上海市中级口译第一阶段笔试分类模拟题6及答案解析.doc
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1、上海市中级口译第一阶段笔试分类模拟题 6及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、TRANSLATION TEST(总题数:4,分数:100.00)1.Help! I Can“t CopeA friend who had lived in New York during the 1970s was recently here for a brief visit. I asked him what, in this ever- changing city. he found to be most startlingly changed. He thought for a mome
2、nt before answering. “Probably the visible increase in prostitution,“ he replied. My astonishment at this comment was so palpable that he felt obliged to explain. “Haven“t you noticed,“ he asked with surprise, “all these young women standing furtively in doorways? You never used to see that when I w
3、as here.“ I couldn“t resist my laughter. “They“re not prostitutes,“ I clarified. “They“re smokers.“ For indeed they are. Most American office buildings no longer allow smoking on the premises, driving those who can“t resist the urge onto the streets. The sight of them, lounging on “coffee breaks“ ne
4、ar the entrances to their workplace, puffing away, has become ubiquitous. Since most new smokers apparently are women, my friend“s confusion was understandable. And there are more than ever since September 11. Stress is probably better measured anecdotally than statistically. I“m not aware of survey
5、s on this matter, but anyone living in New York these days has stories of friends who, amid the scares of 9-11 and its aftermath, have sought solace in cigarettes. I used to go to a gym in the Metlife Building over Grand Central Terminal. Some days so many people stood outside, tensely smoking, that
6、 I assumed an evacuation had just been ordered. At least three friends who“d given up tobacco have lapsed back into the habit, claiming they couldn“t calm their nerves any other way. Others have increased their previously reduced intakes. Some, in their quest for a crutch, have begun smoking for the
7、 first time. In modern Manhattan the frantic puff has become the preferred alternative to the silent scream. New Yorkers, of course, are coping in more imaginative ways, as well. A friend swears he knows someone who has stashed a canoe in his closet in case he needs to escape Manhattan by river. Ano
8、ther says he has moved a heavy objet d“art into his office so that he can smash the window if a firebomb makes the elevator or the staircase impassable. A women working on one of the lowers of her office building has acquired a rope long enough to lower herself to the ground; one who works at the to
9、p of a skyscraper tells me she“s looking into the purchase of a parachute. Still others have stocked up on such items of antiterrorist chic as flame-retardant ponchos, anthrax-antidote antibiotics and heavy-duty gas masks. Recent polls indicate that American women are more stressed than men. Over 50
10、 percent in one national survey of 1,000 adults admitted to being “very“ or “somewhat“ worried in the wake of the terrorist assaults. The anthrax scare may have receded. But recent incidents, from the airplane crash in New York Borough of Queens to the arrest of the London “shoe-bomber“ to rumors of
11、 suitcase nukes, seem to have had permanently unsettling effects. Take food. A surprising number of people are apparently unable to touch their plates. Others are eating too much, seeking reassurance in “comfort food.“ Given the alternatives, smoking seems a reasonable refuge; after all, the long-te
12、rm threat of cancer seems far more remote these days than the prospect of explosive incineration. (分数:25.00)_2.The Ballooning Pension Crisis in Western EuropeMillions of elderly Germans received a notice from the Health they laid their coats on the seat; he asked what she would like to eat and went
13、off to get it; she slid into the booth facing the American. And throughout all this, they showed no sign of having noticed that someone was already sitting in the booth. When the British woman lit up a cigarette, the American began ostentatiously looking around for another table to move to. Of cours
14、e there was none; that“s why the British couple had sat in her booth in the first place. The smoker immediately crushed out her cigarette and apologized. This showed that she had noticed that someone else was sitting in the booth, and that she was not inclined to disturb her. To the American, polite
15、ness requires talk between strangers forced to share a booth in a cafeteria, if only a fleeting “Do you mind if I sit down?“ or a conventional “is anyone sitting here?“ even if it“s obvious no one is. The omission of such talk seemed to her like dreadful rudeness. The American couldn“t see that anot
16、her system of politeness was at work. By not acknowledging her presence, the British couple freed her from the obligation to acknowledge theirs. The American expected a show of involvement; they were being polite by not imposing. An American man who had lived for years in Japan explained a similar p
17、oliteness ethic. He lived, as many Japanese do, in extremely close quartersa tiny room separated from neighboring rooms by paper-thin walls. In order to preserve privacy in this most unprivate situation, his Japanese neighbor with the door open, they steadfastly glued their gaze ahead as if they wer
18、e alone in a desert. The American confessed to feeling what I believe most Americans would feel if a next-door neighbor passed within a few feet without acknowledging their presencesnubbed. But he realized that the intention was not rudeness by omitting to show involvement, but politeness by not imp
19、osing. (分数:25.00)_上海市中级口译第一阶段笔试分类模拟题 6答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、TRANSLATION TEST(总题数:4,分数:100.00)1.Help! I Can“t CopeA friend who had lived in New York during the 1970s was recently here for a brief visit. I asked him what, in this ever- changing city. he found to be most startlingly changed. He t
20、hought for a moment before answering. “Probably the visible increase in prostitution,“ he replied. My astonishment at this comment was so palpable that he felt obliged to explain. “Haven“t you noticed,“ he asked with surprise, “all these young women standing furtively in doorways? You never used to
21、see that when I was here.“ I couldn“t resist my laughter. “They“re not prostitutes,“ I clarified. “They“re smokers.“ For indeed they are. Most American office buildings no longer allow smoking on the premises, driving those who can“t resist the urge onto the streets. The sight of them, lounging on “
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