[外语类试卷]笔译二级实务(综合)模拟试卷3及答案与解析.doc
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1、笔译二级实务(综合)模拟试卷 3及答案与解析 SECTION 1 Compulsory Translation (30 points) 1 Old age is neither inherently miserable nor inherently sublime like every stage of life it has problems, joys, fears and potentials. The process of aging and eventual death must ultimately be accepted as the natural progression of
2、 the life circle, the old completing their prescribed life spans and making way for the young. 2 The womens magazines are about one third dedicated to clothes, one third to mild comments on sex, and the other third to recipes and pictures of handsome salads, desserts and main courses. 3 Undoubtedly
3、the desire for food has been, and still is, one of the main causes of great political events. But man differs from other animals in one very important respect, and that is that he has desires which are, so to speak, infinite, which can never be fully gratified, and which would keep him restless even
4、 in paradise. 4 American individualism, on the face of it an admirable philosophy, wished to manifest itself in independence of the community. You dont share things in common; you have your own things. 5 Of course, America was built on a rejection of the past. Even the basic Christianity which was b
5、rought to the continent in 1620 was of a novel and bizarre kind. And now America, filling in the vacuum left by the liquefied British Empire, has the task of showing the best thing to the rest of the world. 6 At the same time, my generation was discovering that reforming the world is a little like f
6、ighting a military campaign in the Apennines, as soon as you capture one mountain range, another one looms just ahead. 7 The revolutionary state, under whatever political label, has to be run not by violent romantics but by experts in marketing, sanitary engineering, and the management of bureaucrac
7、ies. 8 The trouble with television is that it discourages concentration. Almost anything interesting and rewarding in life requires some constructive, consistently applied effort. The dullest, the least gifted of us can achieve things that seem miraculous to those who never concentrate on anything.
8、But television encourages us to apply no effort. It sells us instant gratification. It diverts us only to divert, to make the time pass without pain. 9 As a very small child I used to imagine that I was, say, Robin Hood, and picture myself as the hero of thrilling adventures, but quite soon my “stor
9、y“ ceased to be narcissistic in a crude way and became more and more a mere description of what I was doing and the things I saw. 10 A newspaper has the right the duty even to assume an attitude, to take a position. But it has an equally sacred right to explain that position in the light of the oppo
10、sing one, to document that position, and to bolster it, not with emotion but with fact. 11 Obesity, a Growing Problem in the US When it comes to food, America is not just the fattest country on earth but probably the most schizophrenic as well home to the Big Mac1 and Weight Watchers, the super mode
11、l and the couch potato. The love-hate relationship with food was examined in the aired documentary “Fat“ , and if there is any comfort for the more than 90 million overweight Americans its that the rest of the world is also getting fatter. “There is an enormous pressure on people to be thin and to b
12、e physically fit but at the same time there is a tremendous pressure and inducement to eat,“ Dr. Kelly Brownell, professor of psychology at Yale University and a participant in the programme, said in an interview. “Youll see a Baskin Robbins next to Weight Watchers. Youll see a Family Circle magazin
13、e with a delicious chocolate on the cover beside a diet article,“ said Brownell. “At the same time as we have record levels of obesity, we have record levels of eating disorders too,“ he said. The desire to eat fatty food came from a primitive survival instinct to store enough energy in good times t
14、o ensure survival when food was scarce. But in a modern urban society, where fast food chains appear on almost every block, the instinct to eat fat has begun to work against us. The documentary claims that nowhere is the exposure to junk food more prevalent than in the United States, where the probl
15、em has been compounded by the increasingly sedentary modern lifestyle. It also says that members of Arizonas Pima Indian tribe are the fattest people in the fattest country on earth. Until recently the tribe lived a simple life, but in 1984 when the tribe won a gaming license it joined the American
16、mainstream. Today the tribe is plagued by obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease. Just 800 kms south in Mexico, another branch of the Pima tribe continues to live a traditional life and eats a traditional diet. These Pimas have none of the problems of their American counterparts,
17、who are on average 27 kgs heavier. Part of the problem, according to Brownell, is the intense advertising of junk food in the United States. The average American child sees thousands of TV commercials each year, most of which advertise fast food, candy and soda. The food environment has become so “t
18、oxic“ according to the documentary, that some US schools even offer fast food such as McDonalds and Burger King in school cafeterias. But junk food is also proliferating overseas, resulting in increasing rates of obesity in such countries as China, where fast food restaurants have recently taken hol
19、d. Compounding the new-found availability of junk food is the changing opinion on what is the ideal body. These days thin is king. Many actors such as Calista Flockhart, the star of the TV show “Ally Mcbeal“, and super models, such as Kate Moss, look anorexic when placed next to someone like Marilyn
20、 Monroe who was the worlds biggest sex symbol in the late 1950s. That unrealistic waif-like ideal has devastating effects on some. Among the more disturbing scenes in the documentary were interviews in an eating disorder clinic in England where many of the patients were skinny girls of 10 or less wh
21、o felt fat. For many the lust to lose weight leads to a see-saw of dieting and bingeing that inevitably ends in tears. “People aspire to an unrealistic ideal and they have to restrict their food intake to an enormous extent to reach that ideal and they just cant maintain it so they give up,“ Brownel
22、l said. While obesity is normally associated with being unfit, like everything, there are exceptions. Triathlete Dave Alexander swims 8 kms, run 48 kms and cycles 320 kms each week. At 1. 7 meters and weighing 113. 4 kgs, Alexander is morbidly obese but nevertheless fit. But Brownell warns viewers n
23、ot to give too much weight to Alexanders case, “The fact is most overweight people are not fit. “ 12 Gender Tax Women expect to pay the same prices for goods and services as men pay, but even in 2004, they dont. Women frequently pay more for products marketed specifically to women, or just because w
24、omen are doing the buying. Its been estimated that this so-called gender tax or gender-based pricing costs Canadian women billions of dollars a year. For example, products scented and packaged specifically for women are often sold in smaller sizes at the same price as comparable products4 aimed at m
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