9月上海英语翻译资格高级口译听力真题完整版

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2010年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)

2010年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)

2010年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)题型有: 2. 口译题口译题Part A Directions: In this part of the test, you will hear 2 passages in English. After you have heard each paragraph, interpret it into Chinese. Start interpreting at the signal.., and stop it at the signal...You may take notes while you are listening. Remember you will hear the passages ONLY ONCE. Now let us begin Part A with the first passage.听力原文:It is a privilege to participate in this important conference,which takes place against the background of an initial strengthening of the global economic outlook.Led by China,the world economy now has the potential for a return to solid growth.The recovery is broadening and deepening,with all major regions showing improvement.Obviously,Asia is in the vanguard of the global recovery.This rising tide will also lift our country,and we expect growth in this country to accelerate in the coming year.// But we know that the recovery is still uneven,with growth relatively rapid in China,India,and the United States,but with the euro area lagging behind.Ensuring that the recovery is robust and sustained requires cooperation.And such cooperation should ensure that no region bears a disproportionate burden of adjustment.This requires major economic powers in the world to accelerate their pace of effective structural financial reform.1.Passage 1正确答案:很荣幸参加今天这次重要会议。

2004[1][1].9.19高译听力(含答案)

2004[1][1].9.19高译听力(含答案)

试卷十六(2004年9月)上海市英语高级口译资格证书第一阶段考试SECTION 1: LISTENING TEST (30 MINUTES)Part A: Spot DictationDirections:In this part of the test, you will hear a passage and read the same passage with blanks in it. Fill in each of the blanks with the word or words you have heard on the tape. Write your answer in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. Remember you will hear the passage ONLY ONCE.Every nation and region in the world has its own set of folk heroes. Sometimes, the heroes from different geographical regions (1) are strikingly similar. When this is true, the stories connected with these figures can reveal underlined similarities (2) between two seemingly different cultures. Often, however, heroes from one culture or region are quite distinctive (3). When this is the case, the heroic figure demonstrates the unique aspects of a specific people, not merely universal responses (4) to similar circumstances. Now, in this lecture, we will look at a number of American folk heroes in order to focus on several aspects of the American experience (5).By folk heroes, we mean figures whose stories have evolved over time and whose legends cannot be identified with one particular author (6). Instead of being created by a single writer, folk heroes evolve through time and reflect the efforts and creativity of a variety of anonymous story-tellers (7). Of course, professional writers sometimes borrow or transform (8) folk heroes, just as those who create folk heroes often incorporate aspects of formal literature (9) into their stories. Nonetheless, folk heroes and the folklore concerning them are created informally (10) by people who perform in face-to-face contact with (11) their audiences. One example of this process might be the poet Homer reciting his heroic tales to a small but attentive (12) audience of ancient Greeks. This was a favorite form of entertainment long before the advent of movies and television (13).America is a diverse country in which various people and sub-cultures embrace their own unique history and lore. Not unexpectedly (14) under these circumstances, a wide variety of heroes have become a part of our nation’s folk traditions (15). Any yet many of these heroes share similarities that make them distinctively American, in spite of their individual differences (16). By focusing on these similarities, we can get a better understanding (17) of America and its people.For hundreds of years, Americans have struggled to understand their place in the New World. There were enormous opportunities (18) in the New World. In addition, the social and economic position of people was not as clearly defined (19) as in Europe, Africa and Asia. As a result, storytellers created heroes who actively confronted (20) the unique opportunities and challenges that America provided.Part B: Listening ComprehensionDirections:In this part of the test there will be some short talks and conversations. After each one, you will be asked some questions. The talks, conversations and questions will be spoken ONLY ONCE. Now listen carefully and choose the right answer to each question you have heard and write the letter of the answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following conversation.Where does this conversation take place?1. (A) In the professor's home.(B) In the professor's office.(C) In the classroom.(D) In the school library.Which of the following is true according to the professor?2. (A) Children always have the same accents as their mothers.(B) Most adult language learners can lose their accents.(C) Students don't usually learn their classmates' accents.(D) There will be big misunderstandings if you speak with accents.In the example given by the professor, what’s wrong with the student who said “homesick”?3. (A) He used the wrong stress.(B) He used the wrong intonation.(C) He misunderstood the word.(D) He spoke the word with a very different accent.The professor speaks English with several accents, which of the following does she not use?4. (A) Australian.(B) British.(C) Indian.(D) South African.What did the student decide to do at the end of the conversation?5. (A) To drop the pronunciation class.(B) To sign up for a listening / speaking class.(C) To check in the library the schedule for the new semester.(D) To wait to make a decision about the pronunciation class.Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following news.Why does Britain’s economy risk overheating?6. (A) Because of the accumulation of funds in the real estate market.(B) Because of the rising house prices and government budget deficits.(C) Because of the resignation of the Finance Minister Gorden Brown.(D) Because of the increase in the number of the houses being sold.Which of the following statements best describes business confidence in the Euro Area?7. (A) Business confidence will probably remain unchanged for the next year.(B) Business confidence was the highest in May since April 2001.(C) Published National indexes show confidence unchanged in Germany and Italy and falling in France.(D) The index of confidence may have stayed at plus 5, the highest in 3 years.What is the financial position of the big four banks in Japan at present?8. (A) They will deliver solid earning results this year.(B) They will break even at the end of this year.(C) They posted another year of losses due to bad loan write-offs.(D) They reported mixed results for the year ended March 31.Around how many are believed to have drowned during a storm in Bangladesh yesterday?9. (A) 50.(B) 100.(C) 150.(D) 200.What happened yesterday in the sea areas between Japan and Korea?10. (A) A Korean patrol boat operated illegally in Japanese waters.(B) A Korean fishing vessel overturned and the captain was fatally wounded.(C) A Japanese Coast Guard patrol boat fired teargas grenades at a Korean fishing vessel.(D) A Japanese fishing vessel was repeatedly ordered to stop operating in Korean waters.Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following interview.According to the man, why is Internet addiction so common now?11. (A) Because the usage of the Internet is widespread now.(B) Because Internet addiction is growing on college campuses.(C) Because the computer is accessible to everyone on college campuses.(D) Because Internet addiction is less harmful than other addictions.What worries the interviewer about surfing on the net?12. (A) She cannot go to sleep without surfing on the Net first.(B) She and other people are surfing on the Net in the middle of the night.(C) She doesn't know when her Internet compulsiveness is turning into an addiction.(D) She isn't sure the exact amount of time is really the issue.What is the problem with “chat rooms” according to the man?13. (A) People's work performance and school performance may be affected.(B) People may lose social skills that make face-to-face relationships successful.(C) People may be cheated by those with false identities.(D) People may have no time for taking walks and other leisure activities.The man says that several areas of a person’s life might be affected by internet addiction, which of the following is not one of these areas?14. (A) Work performance.(B) School performance.(C) Relationships.(D) Mental health.What does the man suggest that students do to remind themselves to get off line and take a walk?15. (A) Practice self-discipline.(B) Have some sort of balance in life.(C) Set an alarm clock.(D) Act upon your friend's advice.Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.In which of the following periods did Pop Art start?16. (A) In the late 1940s.(B) In the early 1950s.(C) In the late 1950s.(D) In the early 1960s.By which of the following were Pop artists inspired?17. (A) Abstract Expressionism.(B) The artistic movement that immediately preceded it.(C) The internal struggles of the individual artists.(D) Mass-produced visual media and the design of common household objects.Which of the following statements is true about abstract expressionism?18. (A) Abstract Expressionism was a very personal art.(B) Abstract Expressionism was more easily accessible to the masses than Pop Art.(C) Abstract Expressionism reflected a direct relationship to the actual world.(D) Abstract Expressionism was a little bit influenced by Pop Art.What was the goal of the pop artist Robert ()Rauschenberg?19. (A) To direct art from the personalities of the individual artists towards the world.(B) To impose a unified symbolic meaning on his collection of materials.(C) To concentrate less on the objects and more on the images he found.(D) To set the stage for further development in Pop Art.Why were pop artists interested in visual communication?20. (A) Because their use of found objects and images from everyday life was innovative.(B) Because they believed that these images reflected the cultural values of contemporary society.(C) Because they use everyday objects found on the street as the material for their art.(D) Because they combined and repeated images from print media to make one single artwork.SECTION 4: LISTENING TEST (30 minutes)Part A: Note-taking And Gap-fillingDirections:In this part of the test you will hear a short talk. You will hear the talk ONLY ONCE. While listening to the talk, you may take notes on the important points so that you can have enough information to complete a gap-filling task on a separate ANSWER BOOKLET. You will not get your ANSWER BOOKLET until after you have listened to the talkMany different cultures exist in the world today, and so there are differences in socially acceptable business behavior throughout the world.In some cultures it is (1) to say "No" even when that is the ultimate answer. ForPersonal points to another difference in culture. In Japan and some (5) AmericanBusiness cards also have different significance in various cultures. Japanese people take exchangingbusiness cards as an important At a business gathering, they may spend ten to fifteen minutesexchanging cards, discussing each other's and experience, answering questions andEthical behavior in one culture may (15) in another. For example, in the United States,Part B: Listening and Translation1. Sentence TranslationDirections: In this part of the test, you will hear 5 English sentences. You will hear the sentences ONLY ONCE. After you have heard each sentence, translate it into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.1.Like many other countries, Britain has experienced a great increase in criminal activities, nearly five times asacts of violence were reported to the police in 2003 as 20 years before.2.Helping the poor should start with their children, because sometimes the poor’s children don’t have goodschools to go to, and if they got a better education, then they would be able to help themselves.3.Today we are going to look at the role of social welfare in 2 European countries, Sweden and Switzerland,both economies can be described as welfare states, or so-called “democratically-controlled socialism”.4.Since World War II, France has had a system known as the “Guided Market Economy”. This means the stateguides and controls economic activity by means of measures such as nationalization of selected industries. 5.Smoking cigarettes is dangerous. It is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States. Every year,over 400,000 Americans die as the result of smoking, and another 10 million people suffer from smoking-related diseases.2. Passage TranslationDirections:In this part of the test, you will hear 2 English passages. You will hear the passages ONLY ONCE. After you have heard each passage, translate it into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. You may take notes while you are listening.1.Australia is one of the world’s 6 leading tourist destinations. And by the year of 2005, tourism is expected tobe the 2nd biggest industry in the country. Between 2000 and 2002, the number of overseas visitors to Australia grew by 50%. In 2003, there were 19.1 million overseas visitors. An estimated 64% of visitors came from Europe and North America, and the rest from Asia and other parts of the world. Business travel accounts for about 1/5 of all overseas tourism revenue. Australia’s tourist attractions include theaters, museums, art galleries, and historic houses, as well as shopping, sports and business facilities.2.What does it mean to be health? The simplest definition of health is the absence of disease. This definitionreflects a medical view of health involving mainly the diagnosis and treatment of illness. This view is limited because it focuses only on physical health and how to go about curing specific physical illnesses. The World Health Organization has a broader view. It talks about the state of complete physical, emotional, social, intellectual, environmental, and spiritual health. This holistic view of health takes into account the whole person. Good health can be described as relationship of harmony with yourself, with others, and with your environment, which allows you to get the most out of life.。

9月高级口译听力真题spot dictation

9月高级口译听力真题spot dictation

9月高级口译听力真题spot dictationSpot DictationWhat’s in a surname? You may ask. A new website project has been released, that helps you locate your past. Have you ever wondered why your ancestors gathered where they did, or where others with your surname live now. A research project investigating the distribution of surnames in Britain answers these questions. And another study has found the surnames are still extremely regional.Smith, for example, remains the most common surname in Britain, used by more than half a million people. It has exactly the same concentration it always did in Lerwick, in the Scottish Shetland Islands. Jones is the No. 2 surname, and is the most common among hill farmers in north Wales.The data used for this project comes partly from electoral register. A number of other files are held by Ex-pairing, which is probably Britain’s largest collector of data about individuals.There’re some of us who are fairly predictable. Campbell, for example, as you might expect, is somewhat concentrated in the northern parts of Scotland, and it appears really bizarre to be found somewhere else.Well, with 25, 000 names as difficult to generalize, what you can do is put them in general categories, if, for example, you look at names which are people’s work. Like the name, Webber, you might find it is much more common in the Midlands than in the south of England. If you go to Wales, most people get their names from their ancestors and in Yorkshire for example, a lot of people have names based on the places that they originally lived in or at least their ancestors did.Well, we only have 25, 000 names on this website, but there’re another 50, 000names now found in Britain and they’re particularly interesting, for they are non-British names. Most British names are fairly common and about what we can now do as such is look for the frequency of all names from different parts of the world and different faiths, religions and languages. And what there is in names is actually extremely useful for researchers in anthropology and sociology may find a lot about different immigrant groups and their descendants now living in this country.。

2013年9月高级口译听力答案Passage Translation

2013年9月高级口译听力答案Passage Translation

2013年9月高级口译听力答案Passage Translation难度:容易作者:沪江英语来源:沪江英语评论:22013年秋季上海中高级口译考试于今日9月15日开考,沪江英语在考后第一时间提供真题、解析、答案信息,本文为2013年9月高级口译听力答案Passage Translation 部分,由沪江网校提供。

Passage Translation E-C 1A person's age no longer tells you anything about his or her social position, marriage or health. There's no longer a particular year in which one goes to school or goes to work or gets married or starts a family. The social clock that keeps us on time and tells us when to go to school, get a job, or stop working isn't as strong as it used to be. It doesn't surprise us to hear of a 29-year-old university president or a 35-year-old grandmother, or a 70-year-old man who has become a father for the first time. Public ideas are changing. We start looking with surprised at old people who act in useful ways.【参考译文】一个人的年龄不再能够说明他或她的社会地位、婚姻以及健康状况。

上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题2006年9月

上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题2006年9月

上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题2006年9月(总分:5.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、口语题(总题数:1,分数:1.00)1.News report:The central government decided to cut down on pollution by calling for a Car Free Day last September. Since then, in the city of Kunming, Yunnan Province, the last Saturday of every month is officially "car free", apart from public transportation, police and emergency vehicles, making Kunming the first city in China to adopt this initiative on a regular basis. Frequent vehicle restrictions have triggered debate among the public. Some questioned the legitimacy of this move. Some asked whether confining their cars at home has deprived them of their rights on free use of private possessions. Others complained of China" s far less developed public transportation infrastructure in some areas.Topic: The Car Free Day InitiativeQuestions for Reference:1. Do you agree with the practice of Car Free Day in major cities in China on a regular basis? Why or why not?2. Shall we simply restrict the use of private cars or reduce the production of cars? Give your reasons.3. Do you have any suggestions for or even better solutions to those traffic and environmental problems?(分数:1.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________正确答案:()解析:(略)二、口译题(总题数:0,分数:0.00)三、Part A (总题数:1,分数:2.00)(分数:2.00)(1).Passage 1(分数:1.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________正确答案:()解析:英中两国的友谊具有坚实的基础,并建立了牢固的双边关系。

9月英语高级口译真题+答案

9月英语高级口译真题+答案

9 月英语高级口译真题+ 答案(4)SECTION 3: TRANSLATION TEST (30 minutes)Directions: Translate the following passage into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.A proposal to change long-standing federal policy and deny citizenship to babies born to illegal immigrants on U.S. soil ran aground this month in Congress, but it is sure to resurface-kindling bitter debate even if it fails to become law.At issue is “ birthright citizenship -pr〞ovided for since the Constitutio n' s14th Amendment was ratified in 1868. Section 1 of that amendment, drafted with freed slaves in mind, says: “ All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subj to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States. 〞Some conservatives in Congress, as well as advocacy groups seeking to crack down on illegal immigration, say the amendment has been misapplied over the years, that it was never intended to grant citizenship automatically to babies of illegal immigrants. Thus they contend that federal legislation, rather than a difficult-to-achieve constitutional amendment, would be sufficient to end birthright citizenship.“ MostAmericans feel it doesn 'mt ake any sense for people to come into the country illegally, give birth an d have a new U.S. citizen, 〞said the spokesman of th federation of American immigration reform. “ But the advocates for illegal immi will make a fuss; they ' lcllaim you ' repunishing the children, and I suspect the leadership doesn ' t want to deatlhwaitt.h 〞SECTION 4: LISTENING TEST (30 minutes)Part A: Note-taking and Gap-fillingDirections: In this part of the test you will hear a short talk. You will hear the talk ONLY ONCE. While listening to the talk, you may take notes on the importa nt points so that you can have enough information to complete a gap-filling task on a separate ANSWER BOOKLET. You will not get your TEST BOOK and ANSWER BOOKLET until after you have listened to the talk.The doctor-patient relationship is one of the __________ 〔1〕relationships in life, but many people say this relationship is beyond _____________ 〔2〕. Can this relationship be saved? The answer is __________ 〔3〕yes, because it must. And if that is lost, medicine becomes a technology and is _________ 〔4〕. In part the crisisin medicine began with doctors __________ 〔5〕themselves from patients.The more critical work of a doctor happens in the taking of the human 〔6〕. 〔7〕is the most important and most difficult single transaction. The studies show that 〔8〕of all the valuable informationthat leads to correct diagnosis comes from the history. Another __________ 〔9〕comes from the physical examination, 10% comes from simple __________ 〔10〕tests, and 5% comes from all the complex __________ 〔11〕. So listening is vital, because listening is not merely listening, but to establish a _________ 〔12〕.But some doctors think listening is _________ 〔13〕. They like to use complex and costly __________ 〔14〕, and use ___________ 〔15〕that create adversereactions and require _________ 〔16〕. They don 't like to listen. Because there premium on listening and that there 's no __〔__1_7_〕___fo_r_listening.Even so, the doctor-patient relationship is not _________ 〔18〕saving. Because people may ask, what is good health? And good health begins first and foremost with 〔19〕. If you don 't care for a _______ 〔__2_0_〕, be somebody else,but don ' t be a doctor!Part B: Listening and Translation1. Sentence TranslationDirections: In this part of the test, you will hear 5 English sentences. You will hear the sentences ONLY ONCE. After you have heard each sentence, translate it into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.〔1〕〔2〕〔3〕〔4〕〔5〕2. Passage TranslationDirections: In this part of the test, you will hear 2 English passages. You will hear the passages ONLY ONCE. After you have heard each passage, translate it into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. You may take notes while you are listening.〔1〕。

2009年9月_听力_上海高级口译笔试真题答案与听力原文

2009年9月_听力_上海高级口译笔试真题答案与听力原文

2021年9月上海高级口译笔试真题答案与听力原文2021年9月上海高级口译笔试听力原文Spot DictationFor more than two centuries, American's colleges and universities have been the backbone of the country's progress. They have educated their technical, managerial and professional work force, and provided generation after generation of national leaders.Today, educators from around the country are up to find many reasons for the excellence of the American universities.But four historic acts stand out as watersheds.First, education for the mass. In 1862, congress enacted the Land-Grand College Act, which essentially extended the opportunity of higher education to all Americans, including women and minorities.Each state was permitted to sell large tracts of federal land, and use the proceeds to endow at least one public college.Second, competition breeds success. Over the years, the decentralization and diversity of the America's colleges and universities have promoted competition for students and resources.Competitive pressure first arose during the Civil War, when President Lincoln created the National Academy of Science, to advice congress on any subject of science and art.The academy's impact really grew after World War 2, when alandmark report commissioned by the then president, argue that it was the Federal government's responsibility to provide adequate funds for basic research.Instead of been centralized in government's laboratories, scientific researches became decentralized in the American universities, and generated increasing investment.It also gave graduate students research opportunities, and help spread scientific discoveries far and wide, to the benefit of industry, medicine, and society as a whole.Thirdly, investing in the future. The end of World War 2, saw the passage of Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944.The law, which provided for college or vocational education for returning veterans, made the higher education system accessible in ways that were inconceivable in Europe, opening the door of the best universities to men and women who had never dreamed of going to college.Finally, promoting diversity. The creation of federal loan and subsidy programs, as well as outright grand for college students, brought much needed diversity to higher education, and further help to democratize access.Since it's funded in 1965, Federal Family Education Loan Program has funded more than 74 million student loans, worth more than 180billion dollars.Listening ComprehensionQuestions 1-5A: Grace, what's interesting to you about living in the city? Why do you like it?B: Well, I'm just a city girl. One time I bought a house in the country to escape from the urban ills, and then found myself totally bored with country life. Because you have to drive everywhere, and there's not much to do. I'm used to the fast pace of the city. There's a whole variety of museums, movies, coffee shops, and places to interact with people. But sitting alone in the country, you know, unless you like to grow a garden, or patter around and build things with your hands.A: Okay, but what about your vacation? I mean, a lot of city people rent vacation houses in the country.B: But to me, going to the country for a vacation makes no sense at all. There's so much work to do. First you have to get there, and then, I don't know. I think I can relax better in the city. Besides, the country has bugs. There you are supposedly enjoying yourself in the fresh country air, but you are been eaten alive by a variety of different bugs. You can't enjoy yourself. You are been stung and eaten to death. You can't relax. Let's putit this way. If you like boredom, you'll like the country. People who like a lot of stimulation, you know, can't hack it. And then there's the transportation thing, I mean, to get a carton of milk, you have to drive three miles. So the whole car culture thing kicks in. Gives me the city any time.A: Well, what would you say is the one thing you like most about the city?B: The interactive social life. People get together. I like it when you call up and people say "come on over", and you hang out together. And it's just fun.A: Yah, and what about the suburbs?B: Well, that's even more hateful than the country to me.A: Why?B: Well, the suburbs don't even have any of the good country air. There's nothing to do. You just stuck there. And for young people, there are all sorts of problems, alcohol, drugs, you have to drive everywhere... Look, I go to my friend's house in the suburbs. Do you ever see anyone walking in the street? No, it's totally zero. There's nothing going on. What can I say?! You know, it's not for me. I do have one or two suburban friends who like it, because they make a barbeque and the birds are chirping, but not me. And then there's another thing I really hate, in the city, you can make mistakes but you always get a second chance; But in the countryand the suburbs, you are labeled. You feel like "wow, that's it!" you are labeled. And that label doesn't come off easily.A: Well, do you think the city is lonely, or dangerous?B: NO! In the city, people live in little communities, they have interactive social lives. And I don't think the city is particularly dangerous.Q1 There are several reasons why the woman likes living in the city, which of the following is NOT one of the reasons?Q2 What does the woman think of vacation in the country?Q3 What does the woman like most about the city?Q4 Which of the following is true about living in the suburbs according to the woman?Q5 How does the woman describe the city life?Questions 6-10London, the United KingdomThe Left-Leaning Think Tank, the institute for public policy research (IPPR), has warned UK chancellor not to use green taxes to plug the hole in government finances. Its new research shows that the government could gain 3.5 billion pounds a year through a carbon tax on homes and vehicles. But IPPR says this would harm the poor, unless ministers give back all the cash in the form of benefits, tax breaks and home insulation. IPPR has developed a computer model to assess the benefits and drawbacks of environmental taxes. The preliminary findings suggest thattaxes can prove a useful tool and achieving environmental objectives. But IPPR says it would be a mistake to use them to raise money because unless they are counter-balanced, they inevitably hit the poorest hardest and are mistrusted by the public.Munich, GermanyGerman business confidence rose less than expected in May, as sluggish demand weighed on construction and manufacturing. Go out look for the six-month ahead improved, a closely watched survey showed.The Munich-based IFO institute's business climate index increased to 84.2 points in May from 83.7 points in April. That’s a steady increase from 82.2 points in March, the lowest level in 26 years. IFO said in a release that manufacturers reported a poorer business situation this month than in April, but expecting improvement in the next 6 months. Germany’s economy went into recession last fall as the global economic crisis sapped demand for its exports.Washington, the United StatesPresident Obama’s tougher new fuel efficiency standards bring industry, environmentalists and states together to start cutting green house gas emissions from cards. But the reductions would represent only a drop in the bucket of what’s needed to address global warming. White House officials say the proposal would cut green house gas emissions by about9oo million metro tons, as the total reduction of pollution from the 5 model years of cars and trucks covered by the proposal. Environmental protection agency chief Lisa Jackson notes that even though the pollution reductions are big, they are dwarfed by the massive challenge of global warming, "This action alone, I don’t want to mislead anyone, is not going to change global temperatures. " Obviously, it is one step on the long road.OPEC, AsiaAlthough it adds lower last week, oil price rose to 61 dollars a barrel Monday in Asia, as investors add an OPEC meeting this week and wait evidence of a global economic recovery. Trading was light because US markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day. Benchmark crude for July delivery was 61 dollars 32 cents a barrel by midday on the New York Mercantile exchange. On Friday, the contract rose to settle at 61 dollars 67 cents. Oil has rallied on investor optimism that the worst of the global economic downturn is over. In Asia, there are signs that the drop in exports has bottomed, although the outlook remains murky.L‘Aquila, ItalyScores of people were killed and tens of thousands left homeless in central Italy today after a powerful earthquake shook a mountain region, severely damaging a historic city ad leaving hundreds feared trapped in rubble. At least 92 people were known to have died, and more than 1,500people had been injured, the Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, told a press conference in L’aquila, the badly damaged capital of the Abruzzo region, close to the epicenter. The 6.3-magnitude tremor was the country’s deadliest since the Irpinia quake in the south in November 1980, which killed more than 2,500 people.Q6 Why has the left-leaning IPPR warned the government not to use green taxes to raise money?Q7 Which of the following best describes Germany’s current economy? Q8 Which of the following statement is true about President Obama’s proposal about new fuel efficiency standards?Q9 What price was oil on Monday in Asia?Q10 At least how many people were known to have died in the recent earthquake in central Italy?Questions 11-15A: BMW, STARBUCKS and NOKIA, they are all brands easily recognizable around the world and getting even more so, according to a new survey of the top 100 global brands. Of all, Tech. company seem to beginning dominants. Coca Cola still holds the No.1 spot. Microsoft is No. 2. And IBM comes in at No. 3. Business week and Inter-brands team up annually to determine these rankings. And joining us now to discuss them is Inter-brand's chief executive John Albert. John, thanks for being here. Very briefly, what is the criteria?B: The criteria is that we need brands that have strong franchise with consumers, but importantly, businesses underline those brands that have very large amounts of revenue.A: Large amounts of revenue, so basically you look at the matter numerically?B: Well, it's a combination of numerical factors, and more soft marketing factors. So we look at the degree of resilience that the consumers have with a particular brand proposition, and that allows us to actually discount from an entire group of earnings. How many of those earnings are attributable to the brand?A: Let's take a look at some of these. Coca Cola, for instance, because it's more than just a brand, I think for a lot of people, it almost has certain nostalgia.B: Yeah, look, Coke is obviously famous for a proposition around refreshment. What Coke's been able to do cleverly is to take that through generations, but also take it through different ethnographies, and through different market demographics. So people around the world buy into the Coke proposition.A: Microsoft. A lot of people hate Microsoft, you know? Because they feel that it's monopolistic, and so on and so forth. Yeah, it runs most of the software for computers, or has the software that runs most of computers.B: Microsoft is a good lesson. And I'm not sure whether people hate Microsoft. I mean Microsoft is great.A: Well, a percentage of people do. I mean, you know, a lot of anti-competitive practices and so forth. I'm not expressing an opinion here. But you know, talk to somebody who has an APPLE computer, for instance.B: Sure, as I have had. Microsoft actually has a fantastic product underneath its brand. And of course, without a fantastic product, you can't build a valuable brand. And we've seen that, through some of the great rises in the table this year, with the likes of E-bay, which has a fantastic product; the likes of Google, which has a fantastic product.A: It really does come down to the functionality of the product.B: Well, it's not just a functionality. It's about delivering on the promise and brands obviously are promoted to build a promise to consumers. And if they continuously deliver on that promise, people will go back again and again, and build loyalty with those brands.A: Why do you think some companies have been so successful at building a brand while some aren't able to do it?B: Well, I guess the product is critical, but a number of these brand market has been around for a long time.A: Let me just go back. You say the product is critical. Now Starbucks would say their coffee is certainly different than what you'll get from one of the competitors, but the basic coffee is not that different. So there's some atmosphere that's also created that makes people want to buy this brand.B: Sure, what I mean is product is an entry level criteria. If you don't have a good product, you can't build a strong brand. So in the case of Starbucks, what they have been able to do is to build a motional place on top of that product that people have bought into, and understand that Starbucks has been something more than just functional coffee.Q11 According to the new survey, at the top of 100 global brands, which of the following brands holds the number 1 spot?Q12 There are several factors involved in ranking the brands. Which of the following is NOT one of the factors?Q13 According to the woman, why do a lot of people hate Microsoft?Q14 Which of the following best explains the huge success of Starbucks? Q15 What do top global brands have in common according to the interview?Questions 16-20Today I'd like to talk about the work of Pedal Power, a small charity based mainly in the UK. I'll be giving our contact details at the end, if anyone would like to find out more about how to support us. The first,how the charity began. I got the idea of exporting bicycles to developing countries while I was in Ecuador. I went there in 2001, just after graduating from university. After three years of studying, I wanted adventure. I love travelling, so I decided to join a voluntary organisation and we were sent to Ecuador to carry out land service. The project came to an end after 5 years and when I returned to the UK in 2006, I started planning Pedal Power. Where I lived in Ecuador was a very rural area. My neighbour had the only bicycle in the village. Whereas anyone else walked to anywhere, my neighbour's business was usually successful. And for years I couldn't understand why. Then I realised having a bike meant he could get wherever he wanted to go without much trouble. Other local carpenters could only accept jobs in a three-kilometre radius. So no matter how skilled they were, they could never do as many jobs as my neighbour. At Pedal Power, we collect second hand bikes in the UK and send them to some of the poorest regions of the world. When we distribute bikes overseas, we don't give them away for free. We'd like to. But long term that doesn't help the local ecomony. The demand for bikes is enomours, which makes them very expensive locally. So we sell them for 5% of the normal price. But in order to continue operating, we need to have a constant supply of bikes which we send out very six months. One example of a town that perceived bicycles from Pedal Power is Rivers. It was the first place I sent a full container of bicycles to. Most people therenow own a bicycle. The local economy has developed so much, you wouldn't recognise it as the same place. In fact, there are more bikes than on the streets of Amsterdam, if you've ever been there. But Pedal Power still needs your help. You may have read about some of our recent problems in the British media. In August 2007, we simply run out of money. We have containers of bikes ready to sent, but no money to pay the bills. It was a terrible situation. We managed to ensure the bikes went out on time, but the other problems carried on for several months. Fortunately in October 2007, we won an enterprise award which helped us enormously. We invested 15 of the 75,000-pound-prize money to help secure our future. Winning the award helped rise our profile, and the money enabled us to pay all our shipping cost which represent our greatest expense. Pedal Power changes lives when someone gets a bicycle from us. They see a 14% increase in their income. We are currently looking to investing computers so that our office staff can do an even better job. Because of our work, people in a number of countries now have a better standard of living. So far we have provided 46,000 people with bikes. But we'd like to send more, at least 50,000 by the end of the year. Now there are many ways in which you can support the work of Pedal Power, not just by taking a bike to a collection in your area. I should also like to say, if you do have a bike to donate, it doesn't matter what condition it's in. If we can't repair it, we'll strip it down for spareparts. Of course to do that we also need tools which are expensive to buy. So we welcome any that you can give. Also, you could organise to bring in funds for us. People do all kinds of things, including of course sponsored bike rides. Also, we are always interested to hear of other places that would benefit from receiving a consignment of bikes. And welcome suggestions from people who've been to developing regions on their travels. We hope by talking on radio programmes like this, we will be able to raise public awareness, which will lead to government organisations also giving us regular financial support, something that we really need.Q16 What type of institution is Pedal Power?Q17 What's the work of Pedal Power?Q18 How does Pedal Power distribute the bikes they collect in the UK? Q19 How many people has Pedal Power provided with bicycles so far?Q20 The speaker mentions several ways people can support the work of Pedal Power, which of the following is not one of these ways?Note-taking & Gap-fillingMany employees complain that they are being watched while they work during the day. The majority of US companies keep watch on their workers with video cameras, tape recorders, computer surveillance. If you send personal e-mail on your office computer, there's a good chance theboss is keeping an eye on you.In a new survey of more than 900 major US companies, nearly 2/3 of them acknowledged using a range of surveillance methods to monitor their employees. Some employers issue that warning, but others do not. In the most worrisome findings of the survey, up to a quarter of the companies that monitor their work force do it secretly, and the practice is on the rise. According to the ACLU workplace rights project, the number of employees been monitored has doubled in the last five years.What's driving this increase? Partly it’s competition. If everyone else in an industry is keeping tags on their workers, there's pressure to join in. But to a large extend, companies have stepped up monitoring, simply because it could be done cheaply and efficiently. Most employers insist that these are legitimate and even necessary business practices. According to these employers, even as surveillance becomes more wide spread, there's nothing sinister about the practice itself.They claim that these practices we are talking about for the most part are very legitimate forms of performance monitoring. They say employers have a right to know how equipment they provide is been used on the job, if rules are being obeyed, if employees are getting the job done.That helps explain why banks routinely take customer service calls, and why the US postal service is testing a satellite system to track howlong it takes to get the mail delivered.The National Association of Manufactures says companies are using technology to accomplish other important goals. Video cameras were recently installed in his building to deter theft. And the association keeps a log of all phone calls, so employees can pay the company for their personal calls. According to the association, monitoring can be used for the worker's own protection. If an employee is sending pornography from an employer's computer, obviously the employer will be expected to go through there.If somebody complains about sexual harassment, that somebody sending out visual slurs over the e-mail, the employer has a right to take action. In fact, the Chevron cooperation which sued by female employees who said they were sexually harassed through company e-mail. But many attorneys are arguing that employees do not give up their privacy rights when they show up for work. Rebecca Lock, the legal director of the ACLU’s work place rights project doesn't agree.She concedes there are legitimate uses of monitoring programs. But too often surveillance practices demean workers for no good reason. Lock argues that employee should not have to leave their human dignity at the work place door. And she says they’re entitled to a few safe guards in this area. Employees should always been informed when they are monitored. Some employees even emphasize that there should be no monitoringwhatsoever in purely private areas.Yet so far, there's only one state—Connecticut—that forbids surveillance in areas such as locker rooms, or the employee lounge. In other states, employers do secretly video tape private places if faces theft or criminal activities such as drug dealing.There's only one federal statute, in 1986, Electronic Communication's Privacy Act that safeguard employee privacy. But according to the National Association of Manufacturers, the scope of the Act is limited to eavesdropping on private telephone calls.Employee rights' attorney Penny Nathan Keen isn't involved in the case over this very issue. She says as the companies continue to expand employee monitoring, workers are turning to the court to protect their rights. There may even be good business reasons for companies to think twice about increase surveillance.Studies link electronic monitoring to higher levels of worker stress which can lead to lower productivity.Sentence Translation1. We have limited our production to certain medicines which are prescribed in large quantities. At the same time, we have been expanding our marketing activities abroad, including Asia, North America, and Australia.2. I really must insist that it’s impossible to view the performance of the company solely from the point of view of Europe. We have nearly 2/3 of our workforce and subsidiaries and associated companies overseas.3. Every business, no matter how large or small, depends on advertising to attract and keep customers, advertisements are everywhere because the media are everywhere, we cannot escape their influence, they effect us everyday of our lives.4. We have a message for divers traveling south, and accident on a southbound carriage way of the M6 in Lancashire is causing congestion and delays. The road should be clear in about an hour’s time.5. As rescue work continues in wide areas of southern Mexico, it is becoming increasingly more likely that the present toll of 650 dead will rise much higher. The worst damage appears to be in small isolated towns and villages.Passage Translation1. How to write a good news story? Unless the correspondent is an eye witness, it is rare to trust any single source. Rumor and gossip can confuse the situation. So you have to check information as much as possible. Using commonsense and experience as final checks to help establish just what is likely to be the truth or close to it. Once the information is avalable, it has to be written in an interesting and easilyunderstood way. Particularly for a radio, since while a newspaper reader can turn back and reread a sentence or two, the radio listener has only one chance. So there should be an element of repetition.2. V olvo, Sweden’s largest car-making group, has announced plans to make 500 staff redundant at its U.K. –based subsidiary in Scotland. The redundancies are part of a move by V olvo to improve productivity. But the news of redundancy has been badly received here in Scotland. I spoke to some of the workers at a V olvo subsidiary factory. They say these are unnecessary job losses. It’s devastating. It will destroy entire communities. V olvo strongly denies that communities will collapse as the result of the job losses. They say they will improve investment and business. The group’s cost-cutting measure also extends to Spain, where they will make job cuts at its other subsidiary factory, which employed 30.000 people.。

上海高级口译听力考试真题完整版

上海高级口译听力考试真题完整版

9月上海高级口译听力考试真题完整版Part A: Spot DictationWas it envisioned for the euro to eventually become such a strong currency that it could compete with the dollar on a global level? Or was that a dream then and is it still a dream now?I think it was an attainable dream, and it is becoming actually, in some ways, less attainable right now.You may ask why?Well, the dream to give credit where credit is due was not only advocated by some European officials but by some American economists, including our Institute’s director, Fred Bergsten, who was way out in the front with that. Richard Portes, who teaches at London Business School, also was way out in front with that. And they were very much against the tide of people like Martin Feldstein and others in London and the United States who were very skeptical towards the euro.At face value, the euro area is the same size in GDP as the United States, roughly speaking. The euro area does have very large and deep financial markets, although the more you look in detail, there are still some things there that differentiate it from the United States. And the euro area has delivered price stability. They have a very low rate of inflation pretty consistently. So you put those three things together, on paper it looks like the euro should be at least a very clear second to the dollar in investor’s portfolios, in government reserve holdings, in how much you invoice trade like oil or planes or things like that.But what our research finds in this book -- in particular in good chapters by Kristin Forbes and Linda Goldberg -- is the fact that if you look under the hood a bit, there is ahuge shortfall between what you would expect just based on size and how much the euro is used. So there’s an awful lot of trade that’s still invoiced in dollars, not in euros, even between countries that are not dollar countries. There are huge amounts of financial flows that come to the United States, and the depth of European assets and financial flows is not commensurate with the size.【解析】本文节选自Growing Pains for the Euro。

2023年9月英语高级口译考试笔试真题整理

2023年9月英语高级口译考试笔试真题整理

9月英语高级口译考试笔试真题整理9月英语高级口译考试笔试真题Directions: In this part of the test,youwillhearapassageand read thesamepassage with blanks in it. Fill in each of the blanks with the words you have heard on the tape. Write your answer in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. Remember you will hear. the passage ONLY ONCE.Directions: In this part of the test, you will hear a passage and read the same passage with blanks in it. Fill in each of the blanks with the words you have heard on the tape. Write your answer in the corresponding space in your ANWER BOOKLET. Remember you will hear the passage ONLR ONCE.Research shows that we make up our minds about people through unspoken communication within seven seconds of meeting them._______________(1), we show our true feelings with our eyes, faces, bodies and attitudes, causing a chain of reactions, ranging______________(2). http://tr.hjenglish/Think about some of your most unforgettable meetings: an introduction to ________________(3), a job interview, and an encounter with a stranger, Focus on the first seven seconds. What did you________________(4)? How did you read the other person? How do you think he reads you?______________ (5). For 25 years Ive worked with thousands who want to be successful. Ive helped them ________________(6), answer unfriendly questions, communicate more effectively.____________________(7) has always been you are the message.Others will want to be with you and help you if you use________________(8). They include physical appearance, energy,_________________(9), pitch and tone of voice, gestures, expressions through eyes, and the ability to ______________________(10). Others form an impression about you based on these.Think of times when you know you ______________________(11). What made you successful? You were ___________________(12) what you were talking about and so absorbed in the moment that you___________________(13). http://tr.hjenglish/Be yourself. Many how-to books advise you to________________(14) and impress others with your qualities. They instruct you to greet them with __________________(15) and tell you to fix your eyes on the other person. If you follow all this advice, it is most likely that youll ________________(16) including yourself.The trick is to _______________(17), at your best. The most effective people never change from one situation to another. Theyre the same whether theyre addressing their garden club,_________________(18), or being interviewed for a job. They communicate ___________________(19);the tones of their voices and their gestures _______________(20). http://tr.hjenglish/Part B: Listening ComprehensionDirections: In this part of the test there will be some short talks and conversations. After each one, you will be asked some questions. The talks, conversations and questions will be spoken only once, Now listencarefully and choose the right answer to each question you have heard and write the letter of the answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.Questions 1 to 5 are based an the following conversation.1. (A) It is required by the course he is taking. http://tr.hjenglish/(B) He is promoting a product through advertising.(C) He is applying for a scholarship at a university.(D) It is part of the selection process for a job.2. (A) How to become a successful job applicant.(B) How to prepare for a good speech.(C) How to make a good impression on the interviewer.(D) It has not been decided yet.3. (A) 20 minutes. (B) 30 minutes.(C) An hour. (D) Its not mentioned in the conversation.4. (A) To use the overhead projector.(B) To read clearly and loud enough from a script.(C) To illustrate his points with anecdotes or analogies.(D) To say something amusing or striking at the very start.5. (A) To listen to him rehearse the talk.(B) To help him collect the required statistics.(C) To analyze the data already available.(D) To write a script for the talk.Question 6 to 10 are based on the following news.6. (A) It will cut its peace keeping forces in some parts of Europe.(B) It will maintain its military presence in Bosnia and Kosovo.(C) It will cease its arms control talks with Russia.(D) It will have several eastern European countries as its full members.7. (A) Germany. (B) France.http://tr.hjenglish/(C) Hungary. (D) The Czech Republic.8. (A) Three. (B) Ten.(C) Fourteen.(D) Thirty.9. (A) Australians personal debts hit an all time low currently.(B) Australians face financial difficulties which might hinder economic growth.(C) The unemployment figures have been on the rise for the thirteenth month.(D) The record high interest rates start to threaten a booming housing market.10.(A) Because this was the first visit of the kind in the past four decades.(B) Because this visit had not been announced before these people actually arrived.(C) Because a denial of such a visit had been reported widely in the press.(D) Because government-level talks between the two sides has been recently cancelled.Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following interview.11. (A) Steel production in the third world.(B) Economics about the developed countries.(C) Grain trade in northern Europe.(D) Cereal production in tropical areas.12. (A) To experience a flood disaster at first hand.(B) To study grain trade. http://tr.hjenglish/(C) To make a lecture tour.(D) To attend an international conference on grain production.13. (A) She took ferries. (B) She had to hire a boat from the locals.(C) She walked without any shoes. (D) She managed to drive a van.14. (A) Snake bites. (B) Big black ants.(C) Worms fleeing from the floods. (D) A fatal epidemic disease.15. (A) The government organized relief in conjunction with international charities.(B) The government brought down grain prices by selling its stock on the open market.(C) The merchants managed to keep their stock of grain safe from the flood water.(D) The merchants pushed up grain prices twice as much in some areas.Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.16. (A) Young Entrepreneur.(B) Business Matters.(C) Successful Enterprise. (D) Talented Businessman.17. (A) Local business people. (B) Self employed people(C) People aged 18-25. (D) Successful people of any kind.18. (A) It must be typed on one side of paper only.(B) It must be no longer than 350 words.(C) It must have a persons signature.(D) It must be accompanied by a charity donation.19. (A) Six. (B) Ten.(C) Three hundred. (D) Three hundred and fifty.20. (A) Three weeks from now.(B) Two months after this announcement.(C) June the fifteenth. (D) The second weekend in July.文档内容到此结束,欢迎大家下载、修改、丰富并分享给更多有需要的人。

英语翻译资格考试:2022年9月上海中级口译听力真题完整版新

英语翻译资格考试:2022年9月上海中级口译听力真题完整版新

英语翻译资格考试:2022年9月上海中级口译听力真题完整版Spot dictationNext, let’s talk about earthquakes on our planet. Some countries have large numbers of earthquakes. Japan is one of them. Others do not have many. For example, there are few earthquakes in Britain. There is often a great noise during an earthquake. The ground vibrates. Houses fall down. Trains run off the lines. Sometimes, there is a heavy loss of human lives.Earthquakes often happen near volcanoes, but this is not always true. The centers of some earthquakes are under the sea. The bottom of the sea suddenly moves. The powerful forces inside the earth break the rocks. The coast is shaken and great waves appear. These waves, also known as seismic waves, or tsunamis can travel long distances and rush over the land when they reach it. They are strong enough to break down houses and other buildings. Very often fires follow the most serious earthquakes. In 1906, the great earthquake at San Francisco broke the gas pipes. The gas escaped, and soon large numbers of fires were burning in the city. The water pipes were also shaken and broken, so it was not possible to put the fires out. There was no water. The Tokyo Earthquake of 1923 happened just before noon. People were cooking meals on their fires at that time. When the ground shook, the fires shook, too. Hot materials were thrown on the different parts of the houses, some of which were made of wood. Soon 134 fires were burning in the city.What kind of building stands up best in an earthquake? A building with concrete walls is perhaps the best. A steel frame will make it even stronger. The frame holds the different parts together and the walls do not easily fall. There is less chance of fire because concrete and steel do not burn. Over the years, scientists carefully studied the results of theearthquake in different parts of the world, and they are convinced that this kind of building is the safest.Statement:1. George started his new job with King Brothers only a month ago and he wants to invite his boss, the sales manager to dinner.2. I got some bad news today. The store with which I work is laying off stuff. I'm worried that they are going to let me go.3. You are not supposed to see Gary tonight. He plans to finish his financial report this week and he is too busy for parties these days.4. I hope our first supply will induce your customers to place regular orders in the future. And we both can make big profits.5. These books are two weeks overdue. But luckily for me, there's a moratorium this week on fines. They are trying to encourage returns.6. May is a time for green grass, picnics, and unfortunately, examinations. In the United States, high school students take their final examinations at the end of every school year.7. China is now the third largest producer of films in the world. However, most of the revenue came from a handful of the movies produced.8. Let me explain why I questioned the feasibility of the project. We don't appear to have enough time. If we were to push our people, the quality of the product becomes questionable.9. While some species of whales are nearing extinction, many countries refuse to accept even a partial ban on whale hunting.10. In 1950, New York City was the only city with a population of ten million. Now, in 2022, worldwide we have 38 cities with populations of over ten million people.Talks and Conversations 1Questions 11 ~ 14 are based on the following conversation.M: I’m going to Boston next week and I’d like to make some reservations. Can you fix that for me?W: Sure. What dates are you traveling on?M: Ur… Starting Monday, June 18, about mid-day, late morning or early afternoon.W: Let me check, please. Yes, I can get you on a noon flight from New Orleans to Boston. How does that sound?M: That’s just fine.W: OK. Now where are you planning to stay?M: Top Hotel, Boston. Would you make reservations for Monday, June 18 and Tuesday, June 19? Two nights, single, with bath, please. By the way, I prefer it in the non-smoking area.W: June 18 and 19. Single with bath. Non-smoking area. Top Hotel, Boston. Yes, they have the room available.M: Fine.11 What is the man doing?12 When is the man’s flight?13 How long is the man going to stay in Boston?14 Which of the following is not a requirement by the man for his accommodation?【评析】本对话是一段关于订机票和酒店的日常对话,难度不大,主要考察细节猎取。

上海高级口译试题及答案

上海高级口译试题及答案

上海高级口译试题及答案一、听力理解1. 请根据所听对话,选择正确的答案。

A. 会议将在下午三点开始。

B. 会议将在下午四点开始。

C. 会议将在下午五点开始。

D. 会议将在下午六点开始。

答案:B2. 根据对话内容,下列哪项是正确的?A. 他们计划去看电影。

B. 他们计划去购物。

C. 他们计划去公园。

D. 他们计划去餐厅。

答案:A二、口语表达1. 请用英语描述你最喜欢的季节,并解释原因。

答案:My favorite season is autumn. The weather is cool and crisp, and the leaves change into beautiful colors.2. 请用英语讲述一次你在国外旅行的经历。

答案:During my trip to Paris, I visited the Eiffel Tower and enjoyed the stunning view of the city from the top.三、阅读理解1. 阅读以下段落,并回答问题:What is the main idea of the passage?答案:The main idea of the passage is the importance of environmental conservation.2. 根据文章内容,下列哪项是作者的观点?A. 人们应该减少使用塑料。

B. 人们应该增加使用塑料。

C. 塑料对环境没有影响。

D. 塑料是不可替代的。

答案:A四、翻译1. 将下列句子从英语翻译成中文:"In order to achieve success, one must be willing to work hard and persevere."答案:为了取得成功,一个人必须愿意努力工作并坚持不懈。

2. 将下列句子从中文翻译成英语:“随着科技的发展,我们的生活变得越来越便利。

199809高译答案及听力原文

199809高译答案及听力原文

1998.9上海市英语高级口译资格证书第一阶段考试参考答案:SECTION 1: LISTENING TESTPart A: Spot Dictation1. one-sixth /1/62. the ocean’s tides3. the occurrence of earthquakes4. affect our behavior5. moon’s phases6. easier or harder to catch7. famous astronomer 8. has an effect9. strange and unpredictable 10. really a connection11. police and fire 12. crime an unusual behavior13. car accidents 14. welfare checks15. is convinced 16. very hard to prove17. 1984 18. crime rates and the full moon19. deal directly with 20. specify exactlyPart B: Listening Comprehension1-5 C C B A D 6-10 B A A A B11-15 C B C D D 16-20 C A A C ?SECTION 2: READING TEST1-5 D C C B A 6-10 B D B A C11-15 B A B D D 6-20 D C B C CSECTION 3: TRANSLATION TEST英语是一种多么崇高的工具!我们每写下一页,都不可能不对祖国语言的丰富多彩、灵便精深产生一种赞同的喜悦。

如果某个英国作家不能用英语,不能用简明的英语说出自己必须说的话,那么这样的话也许就不值得说。

英语没有更广泛地得到学习是何等憾事。

高级口译笔试电子试卷答案和听力文字原稿1999.9

高级口译笔试电子试卷答案和听力文字原稿1999.9

1999.9上海市英语高级口译资格证书第一阶段考试参考答案:SECTION 1: LISTENING TESTPart A: Spot Dictation1. the majority of employees2. that affect them3. two-way communication4. within the company5. set in motion6. between managers and staff7. value consultation with our workforce 8. to perform effectively9. know the basic facts 10. more efficient11. give you one example 12. new products13. some outline about a company’s profit14. its competitors15. future product plans 16. hear about it17. ignore the face 18. communicate with supervisors 19. what is going on 20. they haven’t been told formallyPart B: Listening Comprehension1-5 B D C A C 6-10 C B C A C11-15 C A D A D 16-20 A B D A CSECTION 2: READING TEST1-5 D D B C B 6-10 B C B D A11-15 C D B A D 16-20 D B C C BSECTION 3: TRANSLATION TEST如果各公司断然采取西立国家裁员的做法以增加利润,日本一度令人羡慕的失业率将上升至两位数。

2012年9月高级口译考试真题答案及解析(完整版)

2012年9月高级口译考试真题答案及解析(完整版)

2012年9月高级口译考试真题+答案+解析(完整版)Spot Dictation:Hunger and food insecurity have been called America’s “hidden crisis.” At the same time, and apparently paradoxically, obesity has been declared a serious epidemic. Both obesity and hunger (and, more broadly, food insecurity) are serious public health problems, sometimes co-existing in the same families and the same individuals. Their existence sounds contradictory, but those with insufficient resources to purchase adequate food can still be overweight, for reasons that researchers now are beginning to understand.The apparent paradox of expanding wastelands and persistent hunger and food insecurity in America is driven in part by the economics of buying food. Households without money to buy enough food first change their purchasing in eating habits, relying on cheaper high-calorie foods over more expensive neutral rich foods before they cut back on the amount of food. In order to cope with limited money for food and to stave off hunger, families try to maximize calories-intake for each dollar spent, which can lead to over-consumptions of calories and a less healthful diet.Research among low-income families shows that mothers first sacrifice their own nutrition by restricting their food intake during periods of food insufficiency in order to protect their children from hunger. The resulting chronic ups and downs in food intake can contribute, over the long run, to obesity among low-income women.Dr. Larry Brown, executive director of the Center on Hunger and Poverty, reported, "A growing body of research shows that hunger and obesity pose a dual threat for some people. We need to better understand this relationship if our nation is to grapple with these parallel threats to the well-being of Americans. We particularly need to avoid damaging policy prescriptions that assume hunger and obesity cannot coexist."Renowned food experts and scientists call for a reform agenda to address both hunger and obesity. According to James Wells, president of the Food Research and Action Center, an agenda that seriously tackles hunger and obesity among the poor must address their common roots. Those roots include food insecurity and the impact of poverty. One answer is increased access to income supports and nutrition programs so that more families have sufficient resources to obtain healthier diets.评析:本文选自《The Paradox of Hunger and Obesity in America》和《Hunger, obesity: two sides of same coin.》,命题者对两篇文章的内容进行了节选和组合,组成了一篇听写段落。

2009年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)

2009年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)

2009年9月上海市高级口译第二阶段口试真题试卷(精选)(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1.3 billion,and to ensure our people the rights to subsistence and development is in itself a major contribution to the progress of the world human rights cause.Collective and individual human rights should be considered together and their coordinated development should be pursued,and the Saltle considerations should be given to the development of economic and cultural right son the one hand and of civil and political rights on the other.This is dietated by China’s specific national conditions and therefore,is the only way to progress in human rights cause in China 听力原文:中国人民崇尚“安居乐业”。

大自然是慷慨的,它为人类的生存和发展提供了适宜的条件。

大自然也是无情的,它对无情的掠夺予以报复。

中国许多城市在工业化和都市化过程中面临着生态环境问题。

所以,我们在发展经济的同时,要把环境保护作为首要任务之一。

// 多年来,我们一直致力于控制空气污染、垃圾污染、噪音污染和人口爆炸。

我们试图减少城市供水、能源、住房、交通方面的问题,扩大绿化面积,提高环境质量。

9月高级翻译听力真题Spot Dictation

9月高级翻译听力真题Spot Dictation

9月高级翻译听力真题Spot Dictation英语类考试频道为网友整理英语翻译资格考试,供大家参考学习。

Spot DictationWhat’s in a surname? You may ask. A new website project has been released, that helps you locate your past. Have you ever wondered why your ancestors gathered where they did, or where others with your surname live now. A research project investigating the distribution of surnames in Britain answers these questions. And another study has found the surnames are still extremely regional.Smith, for example, remains the most common surname in Britain, used by more than half a million people. It has exactly the same concentration it always did in Lerwick, in the Scottish Shetland Islands. Jones is the No. 2 surname, and is the most common among hill farmers in north Wales.The data used for this project comes partly from electoral register. A number of other files are held by Ex-pairing, which is probably Britain’s largest collector of data about individuals.There’re some of us who are fairly predictable. Campbell, for example, as you might expect, is somewhat concentrated in the northern parts of Scotland, and it appears really bizarre to be found somewhere else.Well, with 25, 000 names as difficult to generalize, what you can do is put them in general categories, if, for example, you look at names which are people’s work. Like the name, Webber, you might find it is much more common in the Midlands than in the south of England. If you go to Wales, most people get their names from their ancestors and in Yorkshire for example, a lot of people have names based on the places that they originally lived in or at least their ancestors did.Well, we only have 25, 000 names on this website, but there’re another 50, 000 names now found in Britain and they’re particularly interesting, for they are non-British names. Most British names are fairly common and about what we can now do as such is look for the frequency of all names from different parts of the world and different faiths, religions and languages. And what there is in names is actually extremely useful for researchers in anthropology and sociology may find a lot about different immigrant groups and their descendants now living in this country.。

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9月上海英语翻译资格高级口译听力真题完整版Part A: Spot DictationWas it envisioned for the euro to eventually become such a strong currency that it could compete with the dollar on a global level? Or was that a dream then and is it still a dream now?I think it was an attainable dream, and it is becoming actually, in some ways, less attainable right now.You may ask why?Well, the dream to give credit where credit is due was not only advocated by some European officials but by some American economists, including our Institute’s director, Fred Bergsten, who was way out in the front with that. Richard Portes, who teaches at London Business School, also was way out in front with that. And they were very much against the tide of people like Martin Feldstein and others in London and the United States who were very skeptical towards the euro.At face value, the euro area is the same size in GDP as the United States, roughly speaking. The euro area does have very large and deep financial markets, although the more you look in detail, there are still some things there that differentiate it from the United States. And the euro area has delivered price stability. They have a very low rate of inflation pretty consistently. So you put those three things together, on paper it looks like the euro should be at least a very clear second to the dollar in investor’s portfolios, in government reserve holdings, in how much you invoice trade like oil or planes or things like that.But what our research finds in this book -- in particular in good chapters by Kristin Forbes and Linda Goldberg -- is the fact that if you look under the hood a bit, there is ahuge shortfall between what you would expect just based on size and how much the euro is used. So there’s an awful lot of trade that’s still invoiced in dollars, not in euros, even between countries that are not dollar countries. There are huge amounts of financial flows that come to the United States, and the depth of European assets and financial flows is not commensurate with the size.【解析】本文节选自Growing Pains for the Euro。

在段落一开始,作者就抛出了一个问题:欧元最终成为一种能与美元相抗衡的国际货币是不是一场梦?并指出这个期望相比曾经,正变的越来越难以实现。

文中指出,虽然欧元的确有广大的经济市场,而且通货膨胀的概率也较小,但是通过研究发现,如果一旦深探,就会看到期望值与欧元的实际使用率之间存在着巨大差额,以致在一些非美元使用区中,流通的货币仍然为美元。

本文的题材虽然为考生比较惧怕的经济类,但是如果能够听懂首段作者的提问,以及之后作者的态度I think it was an attainable dream, and it is becoming actually, in some ways, less attainable right now,就不难马上领悟全文的主旨。

考生平时要多多关注常考的经济类文章,有了平时的积累,才能在考场上发挥自如。

Listening comprehension 1W: So, one of the things that I really have trouble understanding is how jazz music developed to be so different from many other kinds of music? My class notes are terrible.M: Well, what can’t you understand from your notes?W: Uh, one thing is I copied down the musical training from the blackboard. What did it mean by that?M: Well, most people who became professional musicians have some kind of formal training in music. But the first people who play jazz music had almost none.W: OK, but so what? Doesn’t it just mean that they weren’t very good musicians?M: Well, it’s not that the early jazz musicians weren’t good; it’s that they played their instruments differently. Let’s say you are receiving formal instruction in the trumpet. First you would learn the right way to place your mouth, and the right way to use your fingers, and the right way to blow air. And then you will practice single notes and different combination of notes until you could do those correctly. And only after that, would your teacher give you a piece of music to play.W: And the early jazz musician didn’t learn to play this way?M: No, the first people who play jazz music learned to play their instrument by actually trying to play a song the way they like. They were humanity, and tried to play themselves on their instruments. Because they were mostly teaching themselves, they began to express themselves in ways that formally traditionally trained musicians didn’t. In traditional instruction, there is one correct way to play something, and everyone who plays tries to make the correct sound. But in jazz...W: In jazz music, there isn’t one right way to play. In fact, individual musicians are supposed to interpret the music in their own style. So you are saying that this aspect of jazz developed because the first people who play jazz didn’t have any formal musical training?M: Yes, I believe so.Q1: What is the woman most probably according to the conversation?Q2: What is the problem the woman has trouble understanding?Q3: How did early jazz musicians learn to play their instrument?Q4: Which of the following is true according to the conversation?Q5: Why did jazz music develop to be so different from many other kinds of music?【解析】本文难度并不大,围绕着女生的疑问以及男生的解答,讲述了爵士是如何发展成一种与其他种类相距甚大的音乐的。

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