人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦

上传人:飞****9 文档编号:132241514 上传时间:2020-05-13 格式:DOC 页数:29 大小:123KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦_第1页
第1页 / 共29页
人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦_第2页
第2页 / 共29页
人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦_第3页
第3页 / 共29页
人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦_第4页
第4页 / 共29页
人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦_第5页
第5页 / 共29页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《人事部二级笔译真题 2004年5月至2010年11月部分真题集锦(29页珍藏版)》请在金锄头文库上搜索。

1、2004年5月人事部英语二级笔译实务真题 Section 1: English-Chinese Translation (英译汉) (60 points) This section consists of two parts: Part A “Compulsory Translation” and Part B “Optional Translations” which comprises “Topic 1” and “Topic 2”. Translate the passage in Part A and your choice from passages in Part B into C

2、hinese. Write “Compulsory Translation” above your translation of Part A and write “Topic 1” or “Topic 2” above your translation of the passage from Part B. The time for this section is 100 minutes. Part ACompulsory Translation (必译题)(30 points) The first outline of The Ascent of Man was written in Ju

3、ly 1969 and the last foot of film was shot in December 1972. An undertaking as large as this, though wonderfully exhilarating, is not entered lightly. It demands an unflagging intellectual and physical vigour, a total immersion, which I had to be sure that I could sustain with pleasure; for instance

4、, I had to put off researches that I had already begun; and I ought to explain what moved me to do so. There has been a deep change in the temper of science in the last 20 years: the focus of attention has shifted from the physical to the life sciences. As a result, science is drawn more and more to

5、 the study of individuality. But the interested spectator is hardly aware yet how far-reaching the effect is in changing the image of man that science moulds. As a mathematician trained in physics, I too would have been unaware, had not a series of lucky chances taken me into the life sciences in mi

6、ddle age. I owe a debt for the good fortune that carried me into two seminal fields of science in one lifetime; and though I do not know to whom the debt is due, I conceived The Ascent of Man in gratitude to repay it. The invitation to me from the British Broadcasting Corporation was to present the

7、development of science in a series of television programmes to match those of Lord Clark on Civilisation. Television is an admirable medium for exposition in several ways: powerful and immediate to the eye, able to take the spectator bodily into the places and processes that are described, and conve

8、rsational enough to make him conscious that what he witnesses are not events but the actions of people. The last of these merits is to my mind the most cogent, and it weighed most with me in agreeing to cast a personal biography of ideas in the form of television essays. The idiosyncratic models. Th

9、erefore the underlying concepts that unlock nature must be shown to arise early and in the simplest cultures of man from his basic and specific faculties. And the development of science which joins them in more and more complex conjunctions must be seen to be equally human: discoveries are made by m

10、en, not merely by minds, so that they are alive and charged with individuality. If television is not used to make these thoughts concrete, it is wasted. Part BOptional Translations(二选一题)(30 points) Topic 1 (选题一) Its not that we are afraid of seeing him stumble, of scribbling a mustache over his care

11、er. Sure, the nice part of us wants Mike to know we appreciate him, that he still reigns, at least in our memory. The truth, though, is that we dont want him to come back because even for Michael Jordan, this would be an act of hubris so monumental as to make his trademark confidence twist into conc

12、eit. We dont want him back on the court because no one likes a show-off. The stumbling? That will be fun. But we are nice people, we Americans, with 225 years of optimism at our backs. Days ago when M.J. said he had made a decision about returning to the NBA in September, we got excited. He had said

13、 the day before, “I look forward to playing, and hopefully I can get to that point where I can make that decision. Its O.K., to have some doubt, and its O.K. to have some nervousness.” A Time/CNN poll last week has Americans, 2 to 1, saying they would like him on the court ASAP. And only 21 percent

14、thought that if he came back and just completely bombed, it would damage his legend. In fact only 28 percent think athletes should retire at their peak. Sources close to him tell Time that when Jordan first talked about a comeback with the Washington Wizards, the team Jordan co-owns and would play f

15、or, some of his trusted advisers privately tried to discourage him. “But they say if they try to stop him, it will only firm up his resolve,” says an NBA source. The problem with Jordans return is not only that he cant possibly live up to the storybook ending he gave up in 1998 earning his sixth rin

16、g with a last-second championship-winning shot. The problem is that the motives for coming back needing the attention, needing to play even when his 38-year-old body does not violate the very myth of Jordan, the myth of absolute control. Babe Ruth, the 20th centurys first star, was a gust of fat bravado and drunken talent, while Jordan ended the century by proving the elegance of resolve; Babes pointing to the bleachers replaced by the charm of a backped

展开阅读全文
相关资源
正为您匹配相似的精品文档
相关搜索

最新文档


当前位置:首页 > 商业/管理/HR > 经营企划

电脑版 |金锄头文库版权所有
经营许可证:蜀ICP备13022795号 | 川公网安备 51140202000112号