[外语类试卷]口译二级实务模拟试卷7及答案与解析.doc
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1、口译二级实务模拟试卷 7及答案与解析 一、 PART 1 English-Chinese Translation (50 points, 30 minutes) Interpret the following passages from English into Chinese. Start interpreting at the signal and stop it at the signal. You may take notes while you are listening. You will hear the passages only ONCE. Now lets begin. 1
2、 I am delighted to be with you. I first visited China 22 years ago, but this is my first visit to your university, in a city whose students have helped shape the development of modem China. So I am privileged to have the opportunity to share ideas about U. S. -China relations in the modem era of glo
3、balization with people who will, I expect, help write Chinese historythrough deeds and wordsin the 21 st century. / It was the students of Beijing who in May 1919 protested the Treaty of Versailles failure to expel Japanese occupiers from China. In that action, the source of the May 4 Movement, Beij
4、ings students not only made a bold statement about Chinas freedom from foreign occupation and right to self-determination. They also ushered in the era of modem China, taking a decisive step toward Chinas emergence from imperial rule and stagnation. I think it is useful to begin our exchanges about
5、the future from the vantage point of what happened almost a century ago in this historic city. / Chinese are tightly proud of the history of the worlds oldest continuous civilization, and look to it for lessons. America is a young nation by comparison, but suggestion that we live exclusively in the
6、present, unshaped by history, is a misleading caricature. So I would like to share with you my perceptions about what this last century has meant to our two countries, how we have perceived each other, and where we are going. Many people talk about this new millennium as an unprecedented age of glob
7、alization. Extraordinary it is, but unprecedented it is not. / In 1902, the automobile was just coming into use in the United States. Mans first airplane flight occurred 99 years ago, on a beach in North Carolina. The wireless radio followed in a few years, transforming societiesmuch like the Intern
8、et is doing today. The telephone enabled people to converse across mountains, rivers, and indeed around the world. The United States was transformed by this earlier era of globalization in the most fundamental waythe face of its population. In each year of the first decade of the last century, new i
9、mmigrants to America numbered about one percent of the existing population. / A country that had been largely composed of people of English, German, Irish, and Africa descent found itself the chosen destination of millions of immigrants from different parts of the planetPoles, Russians, Italians, Ch
10、inese, Japanese, and Jews, among others. Their contributions to American economic, social, scientific, intellectual, and political life were enormous. We learned that opennessto people, goods, capital, and of course ideasis our greatest strength as a country and society. Although change and adaptati
11、on and intrusions from outside can be frightening, and pose difficulties of adjustment, openness spurs dynamism, flexibility, competition, liberty, and the individual pursuits of happiness. / 2 My wife Nane and I are both extremely happy to be with you today. I feel truly proud to belong to this ext
12、raordinary class of 2004, and I am pleased to see that so many parents and family members were here today. The day belongs to them, too. Without their constant support, understanding and sacrifice, none of us could have achieved what we have. For me, to receive a degree from Harvard is a very great
13、honor indeed. There are few countries in the world whose leaders in public life, business, science and the humanities have not had some association with Harvardand no country that has not benefited from Harvards outstanding contributions to human knowledge. / You have invited me, I know, not as an i
14、ndividual, but as Secretary-General of the United Nations. You are saying that the United Nations matters, and that you want to hear what we have to say. Are you fight in believing that the UN matters? I think you are, because the UN offers the best hope of a stable world and a broadly equitable wor
15、ld order, based on generally accepted rules. That statement has been much questioned in the past year. But recent events have reaffirmed, and even strengthened, its validity. A rule-based system is in the interest of all countriesespecially today. Globalization has shrunk the world. The very opennes
16、s, which is such an important feature of todays most successful societies, makes deadly weapons relatively easy to obtain, and terrorists relatively difficult to restrain. / Today, the strong feel almost as vulnerable to the weak as the weak feel vulnerable to the strong. So it is in the interest of
17、 every country to have international rules and to abide by them. And such a system can only work if, in devising and applying the rules, the legitimate interests of all countries are accommodated, and decisions are reached collectively. That is the essence of multilateralism, and the founding princi
18、ple of the United Nations. All great American leaders have understood this. That is one of the things that make this country such a unique world power. America feels the need to frame its policies, and exercise its leadership, not just in the light of its own particular interests, but also with an e
19、ye to international interests, and universal principles. / Among the finest examples of this was the plan for reconstructing Europe after World War , which General Marshall announced here at Harvard in 1947. That was one part of a larger-scale and truly statesmanlike effort, in which Americans joine
20、d with others to build a new international systema system which worked, by and large, and which survives, in its essentials, nearly 60 years later. During those 60 years, the United States and its partners developed the United Nations, built an open world economy, promoted human rights and decoloniz
21、ation, and supported the transformation of Europe into a democratic, cooperative community of states, such that war between them has become unthinkable. / 二、 PART 2 Chinese-English Translation (50 points, 30 minutes) Interpret the following passages from Chinese into English. Start interpreting at t
22、he signal and stop it at the signal. You may take notes while you are listening. You will hear the passages only ONCE. Now lets begin. 3 在冷战结束后的新形势下,两国要不要及如何发展双边关系,是中美两国面临的重大课题。 “永久正常贸易关系 ”的通过表明,在美国,支持发展中美关系的力量占了上风,美国政府、国会、工商企业界和公众的主流都支持以建设性的态度与中国打交道。 其次,中美关系的内涵得到了丰富。经贸关系是两国总体关系的组成部分,中美互为重要贸易伙伴,美国还是
23、中国的主要外资来源国,没有稳定、良好的经贸合作关系,政治关系就会空心化,就会缺乏前进的动力,失去公众的参与热情。良好 的经贸合作关系可以对两国政治关系产生促进作用,特别是在政治关系出现波动时可发挥减震作用。 第三,增进了两国的互信和合作气氛。美国几乎给予世界上所有国家正常贸易关系的待遇,惟独将中国这样一个大国排除在外。这本身就是一种歧视,一种不信任。不解决这个问题,中国人民就无法理解中美关系的必要性,就会怀疑美国的合作诚意。没有人民的支持和参与,国家关系就难以发展。同时,建立正常贸易关系后,随着商品和人员往来的增加,投资和管理经验的引进,两国间的了解无疑会加深,误解也会减少。 第四,向中国在亚
24、太地区的邻国发 出积极的信号。中国是亚太大国,美国也自称是亚太国家,在地区有重要的影响力。中美友好,则亚太国家获益;中美敌对,则亚太国家遭殃。中美建立正常贸易关系,就是向亚太国家表明,两个大国愿意友好相处,有通过谈判解决分歧的意愿和能力。这对维护地区稳定,促进经济繁荣将产生长远影响。 4 文山壮族苗族自治州位于云南省东南部,东与广西相连,南与越南接壤,边境线长达 438公里,总面积 3万多平方公里,和海南省差不多。文山州有悠久的历史,境内发现过古人类牙齿化石,说明远古时期就有人类在此生息、劳动。 文山州物产 丰富,矿业开发前景良好,土特产品久负盛名,三七种植面积和产量均占全国 85%以上。文山
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