2012年11月11日二级笔译实务真题-已审核

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1、2012 年年 11 月月 11 日二级笔译实务真题出处日二级笔译实务真题出处passage one 和 passage two 都出自 newyork time. 特殊时期,这个网站打不开,我找到了转载在其它网站的真题出处。passage onehttp:/www.post- . so-they-say-325359/This article originally appeared in The New York Times.First Published November 25, 2011 5:54 pm Where Shakespeare Slept, or So They SayTuc

2、ked away in this small village in Buckinghamshire County is the former Elizabethan coaching inn where William Shakespeare is said to have penned part of “A Midsummer Nights Dream.“Dating from 1534, the inn, now called Shakespeare House, is thought to have been built as a Tudor hunting lodge. Later i

3、t became a stop for travelers between London and Stratford-upon-Avon, where Shakespeare was born and buried.It was “Brief Lives,“ a 17th-century collection of biographies by John Aubrey, that linked Shakespeare to the inn, saying that he had stayed there and drawn inspiration for the comedy while in

4、 the village.One of the current owners, Nick Underwood, said the local lore goes even further: “It is also said he appears at the oriel window on the top floor of the house on April 23 every year - the date he is said to have been born and to have died.“In later years, the house later became a farmh

5、ouse, with 150 acres of land, but, over time, pieces were sold off,“ Mr. Underwood said. “In the 20th century, it was owned by two American families.“ Now, he and his co-owner, Roy Elsbury, have put the seven-bedroom property on the market at 1.375 million, or $2.13 million.Despite its varied uses a

6、nd renovations over the years, the 4,250-square-foot, or 395-square-meter, inn has retained so much of its original character that the organization English Heritage lists it as a Grade II* property, indicating that it is particularly important and of “more than special interest.“ Only 27 percent of

7、the 1,600 buildings on the organizations register have this designation.We knew of the house before we bought it and were very excited when it came up for sale. It is so unusual to find an Elizabethan property of this size, in this area, and when we saw it, we absolutely fell in love with it,“ Mr. U

8、nderwood said. “We have taken great pleasure in working on it and living here. This house is all about the history.“In addition to being the owners home, the property currently is run as a luxury guest house, with rooms rented for 99 to 250 a night.“Shakespeare House is a wonderful example of Elizab

9、ethan architecture,“ said Dean Heaviside, the national sales director of Fine real estate agency, which is representing the owners. “It has been beautifully restored and offers a unique lifestyle, which brings a taste of the past together with modern-day comfort. It is rare to find a home like this

10、on the market.“passage twoNew York Times 打不开,其它转载网站http:/.au/news/cl . /1199554651461.htmlIn Greenland, Ice and Instabilityby Andrew C. Revkin, excerpt from The New York Times January 8, 2008The ancient frozen dome cloaking Greenland is so vast that pilots have crashed into what they thought was a c

11、loud bank spanning the horizon. Flying over it, you can scarcely imagine that it could erode fast enough to dangerously raise sea levels any time soon.Along the flanks in spring and summer, however, the picture is very different. For an increasing number of warm years, a network of blue lakes and ri

12、vulets of melt-water has been spreading ever higher on the icecap.The melting surface darkens, absorbing up to four times as much energy from the sun as snow, which reflects sunlight. Natural drainpipes called moulins carry water from the surface into the depths, in some places reaching bedrock.The

13、process slightly, but measurably, lubricates and accelerates the grinding passage of ice towards the sea.Most important, many glaciologists say, is the break-up of huge semi-submerged clots of ice where some large Greenland glaciers, particularly along the west coast, squeeze through fiords as they

14、meet the warming ocean. As these passages have cleared, this has sharply accelerated the flow of many of these creeping, corrugated and frozen rivers.Some glaciologists fear that the rise in seas in a warming world could be much greater than the upper estimate of about 60 centimetres this century ma

15、de by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change last year. (Seas rose less than 30 centimetres last century.)The panels assessment did not include factors known to contribute to ice flows but not understood well enough to estimate with confidence. SCIENTIFIC scramble is under way to clarify whet

16、her the erosion of the worlds most vulnerable ice sheets, in Greenland and west Antarctica, can continue to accelerate. The effort involves field and satellite analyses and sifting for clues from past warm periods, Things are definitely far more serious than anyone would have thought five years ago汉译英第一篇节选自 http:/ http:/ww

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