翻译三级笔译实务分类模拟题4及答案解析.doc
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1、翻译三级笔译实务分类模拟题 4及答案解析(总分:25.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、English Chinese Tran(总题数:5,分数:25.00)England and France are separated by twenty-two miles of open sea at their closest point. 1 Attempts to swim the English Channel have been made by people of all ages and from various walks of life. Each swimmer is drawn to
2、 the famous channel for different reasons, but each has the same goalto conquer the channel. The English Channel was first crossed in 1875 by Mathew Webb, an Englishman, who swam breaststroke from Dover, England, to Calais, France. 2 Since then, over 3,700 people have made approximately 4,500 attemp
3、ts on the channel. Only 297 people, however, have successfully duplicated Webb“s remarkable achievement. Cold water, rough seas, strong currents, heavy winds and jellyfish are among the many reasons why the success rate is so low. Swimmers and escort crews must wait for periods of calm seas and ligh
4、t winds, lasting 10-20 hours. 3 Much to the frustration of the athletes and their coaches and crews, the weather may only cooperate a few days each year. Once in the channel, swimmers are always at the mercy of the elements since temperatures, winds and currents can change houdy. 4 Quite often, luck
5、 and good timing play as important a role in a swimmer“s success as proper physical training and mental preparation. Channel swimmers come in all ages, abilities and backgrounds. 5 But swimming the English Channel will always be the same to all its challengersan incredible adventure that tests the l
6、imit of human endurance, courage and perseverance.(分数:5.00)_By the eighteenth century, the rise of industrialism in the west was accompanied by a decline of religion that cannot be seen as an accidental concurrence. And from then on the trend accelerates. As the average man becomes more enabled to l
7、ive in comfortable houses, to escape most of the childhood diseases, to communicate rapidly through time and space, to move long distances with ease, his perception of Nature undergoes a startling alteration. 6 No longer does Nature seem quite so terrific and treacherous; for man is much less likely
8、 now to starve for want of food or perish from the heat or cold. His relation to the other animals and plants appears thickly veiled by air conditioning, frozen foods, automobiles and washing machines. 7 It has been said again and again that modern man“s comfortable life amidst the conveniences of t
9、echnology has caused him to suffer a spiritual death and to feel empty, without purpose and direction. And that may well be the case. But nevertheless a radical distinction must be made here: the need for transcendence experienced by most human beings prior to modern times was a very different one f
10、rom what is claimed to exist today. 8 For if the connection between the growth of industry and the decline of religion is a real one, the earlier spiritual lives appear as an escape from man“s vulnerable position in his battle with Nature. It was not that man“s sensitiveness to the idea of the good
11、and the beautiful was any more developed in past history; rather, his need to escape from an intolerable physical life was greater than ours. When I speak of man“s previous need for transcendence, I do not refer to the needs of great creative peopleartist, craftsmenwho can never be satisfied with th
12、e status. 9 I speak of the masses of people whose spiritual lives were necessary to make their physical lives endurable and who, had choice been possible, would certainly have preferred physical comforts over spirituality. This situation does not for the most part now exist: TV and toilet make the n
13、eed for God unnecessary. Man does not generally live in fear of Nature except when earthquake strikes, for he is mostly unaware of a connection with nature concealed by modern technology. 10 The present need for spiritual lives is based on sufficiency and not on deprivation, and it does not seek a h
14、aven in another world but rather a more beautiful version of this one. What I am concerned is what has happened as a result of the Industrial Revolution to man“s conception of his relationship with Nature.(分数:5.00)_This is supposed to be an enlightened age, but you wouldn“t think so if you could hea
15、r what the average man thinks of the average woman. Women won their independence years ago. After a long, bitter struggle, they now enjoy the same educational opportunities as men in most parts of the world. They have proved repeatedly that they are equal and often superior to men in almost every fi
16、eld. 11 The hard-fought battle for recognition has been won, but it is by no means over. It is men, not women who still carry on the sex war because their attitude remains basically hostile. Even in the most progressive societies, women continue to be regarded as second-rate citizens. To hear some m
17、en talk, you“d think that women belonged to a different species! On the surface, the comments made by men about women“s abilities seem light-hearted. The same tired jokes about women drivers are repeated day in day out. 12 This apparent light-heartedness does not conceal the real contempt that men f
18、eel for women. However much men sneer, at women, their claims to superiority are not borne out by statistics. Let“s consider the matter of driving, for instance. 13 We all know that women cause far fewer accidents than men. They are too conscientious and responsible to drive like maniacs. But this i
19、s a minor quibble. Women have succeeded in any job you care to name. As politicians, soldiers, doctors, factory-hands, university professors, farmers, company directors, lawyers, bus-conductors, scientists and presidents of countries they have often put men to shame. And we must remember that they f
20、requently succeed brilliantly in all these fields in addition to bearing and rearing children. 14 Yet men go on maintaining the fiction that there are many jobs women can“t do. Top-level political negotiation between countries, business and banking are almost entirely controlled by men, who jealousl
21、y guard their so-called “rights“. Even in otherwise enlightened places like Switzerland women haven“t even been given the vote. This situation is preposterous! The arguments that men put forward to exclude women from these fields are all too familiar. Women, they say, are unreliable and irrational.
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