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Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13MarriageRobert Lynd1 “Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend thatdifficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject. Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch’s a dvice to those about to marry -“Don’t.”2 I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted morecruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whethera man’s married or single from the way he’s dressed,” said the comedian.“Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart.If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music-halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law. The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti-marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back roomIn Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a weekIn luxury(I forget the next line).But since I have married Maria,I’ve jumped out of the frying-panInto the blooming fire.3 No difficulties Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to opentheir performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who’re married.Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4 It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives werenot all viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5 I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked onmarriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured.These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or not: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages.The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “He was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ‘A young man not yet; an elder man not at all.’” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” Pepys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6 The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of beauty and more of safety than the single life - it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and withoutthe affection suitable to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.”7 Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have paradise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr. Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man. “Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly sufficient to keep them together."8 When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from onegeneration to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9 The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or notwe make life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to this practice that the ostrich owes his survival.婚姻罗伯特·林德1 伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

新发展研究生英语课文翻译

新发展研究生英语课文翻译

Unit 1 why marriages fail1.这些日子,许多婚姻以离婚结束,我们最神圣的誓言不再与真理联系在一起了。

“幸运地”和“直到死亡我们做了一部分”是表面上看起来已经过时了。

为什么夫妻一起呆在一起变得如此困难?出了什么问题?我们发生了什么事,接近一半的婚姻注定离婚法庭?我们如何创造一个社会,其中42%的孩子将在单亲家庭中长大?如果统计数据只能衡量孤独,遗憾,痛苦,失去自信和对未来的恐惧,数字将超出量化。

2.即使每一个破碎的婚姻是独一无二的,我们仍然可以找到共同的危险,婚姻绝望的共同原因。

每个婚姻都有一个危机点,每个婚姻都测试耐力,亲密和变化的能力。

外部压力,如工作失调,疾病,不育,与孩子的麻烦,照顾老化的父母,和所有其他生命的瘟疫飓风爆炸我们的海岸的方式。

有些婚姻在这些暴风雨中生存下来,其他婚姻却没有。

然而,婚姻失败,不仅仅是因为外部天气,而是因为内部气候变得太热或太冷,太湍急或太吝啬。

3.当我们看看我们如何选择我们的合作伙伴,并在浪漫的开始有什么期望存在,一些灾难的原因变得相当清楚。

我们都选择无意识的准确性,将与我们重新创建我们的第一个家的情感模式的伴侣。

威斯康星大学婚姻治疗师和精神病学荣誉教授Carl A. Whitaker博士解释说:“从幼年时代起,我们每个人都携带婚姻,女性气质,男性气质,母性,父亲和所有其他家庭角色的模式。

“我们每个人都爱上一个有我们父母品质的伴侣,他们将帮助我们重新发现我们过去生活的心理幸福和痛苦。

我们可能认为我们发现了一个不像爸爸的男人,但随后他回到喝酒或毒品,或者一次又一次地失去了他的工作,或者像爸爸那样默默地坐在电视机前面。

一个男人可以选择一个不喜欢孩子的女人,就像他的母亲,或者像他的母亲一样赌了家庭储蓄。

或者他可以选择一个苗条的妻子,似乎不像他的肥胖母亲,但后来发现有其他的瘾,摧毁他们的相互幸福。

4.一个男人和一个女人带来了他们的婚姻床上混合混合的有意识和无意识的记忆他们的父母的生活在一起。

Unit3 marriage

Unit3 marriage


结婚一周年 纸婚 Paper Wedding 二 棉布婚 Calico Wedding 三 皮婚 Muslin Wedding 七 毛婚 Wollen Wedding 十 锡婚 Tin Wedding 十五 水晶婚 Crystal Wedding 二十 瓷婚 China Wedding 二十五 银婚 Silver Wedding
peeve n. sth. that annoys you惹人生气的事物 bug v. (American slang) annoy, irritate激怒 article n. section of a legal agreement that deals with a particular point协议的条款 pet peeve sth that you strongly dislike because it always annoys you格外惹人生气的 事
differentsayings结婚一周年纸婚paperwedding二棉布婚calicowedding三皮婚muslinwedding七毛婚wollenwedding十锡婚tinwedding十五水晶婚crystalwedding二十瓷婚chinawedding二十五银婚silverwedding三十珍珠婚pearlwedding三十五珊瑚婚coralwedding四十红宝石婚rubywedding四十五蓝宝石婚sapphirewedding五十金婚goldenwedding五十五翠玉婚emeraldwedding六十钻石婚diamondweddingusefulphrasesmarriage与婚姻有关的givesb




13. It's very important for husband and wife to show appreciation of each other / to talk and get to know what his or her partner expects. 14. A marriage agreement sounds too practical / lacks romantic flavor / reduces marriage to mere business. 15. I think a written marriage agreement shows how much you and your partner are going to respect each other's needs and expectations / promises a harmonious relationship in married life. 16. Trouble starts in a marriage when one partner keeps complaining about small things, making the other feel resentful.

Marriage Vows结婚誓言

Marriage Vows结婚誓言

Marriage Vows结婚时牧师要说的话Do you ? take your groom to be your husband ,For better or worse,For richer , for poor ,In sickness and in health ,To love and to cherish in heaven and earth.And you promise to faith to each other until death apart you.无论好或坏,富贵贫穷,无论疾病健康,永远相爱互相珍惜,从生存之陆地直到天堂。

并且承诺对彼此忠诚,直到死亡将彼此分离。

I promise.I promise.回答是我承诺。

承诺一个永远,承诺一个幸福。

Now you may exchange your wedding rings and kiss your groom.最后当然是交换戒指,和进行那最神圣,不带色情意味的亲吻。

The only daughter of my widow friend yesterday held the wedding ceremony. She married an English friend and I had the honour to be the translator for the bride and best man (bride's younger brother) towards the bridegroom's house. I had the itch to know more about the wedding vows, though another colleague did the translating for them. So here are some samples of wedding vows for us to think about. Examples of Wedding Vows That Are Timeless ClassicsTraditional wedding vows are still perhaps the most popular choice for those specialwords that will marry you. After all, there's a good reason they became sacrosanct classics. And if you're like me, they've also been engrained as "the wedding words" through years of attending weddings, watching movies and tv, and society at large. So if you're a traditional couple, look at these traditional wedding vows.:Traditional Wedding Vows 1:I, (name), take you (name), to be my (wife/husband), to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; from this day forward until death do us part.Traditional Wedding Vows 2:I, (name), take you, (name), to be my [opt: lawfully wedded] (husband/wife), my constant friend, my faithful partner and my love from this day forward.In the presence of God, our family and friends, I offer you my solemn vow to be your faithful partner in sickness and in health, in good times and in bad, and in joy as well as in sorrow. I promise to love you unconditionally, to support you in your goals, to honor and respect you, to laugh with you and cry with you, and to cherish you for as long as we both shall live.Traditional Wedding Vows 3 (traditional civil ceremony vows):(Name), I take you to be my lawfully wedded (husband/wife). Before these witnesses I vow to love you and care for you as long as we both shall live. I take you with all your faults and your strengths as I offer myself to you with my faults and strengths. I will help you when you need help, and I will turn to you when I need help. I choose you as the person with whom I will spend my life.Traditional Wedding Vows 4:I, (name), take you, (name), to be my beloved (wife/husband), to have and to hold you, to honor you, to treasure you, to be at your side in sorrow and in joy, in the good times, and in the bad, and to love and cherish you always. I promise you this from my heart, for all the days of my life.Add Romance to Your Wedding Ceremony with These Wedding VowsIf you're a soft-hearted dreamer who wants to ensure that your wedding vows are heartfelt and touching, here are some samples of romantic wedding vows to get you started:With Kindness, Unselfishness, and TrustI (name) affirm my love to you, (name) as I invite you to share my life. You are the most beautiful, smart, and generous person I have ever known, and I promise always to respect you and love you. With kindness, unselfishness and trust, I will workby your side to create a wonderful life together. I take you (name) to be my lawful (wife/husband), to have and to hold, from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health for as long as we both shall live.The Best Person I Can Be(Name), from the moment I first saw you, I knew you were the one with whom I wanted to share my life.Your beauty, heart, and mind inspire me to be the best person I can be. I promise to love you for eternity, respecting you, honoring you, being faithful to you, and sharing my life with you. This is my solemn vow.To Grow Along with YouName, today I become your (husband/wife) and you become my (wife/husband). I will strive to give you the best of myself, while accepting you the way you are. I promise to respect you as a whole person with your own interests, desires, and needs, and to realize that those are sometimes different, but no less important than my own.I promise to keep myself open to you, to let you in to my innermost fears and feelings, secrets and dreams. I promise to grow along with you, to be willing to face change as we both change, keeping our relationship alive and exciting. And finally, I promise to love you in good times and in bad, with all I have to give and all that I am, in the only way I know how -- completely and forever.Love You Without Reservation(Name), today I take you for my (wife/husband). I promise to love you without reservation, comfort you in times of distress, encourage you to achieve all of your goals, laugh with you and cry with you, grow with you in mind, and spirit, always be open and honest with you, and cherish you for as long as we both shall live.Best Friend(Name), today I take you to be my (husband/wife). Together we will create a home, becoming a part of one another. I vow to help create a life that we can cherish, inspiring your love for me and mine for you. I vow to be honest, caring and truthful, to love you as you are and not as I want you to be, and to grow old by your side as your love and best friend.Funny and Silly Wedding Vows to Make You and Your Guests LaughThe hardest part of writing silly wedding vows is making your guests chuckle without making the vows trite, or promising things you can't (or won't) deliver. After all, promising to always put the toilet seat down might sound cute in the moment, butdo you really want to have broken your wedding vow that easily? Instead, look for qualities about yourself that are funny or amusing, hobbies, or habits that can be incorporated into your vows.Here are some examples of funny wedding vows:I (Name), take you, (Name) to be my lawfully wedded (husband/wife) and chief tennis doubles partner, for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, in sickness and in health, for when we win and the very very rare occasion when we lose. I promise to love, honor, and cherish you, to return your serves and do my best not to foot fault. This I vow to you.I (name), take you (name), to be my beloved wife. I promise to love you and be your faithful partner, for better for worse, for richer, for poorer, when the Jets are winning, and when they are losing, in sickness, and in health, and in Jets-induced sickness. I will be true and loyal, and cherish you for all the days of our lives.I, (name), take you (name), to be my (wife/husband), to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, for even poorer when I've been shopping a lot, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; from this day forward until death do us part.Wedding Vows Inspired by Dr. SeussIf you're getting married and you want to share your humorous side, you might consider using some funny wedding vows. For example, perhaps you could use the traditional vows, but include a line such as "I promise to always make your "favorite banana milkshake," or "I vow to split the difference on the thermostat," as Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston did when they married. Or, if you really want to make your guests laugh, consider writing a complete set of funny wedding vows, such as these inspired by Dr. Seuss.Marty Blase, the author of these vows, writes: "My fiancee and I agreed a long time ago that we wanted to write our own wedding vows, and as a spur-of-the-moment idea, I suggested the following. To my disappointment, she didn't quite go for it..."Pastor: Will you answer me right nowThese questions, as your wedding vow?Groom: Yes, I will answer right nowYour questions as my wedding vow.Pastor: Will you take her as your wife?Will you love her all your life?Groom: Yes, I take her as my wife,Yes, I'll love her all my life.Pastor: Will you have, and also holdJust as you have at this time told?Groom: Yes, I will have, and I will hold, Just as I have at this time told,Yes, I will love her all my lifeAs I now take her as my wife.Pastor: Will you love through good and bad? Whether you're happy or sad?Groom: Yes, I'll love through good and bad, Whether we're happy or sad,Yes, I will have and I will holdJust as I have already told,Yes, I will love her all my life,Yes, I will take her as my wife!Pastor: Will you love her if you're rich? Or if you're poor, and in a ditch?Groom: Yes, I'll love her if we're rich, And I will love her in a ditch,I'll love her through good times and bad, Whether we are happy or sad,Yes, I will have, and I will hold(I could have sworn this has been told!)I promise to love all my lifeThis woman, as my lawful wife!Pastor: Will you love her when you're fit, And also when you're feeling sick?Groom: Yes, I'll love her when we're fit, And when we're hurt, and when we're sick, And I will love her when we're richAnd I will love her in a ditchAnd I will love through good and bad,And I will love when glad or sad,And I will have, and I will holdTen years from now a thousandfold,Yes, I will love for my whole lifeThis lovely woman as my wife!Pastor: Will you love with all your heart?Will you love till death you part?Groom: Yes, I'll love with all my heartFrom now until death do us part,And I will love her when we're rich,And when we're broke and in a ditch,And when we're fit, and when we're sick, (Oh, CAN'T we get this finished quick?)And I will love through good and bad,And I will love when glad or sad,And I will have, and I will hold,And if I might now be so bold,I'll love her my entire life,Yes, I WILL take her as my wife!Pastor: Then if you'll take her as your wife, And if you'll love her all your life,And if you'll have, and if you'll hold,From now until the stars grow cold,And if you'll love through good and bad,And whether you're happy or sad,And love in sickness, and in health,And when you're poor, and when in wealth,And if you'll love with all your heart,From now until death do you part,Yes, if you'll love her through and through, Please answer with these words:Pastor and Groom: I DO!Pastor: You're married now! So kiss the bride, But please, do keep it dignified.。

(完整版)Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

(完整版)Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13MarriageRobert Lynd1“Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend that difficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject.Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch’s advice to those about to marry -“Don’t.”2I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted more cruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whether a man’s married or single from the way he’s dressed,” said the comedian. “Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart. If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music- halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law.The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti- marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back roomIn Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a weekIn luxury(I forget the next line).But since I have married Maria,I’ve jumped out of the frying-panInto the blooming fire.3No difficulties? Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to open their performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who’re married.Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives were not all viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked on marriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured. These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or no t: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages. The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “H e was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ‘A young man not yet; an elder man not at all.’” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” Pe pys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of be auty and more of safety than the single life -it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and without the affection suitable to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.”7Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have paradise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr.Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man.“Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly sufficient to keep them together."8When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from one generation to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or not we make life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers?I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to thispractice that the ostrich owes his survival.婚姻罗伯特·林德1伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

Marriage

Marriage

Marriage结婚Wedding wows哇,婚礼!How the one-child policy changed Chinese nuptials独生子女政策如何改变了中式婚礼Falling in love陷入爱河OVERSIZE cupids in pink, furry outfits hand out heart-shaped balloons with “I Do” written on them (in English) at a wedding-themed trade fair in Beijing. Vendors offer romantic photo-shoots of couples under water or at a racetrack, personalised wedding cigarettes, and biscuits with names such as “Date & Fate”. An emphasis on love is a new addition to Chinese weddings—and shines a pink-filtered spotlight on social change. 在北京的主题婚礼展上,粉色的超大丘比特身穿毛茸茸的衣服,手持心形气球,气球上写着“I Do”(“我愿意”的英文)。

婚礼代理商们向新人们提供浪漫的水下或赛道婚纱照拍摄,个性化的婚礼香烟,以及刻字饼干,如“Date & Fate (巧遇)”饼干。

把重点放在爱情上是中式婚礼上的一个新现象,闪耀的粉红滤光灯下聚焦的是社会的变革。

For centuries, marriage in China was about ensuring heirs for the groom's family. Ceremonies centred on the groom's kin: couples kowtowed to the man's parents but the woman's relatives were absent. Unusually, both thegroom's and the bride's family exchanged money or goods. The more money changed hands, the more opulent the wedding.几个世纪以来,结婚在中国意味着确保传递新郎家的香火。

英语六级汉译英中式婚礼

英语六级汉译英中式婚礼

英语六级汉译英中式婚礼第一篇:英语六级汉译英中式婚礼婚礼结婚是人生中的一件大事。

传统的中式婚礼古朴而又热闹,隆重、喜庆并且礼节周全,场面的铺陈颇具特色,不过在现代,尤其是在城市里,已经很少见了。

花轿是传统婚礼的核心内容之一。

结婚时,新娘要坐在花轿里从娘家被抬到男方家中。

花轿一般分四人抬,八人抬两种,又有“龙轿”“凤轿”之分。

除去轿夫之外,还有持笙锣、伞、扇等的随行人员,一般的轿队少则十几人,多则几十人,很是壮观。

传统的中式婚礼中,新娘要蒙着红盖头,在伴娘的伴随下,由新郎手持的大红绸牵着,慢慢地登上花轿。

在新娘成花轿去往男方家里的途中,颠花轿是必不可少的热闹场面。

轿夫一起左摇右摆使花轿不稳,新娘坐在里面也是左摇右晃。

有的时候,新郎甚至不得不代替新娘或者和新娘一起向众人抱拳施礼求饶,而这个时候,众人欢笑不止,实际上是为了增添新人成婚之日的喜庆气氛。

中式传统婚礼的最重要的部分便是拜堂成亲。

新人走到天地桌前,上面摆放有装满粮食的斗,斗的四周写上“金玉满斗”四个大字,以红纸封口,斗内四角放若干硬币,以供拜完天地后看热闹的亲朋好友掏出来求取吉利之意。

斗中要插一柏枝,枝上缀有铜钱,这个柏枝便被称作“摇钱树”。

斗旁放一杆秤、一面镜、织布机杼、一灯或一蜡烛。

新郎在右,新娘在左,并肩站在天地桌前,执事人高声喊道:“一拜天地,二拜高堂,夫妻对拜”。

民间的说法认为,男女只有在拜过天地后才能算作是正式夫妻,因此对这个拜堂的仪式非常重视。

还有民间习俗有这样有趣的研究,即如果新郎在结婚的当天因故不能拜天地,就让他的姐妹抱只公鸡来代替。

坐完花轿、拜完天地、接下来新人要入洞房了。

洞房是一直延续下来的叫法,新人入了洞房以后,按照习俗,新郎新娘的同辈亲友聚集在洞房里,对新郎新娘开一些充满暗示的玩笑。

这时即便过头一点,新郎新娘也不会生气,而是想办法巧妙化解,因为亲朋好友闹洞房图的是高兴和热闹。

Wedding Marriage is the most important thing in the life.In China, a traditional wedding is simple and lively,ceremonious,and joyful.There are some unique features in this ceremony,but in modern society,especially in the city,it is hardly seen any more.The bridal sedan is the core of the traditional wedding.In wedding,the bride should sit in the sedan, then be lifted from her mother's home to her husband' home.Generally,there are two kinds of sedan,that is,four-lifter and eight-lifter,also divided into “dragon sedan”and“phoenix sedan”.There are so many suites who hold gongs,umbrellas,fans and so on,besides lifters,In group,there are more than ten people at least,and the occasion is very magnificent.In a traditional weddin,accompanied with a bridesmaid, the bride wearing a red veil and led along by the bridegroom who holds a red silk in his hand,enters the bridal sedan.On the way to the husband's home,lifters jolt the sedan as it is necessary in a joyful wedding.Lifters swing the sedan from left to right,causing the bride to sit unsteadily inside.Sometimes the bridegroom has to substitute for his bride or beg to everyone else,while,all laugh to adding to the jubilance.The wedding ceremony is the most important part of a traditional Chinese wedding.The newlyweds go to the table for heaven and earth where there is a dou(a kind of basket)full of grain.The dou is written with red paper.There are many coins placed in the four corners of the dou to provide the“luck” meaning to the guests.There is a cypress branch,called “ready source of money”,decorated with copper coins.Besides,one steelyard ,a mirror ,a loom,alamp or a candle are also placed near the dou.Afterwards, the groom stands on the left side,the bride right by his side,while the director prompts,“First bow to the heaven and earth;second bow to the parents;third bow to eachother”.According to the folk saying, they will not be the formal couple until bowing to the heaven and earth.As a result,people pay a great attention to this ceremony.An interesting custom is that if the groom cannot come to this ceremony,he should ask his sister to hold a cock instead.After taking the bridal sedan,bowing to the heaven,it's time for the newlyweds to go to the bridal chamber.According to custom,their relatives and friends get together in the bridal chamber to banter the newlyweds.At this time,the newlyweds will never get angry even if the teasing games are a bit outrageous, but will try to skillfully dissolve since the relatives and friends intend to delight them. 第二篇:英语六级汉译英翻译.doc北京计划未来三年投资7600亿元治理污染,从减少pm2.5排放入手。

marriage 大学英语四级 翻译和写作

marriage 大学英语四级  翻译和写作

Marriage: Is it Still a Tradition? 要求: 1.剩男剩女( leftover women and men)越来越 多; 2.传统的成家立业 (marry and settle down)结 婚思想是否会发生变化? 3.未来社会是否会有更多的人选择不结婚, 单身过日子,谈谈你的看法。
翻译
• 裸婚(down-to-earth marriage )是一种新的 结婚方式,指的是一对恋人没有房子、没 有车、不办婚礼、不度蜜月甚至没有婚戒, 只领取结婚证(marriage certificate)的结婚 方式。这种形式的结婚最低成本只有9元钱。 现代年轻人的生活压力较大,而且强调爱 情的独立,必须有房再结婚或者大肆操办 婚事的传统在年轻一代中被削弱。许多人 都相信裸婚是两个人纯粹爱情的见证。
Down-to-earth Marriage
• As a new way of getting married, down-to-earth marriage means that a couple marries each other by only applying for a marriage certificate without an apartment, a car, a wedding ceremony, a honeymoon, or even a wedding ring. This form of marriage can cost as little as only nine yuan. As young people in modern times live under great pressure and place emphasis on the independence of love, the tradition that “an apartment is a must for marriage” and “wedding ceremony should be held on a grand scale” has weakened among the young generation. Many people believe that a down-to-earth marriage is a testament to the pure love between the couple.
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marriage课文翻译marriage课文翻译marriage,意为婚姻,结婚,各位同学,下面是marriage课文翻译,请看:marriage课文翻译marriage课文1 “Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend thatdifficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject. Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch?s advice to those about to marry -“Don?t.”2 I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted morecruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whether a man?s married or single from theway he?s dressed,” said the comedian. “Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart. If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music-halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law. The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti-marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back room In Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a week In luxury(I forget the next line). But since I have married Maria,I?ve jumped out of the frying-pan Into the blooming fire.3 No difficulties? Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to opentheir performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who?re married. Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4 It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives were notall viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5 I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked onmarriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured. These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or not: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages. The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “He was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ?A young man not yet; an elder man not at all.?” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that?s his hell; another is, and that?s his plague.” Pepys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6 The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of beauty and more of safety than the single life - it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and without the affection suitable to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.” 7 Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have paradise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr. Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man. “Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly s ufficient to keep them together.”8 When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from onegeneration to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9 The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or not wemake life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. Isometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers? I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to this practice that the ostrich owes his survival.marriage翻译婚姻罗伯特·林德1伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

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