08年硕士研究生入学考试现汉试卷
北外08年硕士研究生入学考试现汉试卷一.单选(每题一分共十分)1.对声调起决定作用的因素是A .音高 B.音强 C.音长 D.音色2.撞(zhuang)这个音节所包含的因素一共有A. 2 B 3 C 4 D 53.下列词中,包含三个语素的是A 荷尔蒙B佝偻病C白金汉宫D反坦克炮4.下列词中,结构方式不同的是A 碧螺春B哈密瓜C基督教D白血病5.下列词语中,属于外来词的是A .逻辑B 电话C 黑板D 足球6.可以说“疾驶”,不可以说“疾开”,是因为构成“疾开”的两个语素A 褒贬色彩不同B形象色彩不同C 语体色彩不同D态度色彩不同7.下列短语中,含有区别词的是A 伟大祖国B 急性肠炎C 亲密爱人D 豪华住宅8.下列短语中,没有歧义的上市A 翻译小说B 一把牙刷C 朋友的哥哥D 鲁迅的回忆9.“明天你去不?”这个句子属于疑问句中的A 是非问B特指问C 选择问D 正反问10.“他就怕丢了乌纱帽”中“乌纱帽”运用的修辞是A比喻B借代C比拟D双关二.多选(每题一分共十分)在每题五个备选答案中选出2-5个正确答案不选多选少选或错选者,谬分(听着像高中的物理选择题呵呵)1.汉语有塞音韵尾的方言是A广州话B梅县话C长沙话D厦门话E北京话2.可以跟韵母e相拼的声母有A bB pC fD tE g3.下列汉字的读音中,韵母属于齐齿呼的有A枝B基C勇D九E恩4.下列汉字中,带有会意字的有A即B淼C本D架E木5.下列词中,带有词缀的有A茫然B使然C淋巴D盐巴E干巴巴6.下列词组中,属于方言词的有A埋汰B瘪三C名堂D知道E晓得7.下列词组中,具有形象色彩的是A蓝色B孔雀蓝C金钱豹D桔子E龙眼8.下列词语中,已经进入共同语词汇的方言是A埋单B结账C拍拖D(这个看不清啊不好意思)E瘪三9.下列词语中属于单纯词的是A龌龊B蜿蜒C冰淇林D白兰地E白皑皑10.下列词组中,属于兼语短语的是A有人敲门B在树下坐着人C走过去开门D坐在树荫下乘凉E给她送花三.解释下列术语(每题六分,共三十分)1.轻声ANS:2.比喻义ANS:3.不成词语素ANS:4.名词谓语句ANS:5.存现句ANS:四.语言分析题(三十分)1.请用国际音标把下列汉字的因素标注出来,然后对这些因素进行音位归纳(十分)爸派鸡家支资2.用义素分析法分析下列这组词的词义(横排式描写法)老太太老太婆老人家3.分析下列句子的层次结构,如有歧义要分别表示出来(每句五分)(1).他说不清楚(2)让更多人尽快富裕起来五.简答题:(每题十分共三十分)1.调至和调类是一回事吗?试加以说明2.连词“或者”和“还是”有何异同?请举例说明3.“差点没摔一跤”“差点摔了一跤”“差点没考上大学”“差点考上了大学”表示的意思都一样吗请加以说明4.现代汉语补语有哪些词义类别请各举一例加以说明5.词汇的发展变化表现在哪些方面请各举一例加以说明六.论述题(每题二十分共四十分)1.试着论述同义词的差异主要是表现在哪些方面2.量词是语法研究和对外汉语教学中的一个难点问题,请你谈谈量词之所以成为“难点词题”的原因。
北京同声传译 北京外国语大学同声传译试卷
北京同声传译北京外国语大学同声传译试卷导读:就爱阅读网友为您分享以下“北京外国语大学同声传译试卷”资讯,希望对您有所帮助,感谢您对92to 的支持!北京外国语大学2001年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷I. 将下列短文译成英语(35%)不久前美国宇航局宣布,他们测得的数据显示,在最近两个月,南极上空的臭氧空洞已扩大到智利南部城市篷塔阿雷纳斯(Punta Arenas)上空。
这是迄今人类所观测到的最大一个空洞。
更为严重的是,这也是臭氧空洞第一次覆盖一个人口稠密的城市。
许多人对臭氧的作用并不陌生,臭氧距地面约25-30公里,能吸收99%的太阳紫外线,可以说,它是地球生态环境的天然屏障,也是人类繁衍生存的保护伞。
据科学家测算,大气中臭氧含量每减少1%,太阳紫外线的辐射量就会增加2%,而人类皮肤癌患者就会增加5%至7%。
但现在,可以说一个城市的所有居民就处在集体患皮肤癌的危险中。
为了居民的身体健康,篷塔阿雷纳斯及其临近地区被迫宣布进入紧急状态。
这很可能也是人类第一次因臭氧空洞问题而进入紧急状态。
篷塔阿雷纳斯卫生部门再三告诫市民,最好不要在中午11点到下午3点之间外出,因为在阳光下曝晒7分钟左右,皮肤就会受到损伤。
据科学家们观测,臭氧空洞目前已达到2800多万平方公里,而造成臭氧空洞的,正是人类在工业生产中不断释放出氟利昂等化学物质,才使臭氧越来越稀薄,最后形成了现在这个巨大无比的空洞。
虽然这次臭氧空洞扩大,还因为南极大陆的气温不断升高所致,但气温的升高,又与人类大量释放二氧化碳有直接的关系。
但愿篷塔阿雷纳斯的警报是第一次,也是最后一次!II. 将下列单句译成英语(15%)1 我们诚心诚意地希望不发生战争, 争取长时间的和平, 集中精力搞好国内现代化建设。
2 冷战后,世界形势出现了重大的变化,两极格局宣告终结,多极化成为国际格局演变的主导方向。
3 近些年来,在经济全球化的冲击下,原有的分工格局和资源配置方式正在发生历史性的重要转变。
北外同传的往年试题
I. 将下列短文译成汉语(25分)UNESCO’s Global AllianceA radical change in mentalities is under way both in the public sector, which has now been forced to admit that its own means of action are insufficient to meet their development targets, and the private sector, which is becoming aware of its capacity to contribute to the developing countries’ emergence on the world stage in the role of future partners in local and global markets.Dialogue can be established within the framework of an already increasing number of forums, as well as in project formulation. The presence of other civil society actors and support from the international organizations—as much in the thinking and debate as in the actions undertaken – are crucial factors for enabling people to make sense of the new prospects for cooperation.The new twenty-first century world order demands that decision-making be opened up to dialogue with new actors. Civil society’s innovative energy has already produced a good number of important initiatives and proposals in many areas. And the business world offers economic resources and know-how that can greatly contribute to development strategy deployment and the promotion of cultural diversity. UNESCO intends to establish cultural patronage agreements with businesses aimed, inter alia, at supporting the initiatives of countries in the South.II. 将下列文章译成汉语(50分)Growth may be everything, but it's not the only thingEconomists have long been a natural constituency in favor of growth. Since even the richest country has limited resources, the central economic problem is choice: Shall we fund tax cuts for the rich or investment in infrastructure and research and development, war in Iraq or assistance for the poor in developing countries and our own? By providing more total resources, growth should, in theory, make these choices less painful.The United States, however, has powerfully demonstrated that while growth increases supply, it also raises aspirations. Choices that rich countries have to make thus seem to be no easier than those confronting poor countries, even though the tradeoffs are more heart-wrenching in the case of the poor. Brazil, for example, must choose whether to use its limited health budget to pay full-market price for AIDS drugs; some AIDS victims may live as a result, but people in need of other health care will die, because money that could have been spent on their needs is simply not there. More growth-provided resources, in this instance, mean the difference between life and death.Still, growth has had its critics. There is a well-developed populist antigrowth literature concerned with, among other things, the impact of growth on the environment and on poverty. Historically, economists have questioned whether, at least in the early stages of development, growth is accompanied by societal goods such as greater equality and a better environment. Nobel Prize-winning economist Simon Kuznets (西蒙·库兹列茨) argued, based on experiences largely before World War II, that there is an increase ininequality in the early stages of development. Arthur Lewis, another Nobel economist, went further: greater inequality, he argued, is necessary to generate the savings that growth requires. A later generation of economists has posited the existence of an environmental Kuznets curve: the early stages of growth cause environmental degradation, not environmental health.Kuznets and his descendants held out the prospect that eventually growth would bring more social justice (greater equality, less poverty) and a better environment. But there is nothing inevitable about this -- which means that even if it has been true in the past, it may not be in the future. Inequality did seem to fall in the United States after the Great Depression, but in the last 30 years it has increased enormously. Many forms of pollution have gone down as richer countries have turned their mind to air-quality issues, but greenhouse gas emissions -- with all the dangers they present for global warming -- have continued to increase with economic growth, especially in the United States.III. 将下列短文译成英语(25分)中国是欧亚地区重要的国家。
2008年同等学力人员申请硕士学位外国语水平全国统一考试A
2008年同等学力人员申请硕士学位外国语水平全国统一考试A英语试卷一ENGLISH QUALIFICA TION TESTFOR MASTER-DEGREE APPLICANTSPaper One (90 minutes)Part I Dialogue Communication(10 minutes,10 points)PartⅡV ocabulary (10 minutes,10 points)PartⅢReading Comprehension (45 minutes,25 points)PartⅣCloze (15 minutes,15 points)Part V Error Detection 00 minutes,5 points)考生须知1.本考试分试卷一和试卷二两部分。
试卷一满分65分,考试时间为90分钟,9:00开始,10:30结束;试卷二满分35分,考试时间为60分钟,10:30开始,11:30结束。
本考试及格标准为总分60分,其中试卷二不低于18分。
2.请考生务必将本人准考证号最后两位数字填写在本页右上角方框内。
3.本试卷一为A型试卷,请将答案用2B铅笔填涂在A型答题卡上,答在其它类型答题卡或试卷上的无效。
答题前,请核对答题卡是否为A型卡,若不是,请要求监考员予以更换。
4.在答题卡上正确的填涂方法为:在答案所代表的字母上划线,如【A】【B】【C】【D】。
5.监考员宣布试卷一考试结束后,请停止答试卷一,将试卷一和试卷一答题卡反扣在自己的桌面上,继续做试卷二。
监考员将到座位上收取试卷一和试卷一答题卡。
6.监考员收卷过程中,考生须配合监考员验收,并请监考员在准考证上签字(作为考生交卷的凭据)。
否则,若发生答卷遗失,责任由考生自负。
Paper One试卷一Part I Dialogue Communication (10 minutes, 10 points)Section A Dialogue CompletionDirections:In this section, you will read 5 short incomplete dialogues between two speakers, each followed by 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. Choose the answer that best suits the situation to complete the dialogue by marking the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square brackets on your machine-scoring ANSWER SHEET.1.A:Bob,would you mind turning down the TV a little? I'm talking on the phone,and I'm having a hard time hearing.B:____________A. Please forgive me.B. Oh,sure! I'm sorry about that.C. Y ou should have told me earlier.D. I’m sorry to hear about it.答案:B讲解:A说,Bob,你介意把电视开小点儿声音吗?我在打电话,很费劲儿才能挺清楚对方说什么。
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北京外国语大学2008年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷(复语班)北京外国语大学2008年硕士研究生入学考试英汉同声传译专业试卷(复语班)一、将下列段落译为汉语(25分)Nevertheless, instead of expanding north, the Japanese moved south. By 1937, the conflict had spread to all of eastern China and the war had begun in earnest. Anti-Japanese feeling was exacerbated by the attack by the Japanese on Chinese soldiers and civilians at the Marco Polo Bridge, next to which was a vital railway line, in July 1937. Because of its strategic importance (it was only ten miles west of Beijing), Japanese troops in northern China had been conducting manoeuvres in the area. However, on 7 July 1937, after a Japanese night manoeuvre during which the Chinese had fired some shells, a Japanese soldier went missing. In retaliation, the Japanese attacked and war commenced. This may rightly be designated the first battle of the Second World War.By the end of July, Japanese soldiers had not only seized the bridge but taken control of the entire Tientsin–Peking region. The speed with which Japanese troops conquered parts of China was astounding. By 1938, Canton had ‗fallen‘ and, despite notable military victories, including one in the town of Taierzhuang in southern Shantung, where 30,000 Japanese soldiers were killed by Nationalist Chinese troops, the Chinese were at a distinct disadvantage. The Japanese military was vastly superior. As late as 1940, China had only 150 military aircraft compared with the Japanese total of over 1,000. By the end of 1939, the whole of the north-eastern quarter of China was under Japanese occupation. Still, the Chinese did not surrender, forcing Japan to move still further inland, lengthening supply routes and stretching manpower to absolute limits. What followed was a war of attrition. (268 words)二、将下列短文译为汉语(50分)Thailand: An Exceptional Case?A few years ago a graduate student named Kanchana came to my office to see if I would be willing to supervise a paper she wanted to write on legal protections for cultural artifacts taken from Thailand, her native country. After an interesting discussion about possible approaches to her paper, I asked Kanchana a question that, in retrospect, would probably be grounds for a lawsuit under today‘s standards of political correctness—I asked whether she was an ethnic Chinese.Kanchana‘s reply: ―But the Thai are Chinese.‖ She then instantly retreated: ―Well—part Chinese. I have Chinese blood. Everyone in Thailand does. Well … almost everyone does.‖Thailand is a fascinating case. On the one hand, it shares with the other Southeast Asian countries the phenomenon of a wildly disproportionately wealthy, market-dominant Chinese minority. The Chinese in Thailand today, although just i o percent of the population, control virtually all of the country‘s largest banks and conglomerates. All of Thailand‘s billionaires are ethnic Chinese. On the other hand, as Kanchana‘s comments suggest, unlike elsewhere in Southeast Asia, the Chinese have assimilated quite successfully into Thailand, and there is relatively little anti-Chinese animus. In Thailand today, many Thai Chinese speak only Thai and consider themselves as Thai as their indigenous counterparts. Intermarriage rates between the Chinese and the indigenous majority (many of whom, at least in Bangkok, have some Chinese ancestry already) are much higher than elsewhere in Southeast Asia. Perhaps most strikingly, the country‘s top political leaders, including a recent prime minister, are often of Chinese descent, although they usually have Thai- sounding surnames and speak little or no Chinese.Although interethnic socializing and intermarriage may seem perfectly normal to Westerners, it bears emphasizing how markedly Thailand differs in this regard from her Southeast Asian neighbors. In Indonesia and Malaysia, for example, rates of intermarriage between the Chinese and the indigenous majority are close to zero. The Chinese in these countries remain a conspicuously insular minority, living, working, and socializing entirely separately from the indigenous majorities.Many have speculated about the reasons for the starkly different rates of intermarriage and assimilation. According to one professor of law from Singapore, the main reason is the ―pork factor.‖ ―Indonesians and Malaysians are mostly Muslims,‖ he explains, ―and they don‘t eat pork. The Chinese love pork; they eat it all the time. And for Chinese, eating is a huge part of their lives. Thus, social interactions are impossible.‖ This professor was being facetious, but he is clearly right that religion has played an important role: Thailand is not Muslim but largely Buddhist, a cultural affinity that has made assimilation much easier for the Thai Chinese, many of whom adhere to a syncretic combination of Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism.(455字)三、将下列段落译为英语(25分)胡锦涛在主持学习时发表了讲话。