2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题常考点分享
2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题分享笔记

2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题分享笔记各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科知识部分一、填空(每空0.4分,共12分)(一)1917年1月_________在《新青年》上发表__________,针对旧文学的形式主义等弊端,提出文学改良的“八事”。
(二)鲁迅接受进化论,是因为受了严复所译赫胥黎的___________的影响。
(三)胡适、陈独秀发表文章,提出了文学革命主张之后,积极响应的还有______、______等人。
(四)中国新文学早期,除了文学研究会、创造社之外,重要的还有:A_______,代表作家是________、___________;B_______,代表作家是_________、_________、________。
(五)1928年,创造社、太阳社的__________、___________、________等人对_______等人发动的批判,是新文学阵营左派之间的一场误会。
(六)中华全国文艺界抗敌协会于_______年在_______成立,其会刊是________。
(七)毛泽东主席的《在延安文艺座谈会上的讲话》发表后,解放区文坛出现了一批优秀作品,主要有小说__________、_________等,歌剧__________及长诗__________。
(八)茅盾的三个连续性的中篇《幻灭》、《动摇》、《追求》组成长篇小说__________。
(九)曹禺的_____、_____、_____、_____等优秀剧作,为现代话剧创作开创了一个崭新的局面。
(十)《新儿女英雄传》的作者是_______和_______。
二、选择,把正确答案填入空处(每空0.4分,共6分)(一)鲁迅发表的第一篇白话小说是__________。
A、《怀旧》B、《阿Q正传》C、《药》D、《狂人日记》(二)历史剧《屈原》是__________的代表作。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题,考研出题趋势

架为主,不需要去费力的记忆。
第二阶段:发力(7 月 1 日-10 月 1 日)
发力原因: 育明教育()咨询师认为,这个阶段时间比较充裕, 没有学校里的繁杂事情影响,可以安心的投入复习。抓住这个阶段,就 成功了一半。 重点任务: 以英语、数学这些需要长期练习的科目为主。尤其是英语,在不放松单 词等基本知识积累的同时,“以真题为纲”进行复习,把每一套真题彻 彻底底的分析明白,真真正正把握住出题人每一道题的出题意图。 专业课复习要有计划的进行,这一阶段要开始有计划的进行知识点的记 忆。争取完成第一轮的复习。达到的效果是,对每个知识点做到能够基 本记住。
Techniques from cognitive behavioral therapy can be helpful in changing patterns of thought that have become painful. There are many patients, such as doctors, lawyers—who believed that if they didn’t flog themselves, they wouldn’t be successful. And part of psychologists’ work is to break through that belief by telling the patients that they usually succeed in spite of their Inner Critics, not because of them. (360 words)
重点任务: 1.收集考研信息,包括所报考专业的未来发展趋势、就业难易程度、所 报考专业的难易程度、所报考学校的录取率、资料。毕竟考研所需关注
2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题汇总

2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题汇总各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科写作部分经济全球化(Economic Globalization) 是指世界经济活动超越国界,通过对外贸易、资本流动、技术转移、提供服务、相互依存、相互联系而形成的全球范围的有机经济整体。
(简单的说也就是世界经济日益成为紧密联系的一个整体)。
经济全球化是当代世界经济的重要特征之一,也是世界经济发展的重要趋势。
进口税(import duty / import tax) 亦称进口关税。
指进口国海关对从外国进入本国的货物和物品征收的一种关税。
是关税中最主要的一种。
进口税在外国货物输入关境或国境时征收,或者外国货物从自由港、自由贸易区或保税仓库中提出运往国内市场销售,办理通关手续时征收。
保税区(Bonded Area ;the low-tax; tariff-free zone ;tax-protected zone)亦称保税仓库区。
这是一国海关设置的或经海关批准注册、受海关监督和管理的可以较长时间存储商品的区域。
是经国务院批准设立的、海关实施特殊监管的经济区域,是我国目前开放度和自由度最大的经济区域。
自由贸易协定Free Trade Agreement是两国或多国间具有法律约束力的契约,目的在于促进经济一体化,其目标之一是消除贸易壁垒,允许产品与服务在国家间自由流动.这里所指的贸易壁垒可能是关税,也可能是繁杂的规则等等.海峡两岸经济合作框架协议(英文为Economic Cooperation FrameworkAgreement,简称ECFA)是属于两岸特殊性质的经济合作协议,不违背世界贸易组织(WTO)精神;只规范两岸经济合作事项,如同两岸已签署的海空运等九项协议,不涉及主权或政治问题。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案笔记

2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案笔记各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科知识部分【中国文学】一、填空1.国别史2.建安七子3.西洲曲4.南朝的宋初5.岑参6.温州杂剧7.酸甜乐府8.金瓶梅9.竟陵派10.阅微草堂笔记11,新青年12 故事新编13 戴望舒14 自叙传抒情小说15 倪焕之二、选择填空1、战国策2、九歌3、《文选》4、左思5、刘长卿6、苏轼7、_白朴8、施惠9、童心说10、黄遵宪11 星空12 郁达夫13 《幻灭》14 艾青15 青春之歌三、名词解释1.元曲——元代特有的文学艺术形式,包括元杂剧和散曲。
元杂剧是一种把诗歌、音乐、舞蹈、表演、宾白相结合,演出一个完整故事的戏曲艺术。
为平民百姓喜闻乐见。
散曲是由诗词演变而来、可以配乐演唱的歌曲,起源于民间小曲和少数民族音乐。
形式简单,坦率真挚,清新纯朴,所以会受到人民喜爱。
2.拟话本——短篇白话小说。
是明代文人模拟宋元话本写作的案头文学。
冯梦龙是其代表作家。
他毕生尽力于整理通俗文学,他编选加工的著名小说集“三言”(即《喻世明言》、《警世通言》、《醒世恒言》),对明代市民生活、道德意识都有深刻反映。
其中《杜十娘怒沉百宝箱》篇是最优秀的代表作。
在冯梦龙影响下,凌濛初也编写了有名的“二拍”(即《初刻拍案惊奇》、《二刻拍案惊奇》),收入小说78篇。
对市民意识的社会思潮有了一定的反映。
四、简要评述中唐“新乐府运动”对乐府诗歌的继承与发展。
思想上,汉乐府民歌继承并发扬了《诗经》的现实主义精神,广泛地反映了两汉人民的痛苦生活,反映了两汉的政治面貌和社会面貌,同时还深刻地反映了两汉人民的思想感情。
具体表现为:1对阶级剥削和压迫的反抗。
2对战争和徭役的揭露。
3对封建礼教和封建婚姻制的抗议。
4讽刺统治者卖官的政治丑剧和权门豪家的荒淫生活。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案分享

2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案分享各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科知识部分【中国文学】一、填空1山海经2《离骚》3山水诗4王昌龄5柳永6警世通言7临川四梦8桐城派9孔尚任10吴趼人的《二十年目睹之怪现状》。
11 呐喊和彷徨12 胡适《尝试集》13 爱情三部曲14 老舍15 高晓声二、选择1司马相如2曹丕3《诗品》。
4永明体5《使至塞上》6刘禹锡7柳宗元8红娘9金瓶梅10贾王史薛11 蘩漪12 沈从文13 上海屋檐下14 柳青15 平凡的世界三、名词解释1.江西诗派——以江西人黄庭坚为代表而得名。
主张以丰富的书本知识作为写诗的基础,“无一字无来处”。
积累古人的“佳句善字”,以备检用。
最著名的主张是:"夺胎换骨"、"点铁成金"。
即或师承前人之辞、或师承前人之意的一种方法,目的是要在诗歌创作中“以故为新”。
还要求诗人以“自成一家”为努力目标,在下苦功掌握艺术技巧的基础上摆脱技巧的束缚而达到"无斧凿痕"的最高艺术境界。
成为宋代影响最大的流派。
江西诗派是中国古典诗歌发展过程中的一个重要环节。
其作品是宋诗的重要组成部分,其艺术风格是构成宋诗独特风貌的一个重要因素,它的诗歌理论也在中国文学批评史上占有一定的地位。
2.古文运动——中唐以韩愈、柳宗元为代表的文学家,为了挽救文坛危机,打着复古旗帜,提倡写秦汉那样的散文,反对骈文,并提出文以明道,文以载道,文以明理的主张,认为写文章应“有为而作”起讽喻和褒贬作用,同时也要重视作家的思想修养。
在语言上要“务去陈言”、“文从字顺”。
要把秦汉散文作为典范。
这个古文运动打击了骈文的写作,恢复了古文的创作传统。
四、论述题1、简述《史记》对中国文学的影响。
《史记》是伟大的历史著作,也是传记文学名著。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案

2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题答案各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科知识部分一、1、旧2、金3、《礼记》4、泰5、君为轻6、书7、五服8、乐府9、关羽10、孝文11、王右军12、清明节13、唐14、郦道元15、朱雀16、利玛窦17、非18、乾隆19、190520、恒21、泼水节22.宣23、郭沫若24、优生25、澳门特别行政二、26B27B28C29A30C31A32B33D34D35A36C37C38A39A40D41A42A43B44C45D46A47A48C49D50B三、名词解释1、三纲五常——中国封建社会基本道德规范。
三纲指“君为臣纲、父为子纲、夫为妻纲”,要求为臣、为子、为妻者绝对服从于君、父、夫;为君、为父、为夫者为臣、子、妻做出表率。
五常指“仁、义、礼、智、信”,是用以调整君臣、父子、兄弟、夫妇、朋友关系的行为规范。
三纲五常连用始于宋代朱熹。
2、格律诗——中国古代诗体的一种,也成为今体诗、近体诗。
其名称是相对于没有固定格律的古诗而言的,其最主要的特点是具有严格的格律,所以叫格律诗,格律诗自唐代成熟后,成为中国古典诗歌的主要形式,它有如下特点:首先是全篇的句数与字数固定,其次是押韵方式有一定的要求,再次是其有严格的平仄格律,格律诗所谓的格律也就是指这一点而言的;最后是也有一些修辞要求,如对仗与用典等。
3、《资治通鉴》——中国历史上最杰出的编年体史书,书名为宋神宗所赐,意在为历代统治者提供统治的借鉴。
此书为宋代史学家司马光主持办些,全书记载了从战国至五代间共一千三百六十二年的历史,记载翔实,条理清晰,具有极高的史学价值;同时,其文字简洁传神,叙事生动,也具有相当的文学价值。
4、晋商——凡旧时山西省(古代晋国)籍的从事商业工作、经营商品交易的商人,都可泛称“晋商”。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题,考研参考书,招生简章

北京第二外国语学院《翻译硕士英语》考研样题I.Vocabulary and grammar(30’)Multiple choiceDirections:Beneath each sentence there are four words or phrases marked A,B,C and D.Choose the answer that best completes the sentence.Mark your answers on your answer sheet.1.Thousands of people turned out into the streets to_________against the local authorities’decision to build a highway across the field.A.contradictB.reformC.counterD.protest2.The majority of nurses are women,but in the higher ranks of the medical profession women are in a _________.A.minorityB.scarcityC.rarityD.minimum3.Professor Johnson’s retirement________from next January.A.carries into effectB.takes effectC.has effectD.puts into effect4.The president explained that the purpose of taxation was to________government spending.A.financeB.expandC.enlargeD.budget5.The heat in summer is no less_________here in this mountain region.A.concentratedB.extensiveC.intenseD.intensive6.Taking photographs is strictly________here,as it may damage the precious cave paintings.A.forbiddenB.rejectedC.excludedD.denied7.Mr.Brown’s condition looks very serious and it is doubtful if he will_________.A.pull backB.pull upC.pull throughD.pull out8.Since the early nineties,the trend in most businesses has been toward on-demand,always-available products and services that suit the customer’s_________rather than the company’s.A.benefitB.availabilityC.suitabilityD.convenience9.The priest made the________of the cross when he entered the church.A.markB.signalC.signD.gesture10.This spacious room is________furnished with just a few articles in it.A.lightlyB.sparselyC.hardlyD.rarely11.If you explained the situation to your solicitor,he________able to advise you much better than I can.A.would beB.will have beenC.wasD.were12.With some men dressing down and some other men flaunting their looks,it is really hard to tell they are gay or_________.A.straightB.homosexualC.beautifulD.sad13.His remarks were________annoy everybody at the meeting.A.so as toB.such as toC.such toD.as much as to14.James has just arrived,but I didn’t know he_________until yesterday.A.will comeB.was comingC.had been comingD.came15._________conscious of my moral obligations as a citizen.A.I was and always will beB.I have to be and always will beC.I had been and always will beD.I have been and always will be16.Because fuel supplies are finite and many people are wasteful,we will have to install_________solar heating device in our home.A.some type ofB.some types of aC.some type of aD.some types of17.I went there in1984,and that was the only occasion when I________the journey in exactly two days.A.must takeB.must have madeC.was able to makeD.could make18.I know he failed his last test,but really he’s_________stupid.A.something butB.anything butC.nothing butD.not but19.Do you know Tim’s brother?He is_________than Tim.A.much more sportsmanB.more of a sportsmanC.more of sportsmanD.more a sportsman20.That was not the first time he________us.I think it’s high time we________strong actions against him.A.betrayed…takeB.had betrayed…tookC.has betrayed…tookD.has betrayed…takeII.Reading comprehension(40’)Section1Multiple choice(20’)Directions:In this section there are reading passages followed by multiple-choice questions.Read thepassages and then mark your answers on your answer sheet.Passage AThe Welsh language has always been the ultimate marker of Welsh identity,but a generation ago it looked as if Welsh would go the way of Manx,once widely spoken on the Isle of Man but now extinct. Government financing and central planning,however,have helped reverse the decline of Welsh.Road signs and official public documents are written in both Welsh and English,and schoolchildren are required to learn both languages.Welsh is now one of the most successful of Europe’s regional languages,spoken by more than a half-million of the country’s three million people.The revival of the language,particularly among young people,is part of a resurgence of national identity sweeping through this small,proud st month Wales marked the second anniversary of the opening of the National Assembly,the first parliament to be convened here since1404.The idea behind devolution was to restore the balance within the union of nations making up the United Kingdom.With most of the people and wealth,England has always had bragging rights.The partial transfer of legislative powers from Westminster,implemented by Tony Blair,was designed to give the other members of the club—Scotland,Northern Ireland,and Wales—a bigger say and to counter centrifugal forces that seemed to threaten the very idea of the union.The Welsh showed little enthusiasm for devolution.Whereas the Scots voted overwhelmingly for a parliament,the vote for a Welsh assembly scraped through by less than one percent on a turnout of less than25percent.Its powers were proportionately limited.The Assembly can decide how money from Westminster or the European Union is spent.It cannot,unlike its counterpart in Edinburgh,enact laws.But now that it is here,the Welsh are growing to like their Assembly.Many people would like it to have more powers.Its importance as figurehead will grow with the opening in2003,of a new debating chamber,one of many new buildings that are transforming Cardiff from a decaying seaport into a Baltimore-style waterfront city.Meanwhile a grant of nearly two million dollars from the European Union will tackle poverty.Wales is one of the poorest regions in Western Europe—only Spain,Portugal,and Greece have a lower standard of living.Newspapers and magazines are filled with stories about great Welsh men and women,boosting self-esteem. To familiar faces such as Dylan Thomas and Richard Burton have been added new icons such as Catherine Zeta-Jones,the movie star,and Bryn Terfel,the opera singer.Indigenous foods like salt marsh lamb are in vogue.And Wales now boasts a national airline,Awyr Cymru.Cymru,which means“land of compatriots”, is the Welsh name for Wales.The red dragon,the nation’s symbol since the time of King Arthur,is everywhere—on T-shirts,rugby jerseys and even cell phone covers.“Until very recent times most Welsh people had this feeling of being second-class citizens,”said Dyfan Jones,an18-year-old student.It was a warm summer night,and I was sitting on the grass with a group of young people in Llanelli,an industrial town in the south,outside the rock music venue of the National Eisteddfod,Wales’s annual cultural festival.The disused factory in front of us echoed to the sounds of new Welsh bands.“There was almost a genetic tendency for lack of confidence,”Dyfan continued.Equally comfortable in his Welshness as in his membership in the English-speaking,global youth culture and the new federal Europe,Dyfan,like the rest of his generation,is growing up with a sense of possibility unimaginable ten years ago.“We used to think.We can’t do anything,we’re only Welsh.Now I think that’s changing.”1.According to the passage,devolution was mainly meant toA.maintain the present status among the nations.B.reduce legislative powers of England.C.create a better state of equality among the nations.D.grant more say to all the nations in the union.2.The word“centrifugal”in the second paragraph meansA.separatist.B.conventional.C.feudal.D.political3.Wales is different from Scotland in all the following aspects EXCEPTA.people’s desire for devolution.B.locals’turnout for the voting.C.powers of the legislative body.D.status of the national language.4.Which of the following is NOT cited as an example of the resurgence of Welsh national identity?A.Welsh has witnessed a revival as a national language.B.Poverty-relief funds have come from the European Union.C.A Welsh national airline is currently in operation.D.The national symbol has become a familiar sight.5.According to Dyfan Jones what has changed isA.people’s mentality.B.pop culture.C.town’s appearance.D.possibilities for the people.Passage BThe miserable fate of Enron’s employees will be a landmark in business history,one of those awful events that everyone agrees must never be allowed to happen again.This urge is understandable and noble: thousands have lost virtually all their retirement savings with the demise of Enron stock.But making sure it never happens again may not be possible,because the sudden impoverishment of those Enron workers represents something even larger than it seems.It’s the latest turn in the unwinding of one of the most audacious promises of the20th century.The promise was assured economic security—even comfort—for essentially everyone in the developed world.With the explosion of wealth,that began in the19th century it became possible to think about a possibility no one had dared to dream before.The fear at the center of daily living since caveman days—lack of food,warmth,shelter—would at last lose its power to terrify.That remarkable promise became reality in many ernments created welfare systems for anyone in need and separate programs for the elderly(Social Security in the U.S.).Labour unions promised not only better pay for workers but also pensions for retirees.Giant corporations came into being and offered the possibility—insome cases the promise—of lifetime employment plus guaranteed pensions?The cumulative effect was a fundamental change in how millions of people approached life itself,a reversal of attitude that most rank as one of the largest in human history.For millennia the average person’s stance toward providing for himself had been.Ultimately I’m on my own.Now it became,ultimately I’ll be taken care of.The early hints that this promise might be broken on a large scale came in the1980s.U.S.business had become uncompetitive globally and began restructuring massively,with huge Layoffs.The trend accelerated in the1990s as the bastions of corporate welfare faced reality.IBM ended its no-layoff policy. AT&T fired thousands,many of whom found such a thing simply incomprehensible,and a few of whom killed themselves.The other supposed guarantors of our economic security were also in decline. Labour-union membership and power fell to their lowest levels in decades.President Clinton signed a historic bill scaling back welfare.Americans realized that Social Security won’t provide social security for any of us.A less visible but equally significant trend affected pensions.To make costs easier to control,companies moved away from defined benefit pension plans,which obligate them to pay out specified amounts years in the future,to defined contribution plans,which specify only how much goes into the play today.The most common type of defined-contribution plan is the401(k).the significance of the401(k)is that it puts most of the responsibility for a person’s economic fate back on the employee.Within limits the employee must decide how much goes into the plan each year and how it gets invested—the two factors that will determine how much it’s worth when the employee retires.Which brings us back to Enron?Those billions of dollars in vaporized retirement savings went in employees’401(k)accounts.That is,the employees chose how much money to put into those accounts and then chose how to invest it.Enron matched a certain proportion of each employee’s401(k)contribution with company stock,so everyone was going to end up with some Enron in his or her portfolio;but that could be regarded as a freebie,since nothing compels a company to match employee contributions at all. At least two special features complicate the Enron case.First,some shareholders charge top management with illegally covering up the company’s problems,prompting investors to hang on when they should have sold.Second,Enron’s401(k)accounts were locked while the company changed plan administrators in October,when the stock was falling,so employees could not have closed their accounts if they wanted to. But by far the largest cause of this human tragedy is that thousands of employees were heavily overweighed in Enron stock.Many had placed100%of their401(k)assets in the stock rather than in the 18other investment options they were offered.Of course that wasn’t prudent,but it’s what some of them did.The Enron employees’retirement disaster is part of the larger trend away from guaranteed economic security.That’s why preventing such a thing from ever happening again may be impossible.The huge attitudinal shift to I’ll-be-taken-care-of took at least a generation.The shift back may take just as long.It won’t be complete until a new generation of employees see assured economic comfort as a20th-century quirk,and understand not just intellectually but in their bones that,like most people in most times and places,they’re on their own.6.Why does the author say at the beginning“The miserable fate of Enron’s employees will be a landmark in business history…”?A.Because the company has gone bankrupt.B.Because such events would never happen again.C.Because many Enron workers lost their retirement savings.D.Because it signifies a turning point in economic security.7.According to the passage,the combined efforts by governments,layout unions and big corporations to guarantee economic comfort have led to a significant change inA.people’s outlook on life.B.people’s life styles.C.people’s living standard.D.people’s social values.8.Changes in pension schemes were also part ofA.the corporate lay-offs.B.the government cuts in welfare spending.C.the economic restructuring.D.the warning power of labors unions.9.Thousands of employees chose Enron as their sole investment option mainly becauseA.the401(k)made them responsible for their own future.B.Enron offered to add company stock to their investment.C.their employers intended to cut back on pension spending.D.Enron’s offer was similar to a defined-benefit plan.10.Which is NOT seen as a lesson drawn from the Enron disaster?A.The401(k)assets should be placed in more than one investment option.B.Employees have to take up responsibilities for themselves.C.Such events could happen again as it is not easy to change people’s mind.D.Economic security won’t be taken for granted by future young workers.Section2Answering questions(20’)Directions:Read the following passages and then answer IN COMPLETE SENTENCES the questions which follow each e only information from the passage you have just read and write your answer in the corresponding space in your answer sheet.Questions1~3For40years the sight of thousands of youngsters striding across the open moorland has been as much an annual fixture as spring itself.But the2,400school pupils who join the grueling Dartmoor Ten Tors Challenge next Saturday may be among the last to take part in the May tradition.The trek faces growing criticism from environmentalists who fear that the presence of so many walkers on one weekend threatens the survival of some of Dartmoor’s internationally rare bird species.The Ten Tors Challenge takes place in the middle of the breeding season,when the slightest disturbance can jeopardize birds’chances of reproducing successfully.Experts at the RSPB and the Dartmoor National Park Authority fear that the walkers could frighten birds and even crush eggs.They are now calling for the event to be moved to the autumn,when the breeding season is over and chicks should be well anisers of the event,which is led by about400Territorial Army volunteers,saymoving it would be impractical for several reasons and would mean pupils could not train properly for the 55-mile trek.Dartmoor is home to10rare species of ground-nesting birds,including golden plovers, dunlins and lapwings.In some cases,species are either down to their last two pairs on the moor or are facing a nationwide decline.Emma Parkin,South-west spokeswoman for the PASPB,took part in the challenge as a schoolgirl. She said the society had no objections to the event itself but simply wanted it moved to another time of year.“It is a wonderful activity for the children who take part but,having thousands of people walking past in one weekend when birds are breeding is hardly ideal,”she said.“We would prefer it to take place after the breeding and nesting season is over.There is a risk of destruction and disturbance.If the walkers put a foot in the wrong place they can crush the eggs and if there is sufficient disturbance the birds might abandon the nest.”Helen Booker,an RSPB upland conservation officer,said there was no research into the scale of the damage but there was little doubt the walk was detrimental.“If people are tramping past continually it can harm the chances of successful nesting.There is also the fear of direct trampling of eggs.”A spokesman for the Dartmoor National Park Authority said the breeding season on the moor lasted from early March to mid-July,and the Ten Tors Challenge created the potential for disturbance for March, when participants start training.To move the event to the autumn was difficult because children would be on holiday during the training period.There was a possibility that some schools in the Southwest move to a four-term year in 2004,“but until then any change was unlikely.The authority last surveyed bird life on Dartmoor two year ago and if the next survey showed any further decline,it would increase pressure to move the Challenge,”he said.Major Mike Pether,secretary of the army committee that organises the Challenge,said the event could be moved if there was the popular will.“The Ten Tors has been running for42years and it has always been at this time of the year.It is almost in tablets of stone but that’s not to say we won’t consider moving if there is a consensus in favour.However,although the RSPB would like it moved,75per cent of the people who take part want it to stay as it is,”he said.Major Pether said the trek could not be moved to earlier in the year because it would conflict with the lambing season,most of the children were on holiday in the summer,and the winter weather was too harsh.Datmoor National Park occupies some54sq km of hills topped by granite outcrops known as“Tors”with the highest Tor-capped hill reaching621m.The valleys and dips between the hills are often sites of bogs to snare the unwary hiker.The moor has long been used by the British Army as a training and firing range.The origin of the event stretches back to1959when three Army officers exercising on the moor thought it would provide a challenge for civilians as well as soldiers.In the first year203youngsters took up the challenges.Since then teams,depending on age and ability,face hikes of35,45or55miles between 10nominated Tors over two days.They are expected to carry everything they need to survive.1.What is the Ten Tors Challenge?Give a brief introduction of its location and history.2.Why is it suggested that the event be moved to the autumn or other seasons?3.What are the difficulties if the event is moved to the autumn or other seasons?Questions4~5Mike and Adam Hurewitz grew up together on Long Island,in the suburbs of New York City.They were very close,even for brothers.So when Adam’s liver started failing,Mike offered to give him half of his.The operation saved Adam’s life.But Mike,who went into the hospital in seemingly excellent health,developed a complication—perhaps a blood colt—and died last week.He was57.Mike Hurewitz’s death has prompted a lot of soul searching in the transplant community.Was it a tragic fluke or a sign that transplant surgery has reached some kind of ethical limit?The Mount Sinai Medical Center,the New York City hospital where the complex double operation was performed,has put on hold its adult living donor liver transplant program,pending a review of Hurewitz’s death.Mount Sinai has performed about100such operations in the past three years.A1-in-100risk of dying may not seem like bad odds,but there’s more to this ethical dilemma than a simple ratio.The first and most sacred rule of medicine is to do no harm.“For a normal healthy person a mortality rate1%is hard to justify,”says Dr.John Fung,chief of transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.“If the rate stays at1%,it’s just not going to be accepted.”On the other hand, there’s an acute shortage of traditional donor organs from people who have died in accidents or suffered fatal heart attacks.If family members fully understand the risks and are willing to proceed,is there any reason to stand in their way?Indeed,a recent survey showed that most people will accept a mortality rate for living organ donors as high as20%.The odds,thankfully,aren’t nearly that bad.For kidney donors,for example,the risk ranges from1in2,500to1in4,000for a healthy volunteer.That helps explain why nearly40%of kidney transplants in the e from living donors.The operation to transplant a liver,however,is a lot trickier than one to transplant a kidney.Not only is the liver packed with blood vessels,but it also makes lots of proteins that need to be produced in the right ratios for the body to survive.When organs from the recently deceased are used,the surgeon gets to pick which part of the donated liver looks the best and to take as much of it as needed.Assuming all goes well,a healthy liver can grow back whatever portion of the organ is missing,sometimes within a month.A living-donor transplant works particularly well when an adult donates a modest portion of the liver to a ually only the left lobe of the organ is required,leading to a mortality rate for living-donors in the neighborhood of1in500to1in1,000.But when the recipient is another adult,as much as60%of the donor’s liver has to be removed.“There really is very little margin for error,”says Dr.Fung.By way of analogy,he suggests,think of a tree.“An adult-to-child living-donor transplant is like cutting off a limb. With an adult-to-adult transplant,you’re splitting the trunk in half and trying to keep both halves alive.”Even if a potential donor understand and accepts these risks,that doesn’t necessarily mean the operation should proceed.All sorts of subtle pressures can be brought to bear on such a decision,says Dr. Mark Siegler,director of the MacLean for Clinical Medical Ethics at the University of Chicago.“Sometimes the sicker the patient,the greater the pressure and the more willing the donor will be to accept risks.”If you feel you can’t say no,is your decision truly voluntary?And if not,is it the medical community’s responsibility to save you from your own best intentions?Transplant centers have developed screening programs to ensure that living donors fully understand the nature of their decision.But unexamined,for the most part,is the larger issue of just how much a volunteer should be allowed to sacrifice to save another human being.So far,we seem to be saying some risk is acceptable,although we’re still vaguer about where the cutoff should be.There will always be family members like Mike Hurewitz who are heroically prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice for a loved one.What the medical profession and society must decide is if it’s appropriate to let them do so.4.Describe in your own words the liver transplant between the two brothers Mike and Adam.5.What is the major issue raised in the article?III.Writing(30’)Some people see education simply as going to school or college,or as a means to secure good jobs; other people view education as a lifelong process.In your opinion,how important is education to people in the modern society?Write a composition of about400words on your view of the topic.1.坚定的决心请随时随地问自己:我到底想要什么?是想要,还是一定要?如果是想要,我们可能什么都得不到;如果是一定要,我们一定能够有方法得到。
2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题汇总

2015年北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士考研真题汇总各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语学院翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
汉译英在网上找到了原文林语堂的《人生就像一首诗》我以为,从生物学角度看,人的一生恰如诗歌。
人生自有其韵律和节奏,自有内在的生成与衰亡。
人生始于无邪的童年,经过少年的青涩,带着激情与无知,理想与雄心,笨拙而努力地走向成熟;后来人到壮年,经历渐广,阅人渐多,涉世渐深,收益也渐大;及至中年,人生的紧张得以舒缓,人的性格日渐成熟,如芳馥之果实,如醇美之佳酿,更具容忍之心,处世虽更悲观,但对人生的态度趋于和善;再后来就是人生迟暮,内分泌系统活动减少,若此时吾辈已经悟得老年真谛,并据此安排残年,那生活将和平,宁静,安详而知足;终于,生命之烛摇曳而终熄灭,人开始永恒的长眠,不再醒来。
I think that, from a biological standpoint, human life almost reads like a poem. It has its own rhythm and beat, its internal cycles of growth and decay. It begins with innocent childhood, followed by awkward adolescence trying awkwardly to adapt itself to mature society, with its young passions and follies, its ideals and ambitions; then it reaches a manhood of intense activities, profiting from experience and learning more about society and human nature; at middle age, there is a slight easing of tension, a mellowing of character like the ripening of fruit or the mellowing of good wine, andthe gradual acquiring of a more tolerant, more cynical and at the same time a kindlier view of life; then In the sunset of our life, the endocrine glands decrease their activity, and if we have a true philosophy of old age and have ordered our life pattern according to it, it is for us the age of peace and security and leisure and contentment; finally, life flickers out and one goes into eternal sleep, never to wake up again.人生有童年、少年和老年,谁也不能否认这是一种美好的安排,一天要有清晨、正午和日落,一年要有四季之分,如此才好。
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
2015年北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士考研真题常考点分享
各位考研的同学们,大家好!我是才思的一名学员,现在已经顺利的考上北京第二外国语大学翻译硕士,今天和大家分享一下这个专业的真题,方便大家准备考研,希望给大家一定的帮助。
百科写作部分
亚欧会议Asia Europe Meeting ASEM是亚洲与欧洲之间的政府间论坛。
旨在通过加强亚欧之间的的对话,了解与合作,建立亚欧新型,全面伙伴关系,为亚欧经济和社会发展创造有利条件,维护世界和平与稳定。
通货膨胀(Inflation)指在纸币流通条件下,因货币供给大于货币实际需求,也即现实购买力大于产出供给,导致货币贬值,而引起的一段时间内物价持续而普遍地上涨现象。
其实质是社会总需求大于社会总供给(供远小于求)。
纸币、含金量低的铸币、信用货币,过度发行都会导致通胀。
通货紧缩(deflation) :当市场上流通货币减少,人民的货币所得减少,购买力下降,影响物价之下跌,造成通货紧缩。
长期的货币紧缩会抑制投资与生产,导致失业率升高及经济衰退。
以人为本,是科学发展观的核心。
是中国共产党人坚持全心全意为人民服务的党的根本宗旨的体现。
产能过剩Excess Capacity.:产能是现有生产能力、在建生产能力和拟建生产能力的总和,生产能力的总和大于消费能力的总和,即可称之为产能过剩。
中国书法是一门古老的汉字的书写艺术,从甲骨文、石鼓文、金文(钟鼎文)演变而为大篆、小篆、隶书,至定型于东汉、魏、晋的草书、楷书、行书等,书法
一直散发着艺术的魅力。
中国书法是一种很独特的视觉艺术,汉字是中国书法中的重要因素,因为中国书法是在中国文化里产生、发展起来的,而汉字是中国文化的基本要素之一。
儒家思想也称为儒教或儒学,由孔子创立,最初指的是司仪,后来逐步发展为以尊卑等级的仁为核心的思想体系,是中国影响最大的流派,也是中国古代的主流意识。
儒家学派对中国,东亚乃至全世界都产生过深远的影响。
儒家基本上坚持“亲亲”、“尊尊”的立法原则,维护“礼治”,提倡“德治”,重视“人治”。
儒家思想对封建社会的影响很大,被封建统治者长期奉为正统思想。
货币政策Monetary Policy是指政府或中央银行为影响经济活动所采取的措施,尤指控制货币供给以及调控利率的各项措施。
用以达到特定或维持政策目标——比如,抑制通胀、实现完全就业或经济增长。
浮动汇率Floating Exchange Rates是根据市场供求关系而自由涨跌,货币当局不进行干涉的汇率。
试分为两个板块。
第一个是百科常识。
50分。
第二板块是作文。
小作文和大作文。
分别是40分和60分。
百科常识一共出了25个选择题。
有的是四选二。
其中有好几道题目是政治类的。
以下是我记得住的一些题目,顺序不分先后哈。
1.主观唯心主义是什么。
四选二
2.人的意识是什么。
四选二
3.大脑是什么。
四选二
3.马克思的两个理论成果。
四选二
4.南北回归线问题。
选项有寒带和温带分界线。
热带和温带分界线。
中纬和高纬分界线。
太阳直射的最高维度。
四选二
5.信息是什么。
四选二
6.西方经济学问题。
什么平均利润率和边际利润率。
四选一
7.京剧四小花旦。
四选二
8.1958-2009年非常出名的歌手在猫王和杰克逊里面选。
四选二
9.日本前首相。
博鳌位于哪个省。
这是一个题目中出现两个问题。
也是四选二的意思
10.藏书阁。
是明清哪个皇帝。
然后是哪四大藏书阁
11.茶叶发酵问题。
青茶不发酵。
然后问题是哪两种茶叶是轻发酵。
选项有白茶,黄茶,红茶,黑茶。
12.1979年中美建交。
当时中国的领导人是哪位。
美国的领导人是哪位。
四选二。
13.“修合人不知,-……天知”。
句子记不大清楚了。
通过句子猜测古代的一种之职业。
选项有教师媒婆郎中商贾四选一
14.在苏联时期,担任过共产党总书记的是谁。
然后还担任了啥职位。
四选二
15.四大菜系是哪四个。
四大阁楼。
四选二
16.是关于非常出名的收藏的三个书贴一个是兰亭集序。
还有一个什么雪的。
然后选择第三个是哪个书贴。
是谁写的。
四选二
17.2011年。
神州几号和天宫几号相接。
四选二
18.中国最古老的什么什么全木头的建筑。
是在哪个省。
建筑名称是什么。
四选二
差不多就这些了。
作文:
小作文:
某高校举办体育运动大会。
请你作为运动员的代表上台演讲。
写一篇讲话稿。
450字以上。
大作文:
有人说。
汉语富有人文性,灵活……很美。
有人说。
语言都是用来交流的,不存在美不美。
以“‘汉语美’问题之我见”为题目,写一篇议论文。
800字以上。
/people/123756541/notes
/blog/caisijiaoyuxiaowei?act=dashboardclick_20130514_04 /f?ie=utf-8&kw=%E6%89%8D%E6%80%9D%E6%95%99%E
8%82%B2
/s/articlelist_2964380531_0_1.html。