07年春季高级口译考试真题试卷
07年4月自考英语翻译试题及答案

2007年4月高等教育自学考试全国统一命题考试英语翻译试卷Ⅰ.Multiple Choice Questions (30 points, 2 points for each)A.Directions: This part consists of ten sentences, each followed by four different versions marked A, B, C and D.Choose the one that is the closest equivalent of the original in terms of meaning and expressiveness.1.I always found myself a dread of west and a love of east in Eden.A.我总是在自己身上找到对伊甸之西的畏惧和对伊甸之东的喜爱。
B.我总是在我内心深处找到对伊甸之西的畏惧和对伊甸之东的喜爱。
C.我发现自己身上一直有对伊甸之西的畏惧,对伊甸之东的喜爱。
D.我发现自己一直对伊甸之西怀有畏惧,而对伊甸之东怀有喜爱。
2.No man is so foolish but he may give another good counsel sometimes.A.没有人如此愚笨,他有时也能给别人提出好的忠告。
B.没有人愚笨到偶尔也给别人提出好的忠告。
C.人再愚笨,有时也能给别人提出好的忠告。
D.偶尔愚笨的人也能给别人提出好的忠告。
3.A pretext was the last thing that Hastings was likely to want.A.最后,哈丁斯好像需要一个借口。
B.哈丁斯可能不需要任何借口。
C.最后,哈丁斯可能想要的那个东西就是借口。
D.借口好像是哈丁斯想要的最后的东西。
4.A powerful indictment of America’s disregard of ecology, Silent Spring was aimed chiefly at the wholesale use of chemical pesticide.especially DDT.A.有力地控诉了美国对生态的忽视,《沉默的春天》主要是针对大规模使用农药,特别是滴滴涕。
[商务英语]2007年11月商务英语BEC考试高级口试真题
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Speaking Test Part II 1. Customer Relations: the importance of making customers feel valued2. Company growth: the importance to a company of controlling expansion3. Marketing: how to ensure that agents maintain a high level of effectiveness when representing a company4. Time Management: the importance of planning work time effectively5. Project Development: how to ensure inter-departmental co-operation on new projects6. Purchasing: how to evaluate and select new products7. Personnel Management: the importance to a company of having well motivated staff8. Strategic Planning: how to decide whether to purchase or rent company premises9. Sales: how to ensure that price levels for new products are set appropriately10. Communication Skills: the importance of foreign language training for selected employees11. Advertising: how to select a suitable agency to handle a company’s advertising12. Finance: how to decide whether to float a company on the stock-market13. Marketing: the importance to a company of offering its products on the world-wide web14. Staff Training: how to evaluate the effectiveness of company training programmes15. Company Growth: how to decide when it is the right time for a business to expand16. Public Relations: the importance to a company of sponsoring well-known personalities from the arts and popular culture17. Recruitment: how to ensure that the best candidate for a post is selected18. Information Management: how to analyse and make effective use of information19. Sales: the importance of brand image in ensuring that products or services sell well20. Technology: the importance to a company of keeping up-to-date with internet developments21. Quality Control: how to ensure that a company consistently maintains quality control standards22. Product Promotion: how to make effective use of the media when promotinga new product or service23. Product Management: the importance of teamwork for the effective management of projects24. Health and Safety: how to develop a responsible attitude among staff to the health and safety requirements of accompany25. Technology: the importance of computer skills for the workplace of the future26. Communications: how to ensure that e-mail is used appropriately by staff for internal and external communications27. Staff Development: how to administer a staff budget effectively28. Market Research: the importance of finding out about customers’ habits and attitudes29. Financial Management: how to identify ways of reducing costs in a company30. Communication: how to achieve an effective working relationship between different departments within a company31. Communication skills: the importance of understanding cultural differences when working in an international environment32. Personnel Management: the importance of providing employees with clear job deions33. Company Growth: how to ensure that company growth proceeds at the optimum rate34. Time Management: how to manage a heavy workload effectively35. Health and Safety: the importance to a company of having a Health and Safety policy36. Human Resources: how to ensure that staff at all levels receive appropriate feedback on individual performanceSamples(部分口语试题参考答案)1、Customer Relations: how to maintain customer interest in a company’s productsAs is know to all, it is very important for a company to maintaincustomer interest in their products. I think a company should try everypossible way to retain its current customers.First, it should always make sure that it provides its customerswith quality goods and after-sales service. Second, it should layenough emphasis on the feedback from its current customers and takeprompt action to take care of their needs and demands. Third, ifpossible it may provide some incentives to its old customers. Forexample, it can grant a certain discount to them if their purchasesreach a certain amount. Apart from all these, a company should designstrategies to attract new customers and create transactions with them,to expand their customer base, so to speak. These strategies includeproduct diversification and upgrading.All in all, a company should try its utmost to keep its currentcustomers satisfied with its products and services, and at the sametime it should stay ahead of the market through product and pricingstrategies.2、How to fill a key vacancyIn order to fill a key vacancy, a company will usually follow the same standard procedure.It will begin by producing an accurate job deion of what it wouldlike the successful candidate to do. From this, it can then produce aprofile of this ideal candidate, which is a list of skills, experience,attributes and so on.Having produced this profile, the company must then decide on thebest recruitment method to capture a candidate with this profile. Thismight be an internal advertisement or an external advertisement in anewspaper, on the Internet say, even an agency or perhaps a headhunter.Having decided on the best recruitment method, the advertisementsare then placedor the headhunter contacted and a list of candidateswill be then drawn up to be put through the company’s recruitmentprocesses. This might be interviews, psychometric tests or evenhand-writing analysis. This will then produce the ideal candidate forthe company.The company will then have to negotiate terms with this candidateand, hopefully, this will result in terms which are both affordable forthe company and attractive enough to get the candidate they want.Background Information3、Career Planning: how to assess the career opportunities provided by different types of companiesCareer PlanningEven after a job is offered and accepted, career decisions must bemade. On-the-job experience may affect the desired path. Aspiring toachieve a position above the present position is natural. The plannedcareer path to that position may involve either a series of promotionswithin the firm or switching to a different firm. While planning acareer path is a useful motivator, the plans should be achievable. Ifeveryone planned to be president of a company, most plans would not beachieved. This can cause frustration. A preferable career path wouldinclude short-term goals, since some ultimate goals may take twentyyears or longer. The use of short-term goals can reinforce confidenceas goals are achieved.Career Development: the importance of acquiring a range of skills throughout your careerIt is important a person to have a range of skills in the courseof his career development. When he has a range of skills, he isobviously more competitive than those who don’t and therefore has morechances of promotion. And it will be easier for him to find a joboutside his company if he is not satisfied with his present job. Inaddition, a person with a range of skills is more likely to work hisway up to the top of the corporate ladder.4、Human Resources: how to provide effective support for new members of staffTraining: The importance of a continuous programme of staff training within a companyStaff Management: how to achieve and maintain high motivation among a workforce Motivating Employees: Employees tend to be more satisfied withtheir jobs if they are provided (1) compensation that is aligned withtheir performance, (2) job security, (3) a flexible work schedule, and(4) employee involvement programs. Firms should offer job security,compensation that is tied to employee performance, more flexible workschedules, and more employee involvement programs. To the extent thatjob satisfaction can motivate employees to improve their performance,firms may be able to a higher production level by providing greater jobsatisfaction.5、Marketing ResearchManagers cannot always wait for information to arrive in bits andpieces from the marketing intelligence system. They often requireformal studies of specific situations. For example, Toshiba wants toknow how many and what kinds of people or companies will buy its newsuperfast laptop computer. Or Barat College in Lake Forest,Illinois,needs to know what percentage of its target market has heard of Barat,how they heard, what they know, and how they feel about Barat. In suchsituations, the marketing intelligence system will not provide thedetailed information needed. Managers will need marketing research.We define marketing research as the systematic design, collection,analysis, and reporting of data and findings relevant to a specificmarketing situation facing an organization. Every marketer needsresearch. Marketing researchers engage in a wide variety of activities,ranging from market potential and market share studies, to assessmentsof customer satisfaction and purchase behavior, to studies of pricing,distribution, and promotion activities.A company can conduct marketing research in its own researchdepartment or have some or all of it done outside. Although most largecompanies have their own marketing research departments, they often useoutside firms to do special research tasks or studies. A company withno research department has to buy the services of research firms.6、Marketing: the importance of packaging products appropriatelyIn recent times, numerous factors have made packaging an importantmarketing tool. Increased competition and clutter on retail storeshelves means that packages now must perform many sales tasks-fromattracting attention, to describing the product, to making the panies are realizing the power of good packaging to create instantconsumer recognition of the company or brand. For example, in anaverage supermarket, which stocks 15,000 to 17,000 items, the typicalshopper passes by some 300 items per minute, and 53 percent of allpurchases are made on impulse. In this highly competitive environment,the package may be the seller’s last chance to influence buyers. Itbecomes a "five-second commercial." The Campbell Soup Company estimatesthat the average shopper sees its familiar red and white can 76 times ayear, creating the equivalent of $26 million worth of advertising.7、Market Research: the importance of doing market research before launchinga new productSales: How to sell a product effectively in international marketsProduct Promotion: the importance of selecting appropriate members of staff to attend exhibitionsCommunication: the importance in business of maintaining contact with clients Public Relations: the importance of adequate supervision and training of staff who deal with the public8、Management: How to run a meeting successfullyTransport Management: the importance to a business of an efficient public transport systemAny distribution of products from producers to wholesalers or fromwholesalers to retailers requires transportation. The cost oftransporting some products can exceed the cost of producing them. Anefficient form of transportation can result in higher costs and lowerprofits for the firm. For each form of transportation, firms shouldestimate timing, cost, and availability. This assessment allows thefirm to choose an optimal method of transportation. The most commonforms of transportationused to distribute products are truck, rail,air, water, pipeline.Transport Management: the importance of using environmentally friendly means of transport whenever possible9、Health & SafetyEmployee Safety: Firms ensure that the workplace is safe foremployees by closely monitoring the production process. Some obvioussafety precautions are to check machinery and equipment for properworking conditions, require safety glasses or any other equipment thatone can prevent injury, and emphasize any special safety precautions intraining seminars.Firms that create a safe working environment prevent injuries andimprove the morale of their employees. Many firms, such as AlliedSignal, now identify workplace safety as one of their main goals. LeviStrauss and Company imposes safety guidelines not only its U.S.facilities but also on Asian factories where some of its clothes aremade. Starbucks Coffee Company has developed a code of conduct in anattempt to improve the quality of life in coffee-producing countries.10、Life Skills: the importance of being able to cope with stress in a jobTechnology: the importance of training staff in how to use new technology when introducing it into the workplace.。
2007年9月高级口译真题答案

2007年9月高级口译真题答案(1) Spot dictation1. career counselor2. concerns about their future3. advanced technology4. the majority of the US population5. find a job6. available in your field7. making phone calls to prospective employers8. with a cover letter9. get back to you10. application process11. require more skills and expertise12. the employer and the employee13. different socio-economic backgrounds14. more competitive15. secret to preparing yourself16. ever-changing tools17. on the internet18. even other countries19. access and print anytime20. send it through emailII. Listening Comprehension1. B2. D3. B4. B5. C6. A7. D8. A9. B10. D11. D12. B13. A14. C15. C16. B17. D18. D19. C20. AIII. Note-taking and Gap-filling 1. urbanization2. reasons3. economic4. jobs5. quality6. convenience7. schools8. comfortable9. age10. falling11. changes12. taller13. Skyscrapers14. sector15. multiple16. sprawl17. smaller18. ethnic19. income20. backgrounds IV. Listening Translation Sentence Translation1. 网上购物十分便捷,很多人觉得没了它就无法生活。
历年高口翻译真题

历年高级口译考题翻译部分精解第一套英译中Since Darwin, biologists have been-firmly convinced that nature works without plan or meaning, pursuing no aim by the direct road of design. But today we see that this conviction is a fatal error. Why should evolution, exactly as Darwin knew it and described it, be planless and irrational? Do not aircraft design engineers work, at precisely that point where specific calculations and plans give out, according to the same principle of evolution, when they test the serviceability of a great number of statistically determined forms in the wind tunnel, in order to choose the one that functions best? Can we say that there is no process of natural selection when nuclear physicists, through thousands of computer operations, try to find out which materials, in which combinations and with what structural form, are best suited to the building of an atomic reactor? They also practise no designed adaptation, but work by the principle of selection. But it would never occur to anyone to call their method planless and irrational.中译英1995年10月,黄浦江上又一座大桥凌空飞架,将浦南与奉贤连接起来,成为继徐浦、南浦、杨浦三座大桥之后建成通车的第四座大桥——奉浦大桥。
中级口译真题2007年(春季)

中级口译真题2007年(春季)(总分:240.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、{{B}}SECTION 1: LISTENING TEST{{/B}}(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Every human being is fallible; we make mistakes. In America when a mistake has been made, it is considered fitting for the person{{U}} (1) {{/U}}to acknowledge his or her error and to apologize to anyone who has been inconvenienced. Even{{U}} (2) {{/U}}are expected to admit their mistakes and apologize for them. Trying to{{U}} (3) {{/U}}a mistake and denying your guilt are considered to be indicative of serious{{U}} (4) {{/U}}.If you make a mistake that{{U}} (5) {{/U}}a group of people, a public apology is considered the best method for{{U}} (6) {{/U}}. If the mistake was a serious one, or if some people were inconvenienced more than others, then the{{U}} (7) {{/U}}should follow the public apology with private ones to{{U}} (8) {{/U}}.It is especially important for executives and company heads to be able to admit their mistakes. Sometimes leaders are afraid that if they{{U}} (9) {{/U}}, they will lose the respect of their employees. Actually{{U}} (10) {{/U}}— if you are honest with your employees and yourself,{{U}} (11) {{/U}}, and show that you are willing to accept blame when you make a mistake, then your employees will be{{U}} (12) {{/U}}you. They will also be more likely to admit their own mistakes. If you{{U}} (13) {{/U}}one person, it is usually best to apologize to that person alone, unless your mistake{{U}} (14) {{/U}}by a large group of people. For example, if Leonard{{U}} (15) {{/U}}to Mr. Todd during a committee meeting, it would be{{U}} (16) {{/U}}for Leonard to apologize to Mr. Todd at the next committee meeting. If the{{U}} (17) {{/U}}created by the initial mistake is public, then the apology should be public. However, if Leonard raised his voice to Mr. Todd when only the two of them{{U}} (18) {{/U}}, he may apologize privately. Notice as well{{U}} (19) {{/U}}the apologies are. As soon as you realize you have made a mistake, you should{{U}} (20) {{/U}}.Every human being is fallible; we make mistakes. In America when a mistake has been made, it is considered fitting for the person{{U}} (1) {{/U}}to acknowledge his or her error and to apologize to anyone who has been inconvenienced. Even{{U}} (2) {{/U}}are expected to admit their mistakes and apologize for them. Trying to{{U}} (3) {{/U}}a mistake and denying your guilt are considered to be indicative of serious{{U}} (4) {{/U}}.If you make a mistake that{{U}} (5) {{/U}}a group of people, a public apology is considered the best method for{{U}} (6) {{/U}}. If the mistake was a serious one, or if some people were inconvenienced more than others, then the{{U}} (7) {{/U}}should follow the public apology with private ones to{{U}} (8) {{/U}}.It is especially important for executives and company heads to be able to admit their mistakes. Sometimes leaders are afraid that if they{{U}} (9) {{/U}}, they will lose the respect of their employees. Actually{{U}} (10) {{/U}}— if you are honest with your employees and yourself,{{U}} (11) {{/U}}, and show that you are willing to accept blame when you make a mistake, then your employees will be{{U}} (12) {{/U}}you. They will also be more likely to admit their own mistakes. If you{{U}} (13) {{/U}}one person, it is usually best to apologize to that person alone, unless your mistake{{U}} (14) {{/U}}by a large group of people. For example, if Leonard{{U}} (15) {{/U}}to Mr. Todd during a committee meeting, it would be{{U}} (16) {{/U}}for Leonard to apologize to Mr. Todd at the next committee meeting. If the{{U}} (17) {{/U}}created by the initial mistake is public, then the apology should be public. However, if Leonard raised his voice to Mr. Todd when onlythe two of them{{U}} (18) {{/U}}, he may apologize privately. Notice as well{{U}} (19) {{/U}}the apologies are. As soon as you realize you have made a mistake, you should{{U}} (20) {{/U}}. (分数:20.00)(1).(分数:1.00)填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:at fault)解析:[听力原文]1-20 Every human being is fallible; we make mistakes. In America when a mistake has been made, it is considered fitting for the person at fault (1) to acknowledge his or her error and to apologize to anyone who has been inconvenienced. Even supervisors and chief executives (2) are expected to admit their mistakes and apologize for them. Trying to cover up (3) a mistake and denying your guilt are considered to be indicative of serious character flaws (4). If you make a mistake that affects (5) a group of people, a public apology is considered the best method for repairing your wrong (6). If the mistake was a serious one, or if some people were inconvenienced more than others, then the guilty party (7) shall follow the public apology with private ones to the individuals most hurt (8). It is especially important for executives and company heads to be able to admit their mistakes. Sometimes leaders are afraid that if they admit mistakes (9), they'll lose the respect of their employees. Actually the opposite is true (10) —if you are honest with your employees and yourself, treat them fairly (11), and show that you're willing to accept blame when you make a mistake, then your employees will be more likely to respect (12) you. They will also be more likely to admit their own mistakes. If you have offended (13) one person, it is usually best to apologize to that person alone, unless your mistake was viewed(14) by a large group of people. For example, if Leonard raised his voice (15) to Mr. Todd duringa committee meeting, it would be appropriate (16) for Leonard to apologize to Mr. Todd at the next committee meeting. If the embarrassment (17) created by the initial mistake is public, then the apology should be public. However, if Leonard raised his voice to Mr. Todd when only the two of them were present (18), he may apologize privately. Notice as well how timely (19) the apologies are. As soon as you realize you have made a mistake, you should apologize for it (20).填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:supervisors and chief executives)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:cover up)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:character flaws)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:affects)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:repairing your wrong)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:guilty party)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the individuals most hurt)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:admit mistakes)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:the opposite is true)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:treat them fairly)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:more likely to respect)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:have offended)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:was viewed)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:raised his voice)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:appropriate)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:embarrassment)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:were present)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:how timely)解析:填空项1:__________________ (正确答案:apologize for it)解析:二、{{B}}B: Listening Comprehension{{/B}}(总题数:2,分数:10.00)(分数:5.00)A.(A) I have finished my lunch.B.(B) I can't wait to make the phone call.C.(C) I have to stay in the office. √D.(D) I don't like to eat in the cafeteria.解析:[听力原文] All my colleagues are going over to the cafeteria now, but I can't. I'm waiting for an important phone call from the States.A.(A) Someone from the housing office will fix the toilet.B.(B) Peter will phone the housing office for you.C.(C) You can fix the toilet in the bathroom by yourself.D.(D) Peter will repair the toilet in the bathroom. √解析:[听力原文] You needn't notify the housing office about the fixing of the toilet in the bathroom. I'll get Peter to take care of it.A.(A) Individuals good at conversations may find it hard to make their first speech before a large audience. √B.(B) Students trained for their first public speeches should be given lessons in a conversational setting.C.(C) The future of those people afraid of giving a public speech lies in the training of making wonderful conversations.D.(D) Most individuals prefer to make a public speech in a conversational setting with an attentive audience.解析:[听力原文] People, even some who are wonderful talkers in a conversation or setting, are often terrified over the prospect of giving their first public speech.A.(A) The trees are being cut down.B.(B) The trees are blocking my view.C.(C) The trees grow better around the office.D.(D) The trees help cool my office. √解析:[听力原文] Look at these trees around my office! They're useful because they cut down on the need for air-conditioning in my office in summer.A.(A) Everyone wants to attend to this school, as it is a private institution.B.(B) It is impossible for you to keep to your own in this boarding school. √C.(C) We all get along very well in this boarding school, as if of close friends.D.(D) It is not important to step into other people's affairs here at this school.解析:[听力原文] Every individual has the right to be alone except in this boarding school. Once you step forward onto this campus, there's no such thing as privacy.(分数:5.00)A.(A) Thirty percent of the German population can receive college education.B.(B) American students enjoy a very high rate of admission to college in the world. √C.(C) Comparatively speaking, there are more British people than the French attending college.D.(D) American college students are envied by 60% of high school graduates around the world. 解析:[听力原文] America's universities are the envy of the world with 60% of all U.S. high school graduates attending college, while in Germany, it's 30%; in France, 28%; and in Britain, only 20%.A.(A) We should adopt a 4-year term for the directors and chairman. √B.(B) The term of the directors and chairman will be decided in four years.C.(C) The term of the directors and chairman turns out to be 2 years.D.(D) It's reasonable to make policies of continuity and stability for the company.解析:[听力原文] With regard to the term of the directors and chairmen, a four-year period is better from the perspective of the continuity and stability of a company's policy though two-year is also reasonable.A.(A) No government or theory can alone cope with the complexities of the global economy. √B.(B) No government can understand the theory of the global economy because of its complexities.C.(C) World War Ⅱ has made the global economy more complex to be exp lained in terms of traditional economic theories.D.(D) Our government must frame a new theory so as to control the development of the global economy.解析:[听力原文] Since World War II, international economy has become too complex for any single theory to explain or for any single government to control.A.(A) Children should be responsible for most of the fire deaths in America.B.(B) Adults load the houses with too much stuff, which is easy to catch fire.C.(C) Nineteen percent of the fires are attributed to children playing with matches.D.(D) Adults should exercise more and stricter precautions against fires. √解析:[听力原文] In America, only 9 % of all fires are caused by children playing with matches, while the adults always overload house wiring and fail to buy fire extinguishers.A.(A) If you are hungry, you'd better go to the nearest supermarket.B.(B) Few American consumers would choose to go shopping in Wal-Mart.C.(C) In 2006, shopping over the Internet rose by 28 percent.D.(D) In 2005, about $14 billion of goods were bought over the Internet. √解析:[听力原文] For those time-starved consumers, shopping from e-Bay is more convenient than driving to Wal-Mart. In 2006, U.S. consumers purchased $ 28 billion of goods over the Internet, and it almost doubled the 2005 total.三、{{B}}Talks and Conversations{{/B}}(总题数:5,分数:20.00){{B}}Questions 11-14{{/B}}{{B}}Questions 11-14{{/B}}(分数:4.00)A.(A) At a stationery counter.B.(B) At a reception desk of a hotel. √C.(C) In the immigration office of an airport.D.(D) In the visa office of an embassy.解析:[听力原文]11-14 W: Good evening, sir. M: Good evening. My name's Peter Roach. I believe you have a room reserved for me. W: Just a moment, Mr. Roach. Let's see. Roach, yes, Mr. Roach, room 803. Would you fill in this form, please? M: Certainly. Eh…I don't have a pen and there isn't one on the desk. W: Isn't there? How strange! M: Perhaps someone walked off with it. Could you lend me yours? W: Of course. Here you are. How long do you intend to stay, Mr. Roach? M. I'm not sure. It all depends. But I'm probably going to leave on Saturday. That means I probably will stay for three nights. Of course, it may be longer than that, you know. W: For three nights until Saturday. I see. Would you tell us as soon as you know? M: Certainly. Where shall I put the number of my passport? W: Just at the bottom. That's right. Thank you. M: Oh, would you wake me up at 7 tomorrow morning? W: At 7, certainly. Tom, would you please take Mr. Roach's suitcase to his room? Just follow the porter, Mr. Roach. M: Thank you. You've been very helpful. Goodbye. W: My pleasure. Goodbye. Oh! Mr. Roach. My pen! M: Your pen? W: Yes. I lent it to you a moment ago. You remember? M: Oh, yeah, of course you did. I put it in my pocket by mistake. Here you are. I'm very sorry. W: That's quite all right. 11. Where does this conversation most probably take place?A.(A) He has lost his own pen.B.(B) He wants to get into conversation with her.C.(C) He cannot find one nearby. √D.(D) He has left his pen in Room 803.解析:[听力原文] Why does the man want to borrow a pen from the woman?A.(A) Monday.B.(B) Tuesday.C.(C) Wednesday. √D.(D) Thursday.解析:[听力原文] What day is it when the man checks in?A.(A) He asks the porter to carry his suitcase to his room. √B.(B) He wants a morning call at 7 o'clock the next day.C.(C) He thinks the woman at the reception is very helpful.D.(D) He puts the woman's pen in his pocket by mistake.解析:[听力原文] Which of the following is NOT true about the man?{{B}}Questions 15-18{{/B}}{{B}}Questions 15-18{{/B}}(分数:4.00)A.(A) We should not take our ability to listen for granted.B.(B) We should have the right listening style for a particular situation. √C.(C) We should try different listening styles one after another.D.(D) We should be faithful to one listening style all the time.解析:[听力原文]15-18 Most of us take our ability to listen for granted. In fact, we have different listening styles for different occasions. How successful we are as listeners may depend in part on choosing the right listening style for the situation. Perhaps the most basic listening style is appreciative listening. We listen appreciatively when we enjoy music, a bird's song or the murmur of the book. We need a different style, one called discriminative listening, when we want to single out one particular sound from a noisy environment. You discriminate, for example, when you listen for a friend's voice in a crowded room. We use a firm style of listening, comprehensive listening, when we want to understand. When we listen to directions or instructions, we are using this style. The last listening style, critical listening, is the one we will examine most closely. Critical listeners are the most active of all listeners, and critical listening, the most helpful. Critical listeners evaluate what they hear, and decide if another person's message is logical, worthwhile or has value. We need to be critical listeners when someone wants us to buy something, vote a certain way or support a particular idea. We also need to be critical listeners in school where we are supposed to listen and think at the same time. 15. According to the speaker, what should we do in order to be successful as listeners?A.(A) Two.B.(B) Three.C.(C) Four. √D.(D) Five.解析:[听力原文] How many listening styles are discussed in the talk?A.(A) When we are attending an English language course.B.(B) When we are watching an interesting TV program.C.(C) When we are enjoying the murmuring of a brook.D.(D) When we are listening for a friend's voice in a crowd. √解析:[听力原文] As is mentioned in the talk, which of the following is an example of discriminative listening?A.(A) When we are touring around an opera house.B.(B) When we are watching a TV series.C.(C) When we are appreciating background music in a restaurant.D.(D) When we are attending a lecture at college. √解析:[听力原文] According to the talk, when will our critical listening become the most active and most helpful?{{B}}Questions 19-22{{/B}}{{B}}Questions 19-22{{/B}}(分数:4.00)A.(A) They are dominating.B.(B) They are not respectable.C.(C) They are persuasive.D.(D) They are very helpful. √解析:[听力原文]19-22 M: You think young people are given too much freedom nowadays, and that, as a result, they lost respect for their parents and their elders generally. W: I don't think so. My parents never interfered with my plans too much. They advised me but never forced me to do anything I didn't want to do. I was allowed to take up the career I wanted. I think I respect and love them more for this. M: Are you quite independent of them now? W: Yes. As soon as I left high school and started my college studies as an elementary school teacher, I became independent financially. I have a government grant which is enough for my keep. But I still stay with them a lot as you know. M: You seem very close to your parents. W: I am. I know that many young peopletoday say they have nothing in common with their parents. But I'm rather lucky because I get on very well with mine. What about you? M: Well, we value family life very much in my country. I'm very fond of my family, but I don't always get on very well with them. They try to control me too much. W: But they allowed you to come to study in England on your own. M: Yes, but only after a lot of persuasion. Your parents treat you as an adult. Mine treat me as a child. W: As I said, I'm lucky. Some English parents are like yours. They interfere too much and they're out of sympathy with our generation. 19.What does the woman think of her parents?A.(A) Because she takes up a part-time job.B.(B) Because she works with the government.C.(C) Because she has a government grant. √D.(D) Because she stays with her friend.解析:[听力原文] Why is the woman able to support herself at college?A.(A) He is sometimes not on good terms with his parents. √B.(B) He wants to have control over his parents.C.(C) He and his parents are not fond of each other.D.(D) He and his parents have different views about family life.解析:[听力原文] According to the conversation, which of the following is true about the man?A.(A) After saving up enough money.B.(B) Through a lot of persuasion. √C.(C) By his outstanding performance at school.D.(D) With the sympathy and interference from his parents.解析:[听力原文] How did the man manage to study in England on his own?{{B}}Questions 23-26{{/B}}{{B}}Questions 23-26{{/B}}(分数:4.00)A.(A) You should be absent from work for 2 weeks before you hand in your resignation.B.(B) You should submit your resignation at least 2 weeks before you leave. √C.(C) You should avoid having an exit interview with your immediate supervisor.D.(D) You should first settle all your personnel items with the personnel manager.解析:[听力原文]23-26 Most American workers, especially those in professional occupations, follow a set procedure when they leave current employment. If you decide to quit, first, you should submit the letter of resignation to your supervisors at least 2 weeks before you plan to leave. When the letter of resignation is submitted, an exit interview with the immediate supervisor is scheduled. During an exit interview, the supervisor may ask questions like "What are your reasons for leaving?" "What can the company do to get you to stay?" and "What advice would you offer to the person who will replace you?" After that, you need to arrange to meet with the personnel manager to settle all personnel items, such as unpaid medical insurance claims and transfer of retirement funds. Although employment termination practices vary somewhat from company to company, the 2-week notice is considered standard. If you are employed for certain posts, such as a teacher or school administrator, an even longer notice period, say a semester, may be required so that the school work may not be seriously affected. If everything runs smoothly, you will be given a sum of money known as the severance pay. In the United States, employees usually receive severance pay when they are fired or asked to resign. The special pay is designed to provide financial assistance to the employee while he or she hunts for a new job. 23. What should you do if you decide to leave your job in an American' company?A.(A) Medical insurance and retirement funds. √B.(B) Unpaid overtime compensations and unsettled debts.C.(C) Replacement for your post and a raise of your salary.D.(D) Fringe benefits and family allowance.解析:[听力原文] What personnel items should you settle with the personnel manager, according to the talk?A.(A) To help you reconsider your decision to resign.B.(B) To allow more time for the authority's approval.C.(C) To keep the schoolwork from being seriously affected. √D.(D) To make it easier for the students to accept a new teacher.解析:[听力原文] Why should you give a longer notice if you are a teacher or a school administrator?A.(A) When you just have a raise in salary.B.(B) When you have found a better job.C.(C) When you are the only one to leave.D.(D) When you are asked to resign. √解析:[听力原文] What is the necessary condition for you to receive the "severance pay"? {{B}}Questions 27-30{{/B}}{{B}}Questions 27-30{{/B}}(分数:4.00)A.(A) It is very mild.B.(B) It is warm.C.(C) It is snowy. √D.(D) It is overcast.解析:[听力原文]27-30 M: Miss Grace, I'm glad that you've made it through that heavy snow. W: Yes, I was not expecting so much snow here and it is colder than I expected. I was unable to book a taxi from the hotel, so I had to get up early and come by bus. M: We are having extraordinary weather this winter. Even so, you are on time for your appointment. During this interview, I would like to give you a brief overview of our MBA program and job requirements. You'll want to know this background information, then I'll need to get some information from you. If you have questions, please feel free to ask them. W: All right. M: You are aware that we have a special purpose for this MBA program. We want to help young professionals find direction and position. The student should earn a certificate upon completion of the program. W: There is definitely a shortage of trained personnel in this area. M: From your resume, I notice that you have experience in the business world as well as in teaching MBA courses. What do you consider to be your strong points? W: My present employer says I am creative but practical. He has commented more than once I'm the best CEO he's ever had. M: If you are hired, what would you plan to do for our students? W: I would hope to help the students become diligent and efficient employees. I would give them a solid foundation in managerial expertise as well as professional knowledge. M: Miss Grace, you will be taking a cut in salary by coming here. Would you mind telling me why you are considering a change of jobs? Is it because of your health? Many people come to this city for the mild climate, and of course for the clean air. This winter is an exception, though. W: No, I just love to work with young people, and I'd like to share with them my work experience. 27. At the point of the conversation, what is the weather like?A.(A) She is creative and practical. √B.(B) She is diligent and efficient.C.(C) She is professional and competitive.D.(D) She is determined and experienced.解析:[听力原文] What strong points does the woman think that she has?A.(A) Secretary.B.(B) CEO.C.(C) Teacher. √D.(D) Chief Consultant.解析:[听力原文] What kind of the job is the woman looking for?A.(A) Because she likes the city's mild climate that is beneficial to her health.B.(B) Because she loves to work with young people and share her experience. √C.(C) Because she does not have the required certificate in business management.D.(D) Because she does not think that she has earned quite enough from her previous job. 解析:[听力原文] Why does the woman apply for the new job?四、{{B}}C: Listening Translation{{/B}}(总题数:1,分数:20.00)(分数:20.00)(1).(分数:4.00)__________________________________________________________________________________________ 正确答案:()解析:女士们,先生们,我们国际俱乐部每学期只聚会一次,所以为了本次聚会,第一项议程就是选举出本次会议的主席。
高级口译2007年3月真题(附加答案)资料

Exercise1(07’3)Listening Part:【Spot Dictation】Most "unassertive" people are not confident and take no for an answer much too easily. There is a growing awareness in our society that this tendency ___________________ (1) the rights of large numbers of people. For example, in recent years there has been an upsurge in ___________________ (2) and pressure groups. This is a ___________________ (3) as there will always be a need for such organizations to ___________________ (4) individuals and minorities in a competitive society. The danger is that we ___________________ (5) for our rights and lose the art of asserting ourselves. It is better for ___________________ (6) with other people if you can learn ___________________ (7) for yourself.Now, we have to learn to ignore some of the ___________________ (8) that may be ringing in our unconscious minds, such as: "If you ask once more, I'll flatten you", and" ___________________ (9)".The main technique that we use in ___________________ (10) to practice the art of persistence is called Broken Record. ___________________ (11) we hear one sentence over and over again until we reach screaming pitch and ___________________ (12).Broken Record is the skill of being able to repeat over and over again, ___________________ (13), what it is you want or need, until the other person gives in or ___________________(14).Now, this technique is extremely useful for dealing with situations where your rights are clearly___________________ (15), or coping with situations where you are likely to be diverted by clever, ___________________ (16).The beauty of using Broken Record is that you___________________ (17) because you know exactly what you are going to say, however___________________ (18) the other person tries to be.As with most assertive techniques, it must be used appropriately. It is ___________________ (19) and is not designed to foster deep, interesting conversations and friendships with people! It is primarily of use in situations where ___________________ (20).【Listening Comprehension】Listening Comprehension 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following conversation.1. (A) Education and health.(B) Health in adolescence.(C) Sleep deprivation in teens.(D) Mysteries of sleep.2. (A) A balance in cognitive thoughts and emotions.(B) A chronic sleep deprivation.(C) A huge wave of sleepiness.(D) A mighty sleep hormone.3. (A) Melatonin is the source of a big push from biology that makes teenagers night owls.(B) Melatonin is a simple signal that turns on in the morning and turns off in the evening.(C) Melatonin is secreted several hours later in childhood than it will be during adolescence.(D) Melatonin doesn't shut off until 11 o'clock P.M. every day.4. (A) They have to struggle to stay up all night.(B) They get severely sleep deprived.(C) They very often oversleep.(D) They fall asleep too soon at night.5. (A) Alertness.(B) Reaction time.(C) Emotion.(D) Concentration.Listening Comprehension 2Question 6 to 10 are based on the following news.6. (A) Corporate executives are confident in the stock market trends.(B) Investors in general believe that the outlook for profits is worsening.(C) Some major company executives are selling more shares than buying.(D) The US stock market is expanding at a 5.6 percent annual rate this year.7. (A) To inspect the shuttle for potentially critical heat shield damage.(B) To rewire the space station for a permanent power source.(C) To beat the odds to get off the launch pad in the first night-time launch.(D) To make a fiery ascent that turns night into day.8. (A) 50.(B) 80.(C) 150.(D) 180.9. (A) Forty-five women were killed in the blaze at a drug treatment center.(B) The fire was not caused by arson according to a senior firefighter.(C) Nine mentally ill patients died in the fire.(D) People were trapped behind locked gates and barred windows.10. (A) Two detectives investigating the case had tested positive for traces of radiation.(B) The ex-wife and the former mother-in-law of the spy were also poisoned.(C) The Russian businessman who met the former spy in London has fallen ill.(D) There is a high degree of probability that it is polonium that killed the spy. Listening Comprehension 3Questions 11-15 are based on the following interview.11. (A) Closed to the public. (B) Silent and empty.(C) Packed with (D) Strangely crowded.12. (A) New Mexico. (B) Minnesota.(C) The coast of Florida. (D) The Caribbean.13. (A) Several gallons of petrol. (B) Food for at least three days.(C) Plenty of drinking water. (D) A sturdy pair of work boots.14. (A) The potential damage.(B) The unexpected temperature changes.(C) The hurricane's possible path.(D) The vulnerability of the locals.15. (A) Watch, wait and try not to panic.(B) Choose another place for a vacation.(C) Ask for their money back if there's a hurricane.(D) Plan for very bad weather.Listening Comprehension 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.16. (A) Car alarms.(B) Sirens.(C) Jack-hammers.(D) Loud music.17. (A) Break eggs on the road.(B) Take certain legal action.(C) Use some minor retaliatory step.(D) Paint the windshield or front hood of a car.18. (A) It can only alert the police.(B) It is of no use.(C) It can prevent the car being broken into.(D) It is really too expensive.19. (A) It makes them noisier than they were 20 years ago.(B) It makes it difficult for them to fall asleep.(C) It affects their work during the day.(D) It does harm to their hearing.20. (A) Many New Yorkers agree about banning this form of sonic pollution.(B) The police have formed a posse to reduce the amount of noise.(C) Police can break into a car as soon as the alarm goes off.(D) Car alarms are very effective at preventing theft.【Note taking & Gap filling】Americans' ________ (1) impulses keep generating surprises. Charitable giving plays an even larger role in the ________ (2). Demand for nonprofit services gets proportionately bigger as a locality's ________ (3) rises. The philanthropy of the wealthy may not hinge on tax ________ (4) to the degree many believe. The US _________ (5) the world in levels of charitable activity. Some experts see charity as a ________ (6) trait of the US, more than ________ (7) or business. But those forces may be________ (8), as many nonprofits—from healthcare to classical music—are selling________ (9) in a marketplace alongside for-profit ________ (10). Charity is no mere ________ (11) activity. It pays off for society in ways that may ________ (12) the rates of return on many traditional investments. Charity not only helps those on the ________ (13) end but also strengthens the ________ (14) of society at large. Moreover, it appears to make the givers themselves more_________ (15). The pattern that conservatives are better givers than ________ (16) is less about politics than about charity-linked ________ (17) most common to conservatives: religious commitment, marriage and children, and entrepreneurship. The main point is that more Americans, regardless of ideology, embrace giving as a tool for ________ (18). The urge to make a difference, and to take ________ (19) in it, outweighs ________ (20) considerations.Sentence Translation(1)_________________________________________________________________________(2)_________________________________________________________________________(3)_________________________________________________________________________(4)_________________________________________________________________________(5)_________________________________________________________________________Passage translation(l)(2)Reading Part:Questions 1—5When Harvey Ball took a black felt-tip pen to a piece of yellow paper in 1963, he never could have realized that he was drafting the face that would launch 50 million buttons and an eventual war over copyright. Mr. Ball, a commercial artist, was simply filling a request from Joy Young of the Worcester Mutual Insurance Company to create an image for their "smile campaign" to coach employees to be more congenial in their customer relations. It seems there was a hunger for a bright grin—the original order of 100 smiley-face buttons were snatched up and an order for 10,000 more was placed at once.The Worcester Historical Museum takes this founding moment seriously. "Just as you'd want to know the biography of General Washington, we realized we didn't know the comprehensive history of the Smiley Face," says Bill Wallace, the executive director of the historical museum where the exhibit "Smiley—An American Icon" opens to the public Oct. 6 in Worcester, Mass.Worcester, often referred to by neighboring Bostonians as "that manufacturing town off Route 90," lays claim to several other famous commercial firsts, the monkey wrench and shredded wheat among them. Smiley Face is a particularly warm spot in the city's history. Through a careful historical analysis, Mr. Wallace says that while the Smiley Face birthplace is undisputed, it took several phases of distribution before the distinctive rounded-tipped smile with one eye slightly larger than the other proliferated in the mainstream.As the original buttons spread like drifting pollen with no copyright attached, a bank in Seattle next realized its commercial potential. Under the guidance of advertising executive David Stern, the University Federal Savings & Loan launched a very public marketing campaign in 1967 centered on the Smiley Face. It eventually distributed 150,000 buttons along with piggy banks and coin purses. Old photos of the bank show giant Smiley Face wallpaper.By 1970, Murray and Bernard Spain, brothers who owned a card shop in Philadelphia, were affixing the yellow grin to everything from key chains to cookie jars along with "Have a happy day." "In the 1970s, there was a trend toward happiness," says Wallace. "We had assassinated a president, we were in a war with Vietnam, and people were looking for [tokens of] happiness. [The Spain brothers] ran with it."The Smiley Face resurged in the 1990s. This time it was fanned by a legal dispute betweenWal-Mart, who uses it to promote its low prices, and Franklin Loufrani, a Frenchman who owns a company called SmileyWorld. Mr. Loufrani says he created the Smiley Face and has trademarked it around the world. He has been distributing its image in 80 countries since 1971.Loufrani's actions irked Ball, who felt that such a universal symbol should remain in the public domain in perpetuity. So in a pleasant proactive move, Ball declared in 1999 that the first Friday in October would be "World Smile Day" to promote general kindness and charity toward children in need. Ball died in 2001.The Worcester exhibit opens on "World Smile Day", Oct. 6. It features a plethora of Smiley Face merchandise—from the original Ball buttons to plastic purses and a toilet seat—and contemporary interpretations by local artists. The exhibit is scheduled to run through Feb. 11.1. According to the passage, the Worcester Historical Museum ______.(A) concentrates on the collection of the most famous commercial firsts the city has invented(B) has composed a comprehensive history of the Smiley Face through the exhibition(C) treats Smiley Face as the other famous commercial firsts the city has produced(D) has organized the exhibit to arouse the Americans' patriotism2. When the author used the expression "spread like drifting pollen "(para.4) to describe the gradual distribution of Smiley Face, he implies that ________.(A) Harvey Ball did not claim the copyright of the yellow grin button(B) the Smiley Face was immediately accepted by the public(C) the button was not sold as an ordinary commercial product(D) Harvey Ball had the intention to abandon the copyright of Smiley Face3. Why did Bill Wallace mention the assassination of the then American president and the Vietnam War in the 1970s?(A) To have a review of the contemporary American history.(B) To remind people that we should never forget the past.(C) To explain why Americans liked the Smiley Face during that period.(D) To show how the Spain brothers made a fortune through selling the yellow grin.4. In the expression "Loufrani's actions irked Ball" (para.7), the word "irked" can best be replaced by ______.(A) perplexed(B) provoked(C) irritated(D) challenged5. Which of the following is NOT true about the "World Smile Day"?(A) It was established to commemorate the founder Harvey Ball.(B) It was to promote general kindness and charity toward children in need.(C) It was declared by Harvey Ball in 1999.(D) It was decided to be held on the first Friday in October each year.【上半场阅读理解第二篇】Questions 6—10Good teachers matter. This may seem obvious to anyone who has a child in school or, for that matter, to anyone who has been a child in school. For a long time, though, researchers couldn't actually prove that teaching talent was important. But new research finally shows that teacher quality is a close cousin to student achievement: A great teacher can cram one-and-a-half grades' worth of learning into a single year, while laggards are lucky to accomplish half that much. Parents and kids, it seems, have been right all along to care whether they were assigned to Mrs. Smith or Mr. Brown.Yet, while we know now that better teachers are critical, flaws in the way that administrators select and retain them mean that schools don't always hire the best.Many ingredients for good teaching are difficult to ascertain in advance—charisma and diligence come to mind—but research shows a teacher's own ability on standardized tests reliably predicts good performance in the classroom. You would think, then, that top-scoring teachers would be swimming in job offers, right? Not so, says Vanderbilt University professor Dale Ballou. High-scoring teaching applicants "do not fare better than others in the job market," he writes. "Indeed, remarkably they do somewhat worse."Even more surprising, given the national shortage of highly skilled math and science teachers, school administrators are more keen to hire education majors than applicants who have math or science degrees. No one knows for sure why those who hire teachers routinely overlook top talent. Perhaps they wrongly think that the qualifications they shun make little difference for students. Also, administrators are probably naturally drawn to teachers who remind them of themselves.But failing to recognize the qualities that make teachers truly effective (and to construct incentives to attract and retain more of these top performers) has serious consequences. For example, because schools don't always hire the best applicants, across-the-board salary increases cannot improve teacher quality much, and may even worsen it. That's because higher salaries draw more weak as well as strong applicants into teaching—applicants the current hiring system can't adequately screen. Unless administrators have incentives to hire the best teachers available, it's pointless to give them a larger group to choose from.If public school hiring processes are bad, their compensation policies are worse. Most districts pay solely based on years of experience and the presence of a master's degree, a formula that makes the Federal General Schedule—which governs pay for U.S. bureaucrats—look flexible. Study after study has shown that teachers with master's degrees are no better than those without. Job experience does matter, but only for the first few years, according to research by Hoover Institution's Eric A. Hanushek. A teacher with 15 years of experience is no more effective, on average, than a teacher with five years of experience, but which one do you think is paid more? This toxic combination of rigid pay and steep rewards for seniority causes average quality to decline rather than increase as teacher groups get older. Top performers often leave the field early for industries that reward their excellence. Mediocre teachers, on the other hand, are soon overcompensated by seniority pay. And because they are paid more than their skills command elsewhere, these less-capable pedagogues settle in to provide many years of ineffectual instruction.So how can we separate the wheat from the chaff in the teaching profession? To make American schools competitive, we must rethink seniority pay, the value of master's degrees, and the notion that a teacher can teach everything equally well—especially math and science—without appropriate preparation in the subject.Our current education system is unlikely to accomplish this dramatic rethinking. Imagine, for a moment, that American cars had been free in recent decades, while Toyotas and Hondas sold at full price. We'd probably be driving Falcons and Corvairs today. Free public education suffers from a lack of competition in just this way. So while industries from aerospace to drugs have transformed themselves in order to compete, public schooling has stagnated.School choice could spark the kind of reformation this industry needs by motivating administrators to hire the best and adopt new strategies to keep top teachers in the classroom. The lesson that good teachers matter should be taught, not as a theory, but as a practice.6. The beginning sentence "Good teachers matter." can mainly be explained as which of the following?(A) Good teachers help students establish confidence.(B) Good teachers determine the personality of students.(C) Good teachers promote student achievement.(D) Good teachers treat students as their own children.7. According to the author, seniority pay favors ________.(A) good teachers' with master's degrees(B) young and effective teachers(C) experienced and effective teachers(D) mediocre teachers of average quality8. The expression "separate the wheat from the chaff in the teaching profession" is closest in meaning to ________.(A) distinguish better teachers from less capable ones(B) differentiate young teachers from old ones(C) tell the essential qualities of good teaching(D) reevaluate the role of senior teachers9. When the author uses the automobile industry as an example, she argues that ________.(A) Japan's auto industry is exceeding America's auto industry(B) the public schooling has stagnated because of competition(C) the current American education system is better than the Japanese one(D) competition must be introduced into the public education system10. Which of the following CANNOT be concluded from the passage?(A) Most average teachers want to leave school because of high pressure.(B) Excellent teachers often leave schools for better jobs.(C) The average quality of the teachers in America is declining.(D) Teachers' quality is closely related to a number of factors.【上半场阅读理解第三篇】Questions 11—15The British author Salman Rushdie is selling his personal archive to a wealthy American university. The archive, which includes personal diaries written during the decade that he spent living in hiding from Islamic extremists, is being bought by the Emory University in Atlanta for an undisclosed sum. The move has sparked concern that Britain's literary heritage is being lost to foreign buyers. The archive also includes two unpublished novels.Rushdie, 59, said last week that his priority had been to "find a good home" for his papers, but admitted that money had also been a factor. "I don't see why I should give them away," he said. "It seemed to me quite reasonable that one should be paid." The sum involved is likely to match or exceed similar deals. In 2003 Emory bought the archive of Ted Hughes, the late poet laureate, for a reported $600,000. Julian Barnes, the author of Flaubert's Parrot, is said to have sold his papers to the University of Texas at Austin for $200,000.Rushdie was born in Bombay (Mumbai) but educated in Britain. His book Midnight's Children was voted the best Booker prize winner in 25 years and he is regarded as a leading British literary novelist. The sale of his papers will annoy the British Library, which is about to hold a conference to discuss how to stop famous writers' archives being sold abroad.Yesterday Clive Field, the director .of scholarship and collections at the library, said: "I am pleased that Rushdie's papers will be preserved in a publicly accessible institution, but disappointed that we didn't have an opportunity to discuss the acquisition of the archive with him." Rushdie' said the British Library "never asked me about the archive".Emory University enjoys a large endowment thanks to a student who became a senior executive at Coca-Cola, and already holds the archives of the poets W B Yeats and Seamus Heaney, as well as Hughes. "Emory seems to be very serious about building a collection of contemporary literature," said Rushdie. "Not only do they have the papers of Hughes and Heaney, but also Paul Muldoon and other writers. I got the sense that they want to collect contemporary novelists as well and it just felt very good to be part of that."Rushdie, who now lives in New York, has accepted a position as a visiting fellow and will spend a month on the campus in Decatur, a leafy suburb of Atlanta, every year until 2012. "They asked if I'd ever thought about putting my archive anywhere and, to tell you the truth, until that moment I really hadn't," Rushdie said."My archive is so voluminous that I don't have room in my house for it and it's in an outside storage facility. I was worried about that and wanted to feel it was in a safe place." The papers will be open for scholars to study with one key exception: the "fatwa" diaries that Rushdie wrote under threat of death from Islamic extremists for writing The Satanic Verses. He spent a decade in hiding under the protection of Scotland Yard after Ayatollah Khomeini, then leader of Iran, called the book "blasphemous against Islam" in 1989.The author may use the diaries as the basis for a book: "I wouldn't want them out in the open,1 want to be the first person to have a go at the material, whether as a serious autobiography or asa memoir." He was ambivalent about the idea of scholars studying his papers. "The whole thing is very bizarre, you know, it's like imagining someone going through your underwear."The two unpublished novels—The Antagonist, influenced by Thomas Pynchon, the American writer, and The Book of Peer—were written by Rushdie in the 1970s: "The Antagonist was a contemporary London novel, set around Ladbroke Grove where I was living at the time. I think it was embarrassingly Pynchonesque."Chris Smith, the former culture minister who chairs the UK Literary Heritage Working Group, said: "It is a very sad day for British literature and scholarship. Our literary heritage is arguably our greatest contribution to culture and we should be taking special care to protect that." Andrew Motion, the poet laureate, last week called for the government to remove Vat from unbound papers, which increases the cost of purchases in this country. Stephen Enniss, of Emory University, said: "There is worldwide interest in Rushdie. We are catering for the long-term care of the archive and will welcome scholars from all over the world."11. It can be learned from the passage that the British author Salman Rushdie ______.(A) lived in hiding under the protection of Scotland Yard for a decade(B) had spent the decade living in Scotland Yard until 1998(C) lived in hiding in New York for one decade(D) had moved from place to place since the publication of The Satanic Verses12. According to the passage, the British Library ______.(A) is going to buy back Rushdie's personal archive from Amory University(B) opposes the American universities' acquisition of archives from British literary people(C) has discussed with Salman Rushdie about the acquisition of his personal archive(D) has expressed much concern over foreign buyers' acquisition of Britain's literary heritage13. It can be concluded from the passage that the Emory University has collected the archives of all the following British poets EXCEPT ______.(A) Ted Hughes(B) Andrew Motion(C) W B Yeats(D) Seamus Heaney14. According to the passage, the "fatwa" diaries (para.7) ______.(A) were not included in the archive sold to the Emory University(B) will not be open to the public in the near future(C) were all about the writing of The Satanic Verses(D) will soon be published to expose the persecution of Islamic extremists15. Why was Salman Rushdie ambivalent about the idea of scholars studying his papers?(A) He was afraid that he would be pursued by Islamic extremists again.(B) The scholars might use the papers to write a biography about him.(C) He felt that his privacy might be easily exposed to the public.(D) He could not imagine what kind of consequences would be following.【上半场阅读理解第四篇】Questions 16—20At the tail end of the 19th century, Friedrich Nietzsche suggested that natural history—which he saw as a war against fear and superstition—ought to be narrated "in such a way that everyone who hears it is irresistibly inspired to strive after spiritual and bodily health and vigour," and he grumbled that artists had yet to discover the right language to do this."Nonetheless," Nietzsche admitted, "the English have taken admirable steps in the direction of that ideal ... the reason is that they [natural history books] are written by their most distinguished scholars—whole, complete and fulfilling natures."The English language tradition of nature writing and narrating natural history is gloriously rich, and although it may not make any bold claims to improving health and wellbeing, it does a good job—for readers and the subjects of the writing. Where the insights of field naturalists meet the legacy of poets such as Clare, Wordsworth, Hughes and Heaney, there emerges a language as vivid as any cultural achievement.That this language is still alive and kicking and read every day in a newspaper is astounding. So to hold a century's worth of country diaries is, for an interloper like me, both an inspiring and humbling experience. But is this the best way of representing nature, or is it a cultural default? Will the next century of writers want to shake loose from this tradition? What happens next?Over the years, nature writers and country diarists have developed an increasingly sophisticated ecological literacy of the world around them through the naming of things and an understanding of the relationships between them. They find ways of linking simple observations to bigger issues by remaining in the present, the particular. For writers of my generation, a nostalgia for lost wildlife and habitats and the business of bearing witness to a war of attrition in the countryside colours what we're about. The anxieties of future generations may not be the same.Articulating the "wild" as a qualitative character of nature and context for the more quantitative notion of biodiversity will, I believe, become a more dynamic cultural project. The re-wilding of lands and seas, coupled with a re-wilding of experience and language, offers fertile ground for writers. A response to the anxieties springing from climate change, and a general fear of nature answering our continued environmental injustices with violence, will need a reassessment of our feelings for the nature we like—cultural landscapes, continuity, native species—as well as the nature we don't like—rising seas, droughts, "invasive" species.Whether future writers take their sensibilities for a walk and, like a pack of wayward dogs unleashed, let them loose in hills and woods to sniff out some fugitive truth hiding in the undergrowth, or choose to honestly recount the this-is-where-I-am, this-is-what-I-see approach, they will be hitched to the values implicit in the language they use. They should challenge these.Perhaps they will see our natural history as a contributor to the commodification of nature and the obsessive managerialism of our times. Perhaps they will see our romanticism as a blanket thrown over the traumatized victim of the countryside. But maybe they will follow threads we found in the writings of others and find their own way to wonder.16. The major theme of the passage is about ______.(A) the 19th century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche(B) the development of the discipline of natural history。
2007年9月高级口译听力真题
2007年9月高级口译听力真题【Spot Dictation】Good afternoon, everybody. I'm pleased to be here with you, graduates of 2007. I'm a ________ (1), and students often approach me with ________ (2). You see, we are living in a society of great changes. With the presence of ________ (3), the process of getting a job in today's world has changed for ________ (4).Well, how can you use new technologies to help you? First, let's look at how you ________ (5). The traditional method of hunting for a job in the past required first, doing research on jobs that were ________ (6), typically by looking in newspapers, periodicals and magazines, as well as TV ads, and ________ (7). Then you decided where and for what post you were going to apply, put your resume ________ (8) in a stamped envelope, and waited anxiously for someone to ________ (9).Well, today, maybe the job search and ________ (10) are very much the same, but the tools used are much more advanced, and they ________ (11). In fact, technology has not so much changed the process as enhanced it. The benefit, both for ________ (12), is that this makes the search more open to people of ________ (13) from all over the world. But as more people are involved, it becomes ________ (14) for the applicant than it ever was before.The ________ (15) for the working world today is learning these new and ________ (16) and combining them with the older methods people have been using for years. For example, ________ (17), you can research employment not just in your city, but also in your state, your country, and ________ (18). You can copy information from a web page and paste it into a Microsoft Word document that's easy to ________ (19). In many ways, it's easier now: Just type your job application, click, and ________ (20); it gets there in an instant.【Listening Comprehension】Listening Comprehension 1Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following conversation.1. (A) Entertainment on TV.(B) The news in the US.(C) Being a correspondent.(D) Interpreting news.2. (A) The news is just entertainment.(B) The news is shallow.(C) The news gets reported in the same style.(D) The news is boring.3. (A) The news offers easy information that doesn't mean much to you.(B) The news makes you feel like you're learning, but actually you're not.(C) The news is just another popular entertainment program like a sitcom.(D) The news must be presented by physically attractive ladies.4. (A) More entertaining.(B)More in-depth.(C)Less informative.(D) Less interesting.5. (A) Newspapers. (B) Radio.(C) TV. (D) The Internet.Listening Comprehension 2Question 6 to 10 are based on the following news.6. (A) A trade show of the latest sporting goods is on display.(B) An event for team sports is held with the country's best athletes.(C) A spring market fair for cutting equipment and accessories is open.(D) A business rendezvous is scheduled between VIPs and the best athletes.7. (A) Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 and Mozilla Firefox 2.(B) SnapBack, a private browser that does not store individual information.(C) A built-in RSS reader to quickly scan the latest news and information.(D) Safari 3, the world's fastest and easiest-to-use web browser.8. (A) Heavy rain triggered floods which caused heavy casualties and damage.(B) Harsh drought had been going on for several years and killed some people.(C) 23 people were missing after a storm hit a village in the mountainous province.(D) Authorities were searching for the people who had crossed the border from other countries.9. (A) Two soldiers hijacked a jet plane full of passengers in flight.(B) The hijackers were captured after killing one of the hostages.(C) A military unit arrested the hijackers with no one injured or killed.(D) The hijacked plane landed safely at an airport in a neighboring country.10. (A) $683.30. (B) $ 900, 000.(C) C$1 million. (D) C$2 million.Listening Comprehension 3Questions 11-15 are based on the following interview.11. (A) TV programs.(B) Media coverage on crime.(C) The school system.(D) Juvenile crime.12. (A) The problem has been overdone by the media.(B) The messages the kids get make them like that.(C) The school has not done enough to help the kids.(D) Some kids are essentially violent.13. (A) Giving the kids a more caring environment.(B) Setting up a responsible school system.(C) Taking harsh actions against violence in the school.(D) Keeping the kids under one-to-one surveillance.14. (A) Do supervised activities.(B) Take instructional programs.(C) Stay in school for supper.(D) Go in for sports.15. (A) Because they can help set good role models.(B) Because they can stop white-collar crime.(C) Because they can reduce crime.(D) Because they can make criminals feel fair.Listening Comprehension 4Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.16. (A) Workplace inequality.(B) Sexism in language.(C) The AIDS crisis.(D) The way the mass media treats women.17. (A) Language and thought definitely influence each other.(B) It is impossible to understand the relationship between the two.(C) What we think certainly determines what we say.(D) What we say very probably affects what we think.18. (A) The professional world.(B) The United Nations publications.(C) The international women's organization.(D) The feminist movement.19. (A) Nouns don't have a gender in English.(B) Spanish nouns have two genders.(C) German nouns are either masculine or feminine.(D) The issues of gender vary across-languages.20. (A) How some publications avoid sexist language.(B) Why we have to avoid sexism in English.(C) The efforts we have already taken to eliminate sexism.(D) The gender issues in different languages.【Note taking & Gap filling】Today's lecture is about the mass ________ (1) of the world's population. There are two major ________ (2) why people are moving to cities. The first reason is ________ (3). People are moving to the cities because that's where they can find ________ (4) and earn money. The second reason for the move to cities has to do with ________ (5) of life issues: comfort and ________ (6). Cities often offerbetter ________ (7). And then for many, city life is just more ________ (8). An interesting consequence of urbanization is that the average ________ (9) of people in the countryside is increasing, while that of the cities is ________ (10).Three key ________ (11) can be identified in our cities. First of all, they're getting bigger. Most cities are bigger now than ever before. Cities are also changing shape. They're getting ________ (12), because land is getting more and more expensive. ________ (13) have become a symbol of modern cities.Cities are also changing shape in other ways. The ________ (14) Model and The ________ (15) Nuclei Model are probably more typical of the cities we know today. They show the urban ________ (16) that's occurring in contemporary cities.The third change is that our cities are breaking up into ________ (17) communities, often by ________ (18) group or ________ (19) level. This often means that people stay within their community and do not come into contact with others from different ________ (20).Sentence Translation(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)Passage translation(1)(2)。
[商务英语]2007年11月商务英语BEC考试高级口试真题
Speaking Test Part II 1. Customer Relations: the importance of making customers feel valued2. Company growth: the importance to a company of controlling expansion3. Marketing: how to ensure that agents maintain a high level of effectiveness when representing a company4. Time Management: the importance of planning work time effectively5. Project Development: how to ensure inter-departmental co-operation on new projects6. Purchasing: how to evaluate and select new products7. Personnel Management: the importance to a company of having well motivated staff8. Strategic Planning: how to decide whether to purchase or rent company premises9. Sales: how to ensure that price levels for new products are set appropriately10. Communication Skills: the importance of foreign language training for selected employees11. Advertising: how to select a suitable agency to handle a company’s advertising12. Finance: how to decide whether to float a company on the stock-market13. Marketing: the importance to a company of offering its products on the world-wide web14. Staff Training: how to evaluate the effectiveness of company training programmes15. Company Growth: how to decide when it is the right time for a business to expand16. Public Relations: the importance to a company of sponsoring well-known personalities from the arts and popular culture17. Recruitment: how to ensure that the best candidate for a post is selected18. Information Management: how to analyse and make effective use of information19. Sales: the importance of brand image in ensuring that products or services sell well20. Technology: the importance to a company of keeping up-to-date with internet developments21. Quality Control: how to ensure that a company consistently maintains quality control standards22. Product Promotion: how to make effective use of the media when promotinga new product or service23. Product Management: the importance of teamwork for the effective management of projects24. Health and Safety: how to develop a responsible attitude among staff to the health and safety requirements of accompany25. Technology: the importance of computer skills for the workplace of the future26. Communications: how to ensure that e-mail is used appropriately by staff for internal and external communications27. Staff Development: how to administer a staff budget effectively28. Market Research: the importance of finding out about customers’ habits and attitudes29. Financial Management: how to identify ways of reducing costs in a company30. Communication: how to achieve an effective working relationship between different departments within a company31. Communication skills: the importance of understanding cultural differences when working in an international environment32. Personnel Management: the importance of providing employees with clear job deions33. Company Growth: how to ensure that company growth proceeds at the optimum rate34. Time Management: how to manage a heavy workload effectively35. Health and Safety: the importance to a company of having a Health and Safety policy36. Human Resources: how to ensure that staff at all levels receive appropriate feedback on individual performanceSamples(部分口语试题参考答案)1、Customer Relations: how to maintain customer interest in a company’s productsAs is know to all, it is very important for a company to maintaincustomer interest in their products. I think a company should try everypossible way to retain its current customers.First, it should always make sure that it provides its customerswith quality goods and after-sales service. Second, it should layenough emphasis on the feedback from its current customers and takeprompt action to take care of their needs and demands. Third, ifpossible it may provide some incentives to its old customers. Forexample, it can grant a certain discount to them if their purchasesreach a certain amount. Apart from all these, a company should designstrategies to attract new customers and create transactions with them,to expand their customer base, so to speak. These strategies includeproduct diversification and upgrading.All in all, a company should try its utmost to keep its currentcustomers satisfied with its products and services, and at the sametime it should stay ahead of the market through product and pricingstrategies.2、How to fill a key vacancyIn order to fill a key vacancy, a company will usually follow the same standard procedure.It will begin by producing an accurate job deion of what it wouldlike the successful candidate to do. From this, it can then produce aprofile of this ideal candidate, which is a list of skills, experience,attributes and so on.Having produced this profile, the company must then decide on thebest recruitment method to capture a candidate with this profile. Thismight be an internal advertisement or an external advertisement in anewspaper, on the Internet say, even an agency or perhaps a headhunter.Having decided on the best recruitment method, the advertisementsare then placedor the headhunter contacted and a list of candidateswill be then drawn up to be put through the company’s recruitmentprocesses. This might be interviews, psychometric tests or evenhand-writing analysis. This will then produce the ideal candidate forthe company.The company will then have to negotiate terms with this candidateand, hopefully, this will result in terms which are both affordable forthe company and attractive enough to get the candidate they want.Background Information3、Career Planning: how to assess the career opportunities provided by different types of companiesCareer PlanningEven after a job is offered and accepted, career decisions must bemade. On-the-job experience may affect the desired path. Aspiring toachieve a position above the present position is natural. The plannedcareer path to that position may involve either a series of promotionswithin the firm or switching to a different firm. While planning acareer path is a useful motivator, the plans should be achievable. Ifeveryone planned to be president of a company, most plans would not beachieved. This can cause frustration. A preferable career path wouldinclude short-term goals, since some ultimate goals may take twentyyears or longer. The use of short-term goals can reinforce confidenceas goals are achieved.Career Development: the importance of acquiring a range of skills throughout your careerIt is important a person to have a range of skills in the courseof his career development. When he has a range of skills, he isobviously more competitive than those who don’t and therefore has morechances of promotion. And it will be easier for him to find a joboutside his company if he is not satisfied with his present job. Inaddition, a person with a range of skills is more likely to work hisway up to the top of the corporate ladder.4、Human Resources: how to provide effective support for new members of staffTraining: The importance of a continuous programme of staff training within a companyStaff Management: how to achieve and maintain high motivation among a workforce Motivating Employees: Employees tend to be more satisfied withtheir jobs if they are provided (1) compensation that is aligned withtheir performance, (2) job security, (3) a flexible work schedule, and(4) employee involvement programs. Firms should offer job security,compensation that is tied to employee performance, more flexible workschedules, and more employee involvement programs. To the extent thatjob satisfaction can motivate employees to improve their performance,firms may be able to a higher production level by providing greater jobsatisfaction.5、Marketing ResearchManagers cannot always wait for information to arrive in bits andpieces from the marketing intelligence system. They often requireformal studies of specific situations. For example, Toshiba wants toknow how many and what kinds of people or companies will buy its newsuperfast laptop computer. Or Barat College in Lake Forest,Illinois,needs to know what percentage of its target market has heard of Barat,how they heard, what they know, and how they feel about Barat. In suchsituations, the marketing intelligence system will not provide thedetailed information needed. Managers will need marketing research.We define marketing research as the systematic design, collection,analysis, and reporting of data and findings relevant to a specificmarketing situation facing an organization. Every marketer needsresearch. Marketing researchers engage in a wide variety of activities,ranging from market potential and market share studies, to assessmentsof customer satisfaction and purchase behavior, to studies of pricing,distribution, and promotion activities.A company can conduct marketing research in its own researchdepartment or have some or all of it done outside. Although most largecompanies have their own marketing research departments, they often useoutside firms to do special research tasks or studies. A company withno research department has to buy the services of research firms.6、Marketing: the importance of packaging products appropriatelyIn recent times, numerous factors have made packaging an importantmarketing tool. Increased competition and clutter on retail storeshelves means that packages now must perform many sales tasks-fromattracting attention, to describing the product, to making the panies are realizing the power of good packaging to create instantconsumer recognition of the company or brand. For example, in anaverage supermarket, which stocks 15,000 to 17,000 items, the typicalshopper passes by some 300 items per minute, and 53 percent of allpurchases are made on impulse. In this highly competitive environment,the package may be the seller’s last chance to influence buyers. Itbecomes a "five-second commercial." The Campbell Soup Company estimatesthat the average shopper sees its familiar red and white can 76 times ayear, creating the equivalent of $26 million worth of advertising.7、Market Research: the importance of doing market research before launchinga new productSales: How to sell a product effectively in international marketsProduct Promotion: the importance of selecting appropriate members of staff to attend exhibitionsCommunication: the importance in business of maintaining contact with clients Public Relations: the importance of adequate supervision and training of staff who deal with the public8、Management: How to run a meeting successfullyTransport Management: the importance to a business of an efficient public transport systemAny distribution of products from producers to wholesalers or fromwholesalers to retailers requires transportation. The cost oftransporting some products can exceed the cost of producing them. Anefficient form of transportation can result in higher costs and lowerprofits for the firm. For each form of transportation, firms shouldestimate timing, cost, and availability. This assessment allows thefirm to choose an optimal method of transportation. The most commonforms of transportationused to distribute products are truck, rail,air, water, pipeline.Transport Management: the importance of using environmentally friendly means of transport whenever possible9、Health & SafetyEmployee Safety: Firms ensure that the workplace is safe foremployees by closely monitoring the production process. Some obvioussafety precautions are to check machinery and equipment for properworking conditions, require safety glasses or any other equipment thatone can prevent injury, and emphasize any special safety precautions intraining seminars.Firms that create a safe working environment prevent injuries andimprove the morale of their employees. Many firms, such as AlliedSignal, now identify workplace safety as one of their main goals. LeviStrauss and Company imposes safety guidelines not only its U.S.facilities but also on Asian factories where some of its clothes aremade. Starbucks Coffee Company has developed a code of conduct in anattempt to improve the quality of life in coffee-producing countries.10、Life Skills: the importance of being able to cope with stress in a jobTechnology: the importance of training staff in how to use new technology when introducing it into the workplace.。
厦大口译07春1级
2007年春季厦门大学英语口译资格证书考试1级试题2007年春季厦门大学英语口译资格证书考试1级试题第一部分:单句口译1. 汉译英1.请问,明天有到上海的航班吗?我要买两张从新加坡到上海的机票。
2.请替我叫一辆出租车送我到机场,我要赶11点30分的飞机,谢谢。
3.我想订一个标准房,打算住一个星期。
4.这个旅馆有洗衣服务吗?5.请问,在哪儿可以兑换人民币?6.筷子您用得习惯吗?7.请给我一杯冰镇啤酒。
8.我只有今天有时间游览,您觉得我应该看哪个景点?9.这个城市有游览观光巴士吗?10.悉尼实在太美了,它给我留下美好而深刻的印象。
2. English to Chinese1.May I take your order, sir?2.Go along this road, when you come to a crossroad, turn left, you can’t miss it.3.Excuse me, would you tell me where the nearest internet café is, please?4.If you need a taxi, you can ask the reception desk to book one for you.5.Please feel free to ask us any questions you may have during your visit.6.Recently I’ve been finding it hard to fall asleep when I go to bed at night.7.Thank you doctor. I’ll do what you say.8.Thank you so much, I really had a nice evening. The meal was excellent.9.What is the population of this city? Is there a subway system?10.I very much appreciate everything you have done for me during my stay.第二部分:对话口译Situation:Mr liu, the Manager of the Shanghai International Trade Corperation, invites Mr Johnson to a farewell dinner after a successful negotiation. You are interpreting for them.Johnson: Mr Liu, thank you so much for inviting me to dinner.刘先生: 很高兴您能出席今天这个晚宴。
2007年03月~2013年09月高级口译汉译英翻译真题及答案
2007年03月~2013年09月高级口译汉译英翻译真题及答案一、2007年03月翻译二(汉译英):中国政府高度重视保护环境,认为保护环境关系到国家现代化建设的全局和长远发展,是造福当代、惠及子孙的事业。
中国政府将环境保护确立为一项基本国策,在推进经济发展的同时,采取一系列措施加强保护环境。
特别是近年来,中国政府坚持预防为主、综合治理、全面推进、重点突破,着力解决危害人民群众健康的突出环境问题;坚持创新体制机制,领先科学进步,强化环境法治,发挥社会各方面的积极性。
经过努力,环境污染和生态破坏加剧的趋势减缓,部分流域污染治理初见成效,部分城市和地区环境质量有所改善,全社会保护环境意识进一步增强。
汉译英答案:The Chinese government attaches great importance to environmental protection. It believes that environmental protection has a bearing on the overall situation of China’s modernization drive and its long-term development and that it is an undertaking which will not only benefit the Chinese people of today but also bring benefit to their children and grand children. The Chinese government has established environmental protection as a basic national policy. While promoting economic growth, it has adopted a series of measures to protect the environment. Especially in recent years, adhering to the principle of prevention first, comprehensive control, entire push-on and key-point breakthrough, Chinese government has made great efforts to solve those outstanding environmental problems that threaten people’s health. It has persisted in institutional innovation, relied on technological advances, strengthened the role of law in environmental protection and brought into full play the initiative of various sectors of the society. Thanks to these efforts, the trend toward aggravated environmental pollution and ecological destruction has slowed down, pollution control in some river basins has achieved some initial success, the environmental quality of some cities and regions has improved to some extent, and the people’s awareness of the importance of environmental protection has increased further.二、2007年09月翻译二(汉译英):据说,上海男人是最好丈夫。
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07年春季高级口译考试真题试卷>> 07年春季高级口译考试听力部分音频Part A: Spot DictationDirection: In this part of the test, you will hear a passage and read the same passage with blanks in it. Fill in each of the blanks with the words you have heard on the tape. Write your answer in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. Remember you will hear the passage ONL Y ONCE.Most "unassertive" people are not confident and take no for an answer much too easily. There is a growing awareness in our society that this tendency ________ (1) the rights of large numbers of people. For example, in recent years there has been an upsurge in ________ (2) and pressure groups. This is a ________ (3) as there will always be a need for such organizations to ________ (4) individuals and minorities in a competitive society. The danger is that we ________ (5) for our rights and lose the art of asserting ourselves. It is better for ________ (6) with other people if you can learn ________ (7) for yourself.Now, we have to learn to ignore some of the ________ (8) that may be ringing in our unconscious minds, such as: "If you ask once more, I'll flatten you", and" ________ (9)".The main technique that we use in ________ (10) to practice the art of persistence is called Broken Record. ________ (11) we hear one sentence over and over again until we reach screaming pitch and ________ (12).Broken Record is the skill of being able to repeat over and over again, ________ (13), what it is you want or need, until the other person gives in or ________ (14).Now, this technique is extremely useful for dealing with situations where your rights are clearly________ (15), or coping with situations where you are likely to be diverted by clever, ________ (16).The beauty of using Broken Record is that you________ (17) because you know exactly what you are going to say, however________ (18) the other person tries to be.As with most assertive techniques, it must be used appropriately. It is ________ (19) and is not designed to foster deep, interesting conversations and friendships with people! It is primarily of use in situations where ________ (20).Part B: Listening ComprehensionDirections: In this part of the test there will be some short talks and conversations. After each one, you will be asked some questions. The talks, conversations and questions will be spoken ONL Y ONCE. Now listen carefully and choose the right answer to each question you have heard and write the letter of the answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following conversation.1. (A) Education and health.(B) Health in adolescence.(C) Sleep deprivation in teens.(D) Mysteries of sleep.2. (A) A balance in cognitive thoughts and emotions.(B) A chronic sleep deprivation.(C) A huge wave of sleepiness.(D) A mighty sleep hormone.3. (A) Melatonin is the source of a big push from biology that makes teenagers night owls.(B) Melatonin is a simple signal that turns on in the morning and turns off in the evening.(C) Melatonin is secreted several hours later in childhood than it will be during adolescence.(D) Melatonin doesn't shut off until 11 o'clock P.M. every day.4. (A) They have to struggle to stay up all night.(B) They get severely sleep deprived.(C) They very often oversleep.(D) They fall asleep too soon at night.5. (A) Alertness.(B) Reaction time.(C) Emotion.(D) Concentration.Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following news.6. (A) Corporate executives are confident in the stock market trends.(B) Investors in general believe that the outlook for profits is worsening.(C) Some major company executives are selling more shares than buying.(D) The US stock market is expanding at a 5.6 percent annual rate this year.7. (A) To inspect the shuttle for potentially critical heat shield damage.(B) To rewire the space station for a permanent power source.(C) To beat the odds to get off the launch pad in the first night-time launch.(D) To make a fiery ascent that turns night into day.8. (A) 50.(B) 80.(C) 150.(D) 180.9. (A) Forty-five women were killed in the blaze at a drug treatment center.(B) The fire was not caused by arson according to a senior firefighter.(C) Nine mentally ill patients died in the fire.(D) People were trapped behind locked gates and barred windows.10. (A) Two detectives investigating the case had tested positive for traces of radiation.(B) The ex-wife and the former mother-in-law of the spy were also poisoned.(C) The Russian businessman who met the former spy in London has fallen ill.(D) There is a high degree of probability that it is polonium that killed the spy.Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following interview.11. (A) Closed to the public. (B) Silent and empty.(C) Packed with (D) Strangely crowded.12. (A) New Mexico. (B) Minnesota.(C) The coast of Florida. (D) The Caribbean.13. (A) Several gallons of petrol. (B) Food for at least three days.(C) Plenty of drinking water. (D) A sturdy pair of work boots.14. (A) The potential damage.(B) The unexpected temperature changes.(C) The hurricane's possible path.(D) The vulnerability of the locals.15. (A) Watch, wait and try not to panic.(B) Choose another place for a vacation.(C) Ask for their money back if there's a hurricane.(D) Plan for very bad weather.Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following talk.16. (A) Car alarms.(B) Sirens.(C) Jack-hammers.(D) Loud music.17. (A) Break eggs on the road.(B) Take certain legal action.(C) Use some minor retaliatory step.(D) Paint the windshield or front hood of a car.18. (A) It can only alert the police.(B) It is of no use.(C) It can prevent the car being broken into.(D) It is really too expensive.19. (A) It makes them noisier than they were 20 years ago.(B) It makes it difficult for them to fall asleep.(C) It affects their work during the day.(D) It does harm to their hearing.20. (A) Many New Yorkers agree about banning this form of sonic pollution.(B) The police have formed a posse to reduce the amount of noise.(C) Police can break into a car as soon as the alarm goes off.(D) Car alarms are very effective at preventing theft.http:/SECTION 2: READING TESTDirections: In this section you will read several passages. Each one is followed by several questions about it. You are to choose ONE best answer, (A), (B), (C) or (D), to each question. Answer all the questions following each passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in that passage and write the letter of the answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.Questions 1-5When Harvey Ball took a black felt-tip pen to a piece of yellow paper in 1963, he never could have realized that he was drafting the face that would launch 50 million buttons and an eventual war over copyright. Mr. Ball, a commercial artist, was simply filling a request from Joy Young of the Worcester Mutual Insurance Company to create an image for their "smile campaign" to coach employees to be more congenial in their customer relations. It seems there was a hunger for a bright grin—the original order of 100 smiley-face buttons were snatched up and an order for 10,000 more was placed at once.The Worcester Historical Museum takes this founding moment seriously. "Just as you'd want to know the biography of General Washington, we realized we didn't know the comprehensive history of the Smiley Face," says Bill Wallace, the executive director of the historical museum where the exhibit "Smiley—An American Icon" opens to the public Oct. 6 in Worcester, Mass. Worcester, often referred to by neighboring Bostonians as "that manufacturing town off Route 90," lays claim to several other famous commercial firsts, the monkey wrench and shredded wheat among them. Smiley Face is a particularly warm spot in the city's history. Through a careful historical analysis, Mr. Wallace says that while the Smiley Face birthplace is undisputed, it took several phases of distribution before the distinctive rounded-tipped smile with one eye slightly larger than the other proliferated in the mainstream.As the original buttons spread like drifting pollen with no copyright attached, a bank in Seattle next realized its commercial potential. Under the guidance of advertising executive David Stern, the University Federal Savings & Loan launched a very public marketing campaign in 1967 centered on the Smiley Face. It eventually distributed 150,000 buttons along with piggy banks and coin purses. Old photos of the bank show giant Smiley Face wallpaper.By 1970, Murray and Bernard Spain, brothers who owned a card shop in Philadelphia, were affixing the yellow grin to everything from key chains to cookie jars along with "Have a happy day." "In the 1970s, there was a trend toward happiness," says Wallace. "We had assassinated a president, we were in a war with Vietnam, and people were looking for [tokens of] happiness. [The Spain brothers] ran with it."The Smiley Face resurged in the 1990s. This time it was fanned by a legal dispute between Wal-Mart, who uses it to promote its low prices, and Franklin Loufrani, a Frenchman who owns a company called SmileyWorld. Mr. Loufrani says he created the Smiley Face and has trademarked it around the world. He has been distributing its image in 80 countries since 1971.Loufrani's actions irked Ball, who felt that such a universal symbol should remain in the public domain in perpetuity. So in a pleasant proactive move, Ball declared in 1999 that the first Friday in October would be "World Smile Day" to promote general kindness and charity toward children in need. Ball died in 2001.The Worcester exhibit opens on "World Smile Day", Oct. 6. It features a plethora of Smiley Face merchandise—from the original Ball buttons to plastic purses and a toilet seat—and contemporary interpretations by local artists. The exhibit is scheduled to run through Feb. 11.1. According to the passage, the Worcester Historical Museum ______.(A) concentrates on the collection of the most famous commercial firsts the city has invented(B) has composed a comprehensive history of the Smiley Face through the exhibition(C) treats Smiley Face as the other famous commercial firsts the city has produced(D) has organized the exhibit to arouse the Americans' patriotism2. When the author used the expression "spread like drifting pollen "(para.4) to describe the gradual distribution of Smiley Face, he implies that ________.(A) Harvey Ball did not claim the copyright of the yellow grin button(B) the Smiley Face was immediately accepted by the public(C) the button was not sold as an ordinary commercial product(D) Harvey Ball had the intention to abandon the copyright of Smiley Face3. Why did Bill Wallace mention the assassination of the then American president and the Vietnam War in the 1970s?(A) To have a review of the contemporary American history.(B) To remind people that we should never forget the past.(C) To explain why Americans liked the Smiley Face during that period.(D) To show how the Spain brothers made a fortune through selling the yellow grin.4. In the expression "Loufrani's actions irked Ball" (para.7), the word "irked" can best be replaced by ______.(A) perplexed(B) provoked(C) irritated(D) challenged5. Which of the following is NOT true about the "World Smile Day"?(A) It was established to commemorate the founder Harvey Ball.(B) It was to promote general kindness and charity toward children in need.(C) It was declared by Harvey Ball in 1999.(D) It was decided to be held on the first Friday in October each year.Questions 6-10Good teachers matter. This may seem obvious to anyone who has a child in school or, for that matter, to anyone who has been a child in school. For a long time, though, researchers couldn't actually prove that teaching talent was important. But new research finally shows that teacherquality is a close cousin to student achievement: A great teacher can cram one-and-a-half grades' worth of learning into a single year, while laggards are lucky to accomplish half that much. Parents and kids, it seems, have been right all along to care whether they were assigned to Mrs. Smith or Mr. Brown.Yet, while we know now that better teachers are critical, flaws in the way that administrators select and retain them mean that schools don't always hire the best.Many ingredients for good teaching are difficult to ascertain in advance—charisma and diligence come to mind—but research shows a teacher's own ability on standardized tests reliably predicts good performance in the classroom. You would think, then, that top-scoring teachers would be swimming in job offers, right? Not so, says Vanderbilt University professor Dale Ballou. High-scoring teaching applicants "do not fare better than others in the job market," he writes. "Indeed, remarkably they do somewhat worse."Even more surprising, given the national shortage of highly skilled math and science teachers, school administrators are more keen to hire education majors than applicants who have math or science degrees. No one knows for sure why those who hire teachers routinely overlook top talent. Perhaps they wrongly think that the qualifications they shun make little difference for students. Also, administrators are probably naturally drawn to teachers who remind them of themselves. But failing to recognize the qualities that make teachers truly effective (and to construct incentives to attract and retain more of these top performers) has serious consequences. For example, because schools don't always hire the best applicants, across-the-board salary increases cannot improve teacher quality much, and may even worsen it. That's because higher salaries draw more weak as well as strong applicants into teaching—applicants the current hiring system can't adequately screen. Unless administrators have incentives to hire the best teachers available, it's pointless to give them a larger group to choose from.If public school hiring processes are bad, their compensation policies are worse. Most districts pay solely based on years of experience and the presence of a master's degree, a formula that makes the Federal General Schedule—which governs pay for U.S. bureaucrats—look flexible. Study after study has shown that teachers with master's degrees are no better than those without. Job experience does matter, but only for the first few years, according to research by Hoover Institution's Eric A. Hanushek. A teacher with 15 years of experience is no more effective, on average, than a teacher with five years of experience, but which one do you think is paid more? This toxic combination of rigid pay and steep rewards for seniority causes average quality to decline rather than increase as teacher groups get older. Top performers often leave the field early for industries that reward their excellence. Mediocre teachers, on the other hand, are soon overcompensated by seniority pay. And because they are paid more than their skills command elsewhere, these less-capable pedagogues settle in to provide many years of ineffectual instruction.So how can we separate the wheat from the chaff in the teaching profession? To make American schools competitive, we must rethink seniority pay, the value of master's degrees, and the notion that a teacher can teach everything equally well—especially math and science—without appropriate preparation in the subject.Our current education system is unlikely to accomplish this dramatic rethinking. Imagine, for a moment, that American cars had been free in recent decades, while Toyotas and Hondas sold at full price. We'd probably be driving Falcons and Corvairs today. Free public education suffers from a lack of competition in just this way. So while industries from aerospace to drugs have transformed themselves in order to compete, public schooling has stagnated.School choice could spark the kind of reformation this industry needs by motivating administrators to hire the best and adopt new strategies to keep top teachers in the classroom. The lesson that good teachers matter should be taught, not as a theory, but as a practice.6. The beginning sentence "Good teachers matter." can mainly be explained as which of the following?(A) Good teachers help students establish confidence.(B) Good teachers determine the personality of students.(C) Good teachers promote student achievement.(D) Good teachers treat students as their own children.7. According to the author, seniority pay favors ________.(A) good teachers' with master's degrees(B) young and effective teachers(C) experienced and effective teachers(D) mediocre teachers of average quality8. The expression "separate the wheat from the chaff in the teaching profession" is closest in meaning to ________.(A) distinguish better teachers from less capable ones(B) differentiate young teachers from old ones(C) tell the essential qualities of good teaching(D) reevaluate the role of senior teachers9. When the author uses the automobile industry as an example, she argues that ________.(A) Japan's auto industry is exceeding America's auto industry(B) the public schooling has stagnated because of competition(C) the current American education system is better than the Japanese one(D) competition must be introduced into the public education system10. Which of the following CANNOT be concluded from the passage?(A) Most average teachers want to leave school because of high pressure.(B) Excellent teachers often leave schools for better jobs.(C) The average quality of the teachers in America is declining.(D) Teachers' quality is closely related to a number of factors.Questions 11-15The British author Salman Rushdie is selling his personal archive to a wealthy American university. The archive, which includes personal diaries written during the decade that he spent living in hiding from Islamic extremists, is being bought by the Emory University in Atlanta for an undisclosed sum. The move has sparked concern that Britain's literary heritage is being lost toforeign buyers. The archive also includes two unpublished novels.Rushdie, 59, said last week that his priority had been to "find a good home" for his papers, but admitted that money had also been a factor. "I don't see why I should give them away," he said. "It seemed to me quite reasonable that one should be paid." The sum involved is likely to match or exceed similar deals. In 2003 Emory bought the archive of Ted Hughes, the late poet laureate, for a reported $600,000. Julian Barnes, the author of Flaubert's Parrot, is said to have sold his papers to the University of Texas at Austin for $200,000.Rushdie was born in Bombay (Mumbai) but educated in Britain. His book Midnight's Children was voted the best Booker prize winner in 25 years and he is regarded as a leading British literary novelist. The sale of his papers will annoy the British Library, which is about to hold a conference to discuss how to stop famous writers' archives being sold abroad.Yesterday Clive Field, the director .of scholarship and collections at the library, said: "I am pleased that Rushdie's papers will be preserved in a publicly accessible institution, but disappointed that we didn't have an opportunity to discuss the acquisition of the archive with him." Rushdie' said the British Library "never asked me about the archive".Emory University enjoys a large endowment thanks to a student who became a senior executive at Coca-Cola, and already holds the archives of the poets W B Yeats and Seamus Heaney, as well as Hughes. "Emory seems to be very serious about building a collection of contemporary literature," said Rushdie. "Not only do they have the papers of Hughes and Heaney, but also Paul Muldoon and other writers. I got the sense that they want to collect contemporary novelists as well and it just felt very good to be part of that."Rushdie, who now lives in New York, has accepted a position as a visiting fellow and will spend a month on the campus in Decatur, a leafy suburb of Atlanta, every year until 2012. "They asked if I'd ever thought about putting my archive anywhere and, to tell you the truth, until that moment I really hadn't," Rushdie said."My archive is so voluminous that I don't have room in my house for it and it's in an outside storage facility. I was worried about that and wanted to feel it was in a safe place." The papers will be open for scholars to study with one key exception: the "fatwa" diaries that Rushdie wrote under threat of death from Islamic extremists for writing The Satanic Verses. He spent a decade in hiding under the protection of Scotland Yard after Ayatollah Khomeini, then leader of Iran, called the book "blasphemous against Islam" in 1989.The author may use the diaries as the basis for a book: "I wouldn't want them out in the open, 1 want to be the first person to have a go at the material, whether as a serious autobiography or as a memoir." He was ambivalent about the idea of scholars studying his papers. "The whole thing is very bizarre, you know, it's like imagining someone going through your underwear."The two unpublished novels—The Antagonist, influenced by Thomas Pynchon, the American writer, and The Book of Peer—were written by Rushdie in the 1970s: "The Antagonist was a contemporary London novel, set around Ladbroke Grove where I was living at the time. I think it was embarrassingly Pynchonesque."Chris Smith, the former culture minister who chairs the UK Literary Heritage Working Group, said: "It is a very sad day for British literature and scholarship. Our literary heritage is arguablyour greatest contribution to culture and we should be taking special care to protect that." Andrew Motion, the poet laureate, last week called for the government to remove Vat from unbound papers, which increases the cost of purchases in this country. Stephen Enniss, of Emory University, said: "There is worldwide interest in Rushdie. We are catering for the long-term care of the archive and will welcome scholars from all over the world."11. It can be learned from the passage that the British author Salman Rushdie ______.(A) lived in hiding under the protection of Scotland Yard for a decade(B) had spent the decade living in Scotland Yard until 1998(C) lived in hiding in New York for one decade(D) had moved from place to place since the publication of The Satanic Verses12. According to the passage, the British Library ______.(A) is going to buy back Rushdie's personal archive from Amory University(B) opposes the American universities' acquisition of archives from British literary people(C) has discussed with Salman Rushdie about the acquisition of his personal archive(D) has expressed much concern over foreign buyers' acquisition of Britain's literary heritage13. It can be concluded from the passage that the Emory University has collected the archives of all the following British poets EXCEPT ______.(A) Ted Hughes(B) Andrew Motion(C) W B Yeats(D) Seamus Heaney14. According to the passage, the "fatwa" diaries (para.7) ______.(A) were not included in the archive sold to the Emory University(B) will not be open to the public in the near future(C) were all about the writing of The Satanic Verses(D) will soon be published to expose the persecution of Islamic extremists15. Why was Salman Rushdie ambivalent about the idea of scholars studying his papers?(A) He was afraid that he would be pursued by Islamic extremists again.(B) The scholars might use the papers to write a biography about him.(C) He felt that his privacy might be easily exposed to the public.(D) He could not imagine what kind of consequences would be following.Questions 16-20At the tail end of the 19th century, Friedrich Nietzsche suggested that natural history—which he saw as a war against fear and superstition—ought to be narrated "in such a way that everyone who hears it is irresistibly inspired to strive after spiritual and bodily health and vigour," and he grumbled that artists had yet to discover the right language to do this."Nonetheless," Nietzsche admitted, "the English have taken admirable steps in the direction of that ideal ... the reason is that they [natural history books] are written by their most distinguished scholars—whole, complete and fulfilling natures."The English language tradition of nature writing and narrating natural history is gloriously rich,and although it may not make any bold claims to improving health and wellbeing, it does a good job—for readers and the subjects of the writing. Where the insights of field naturalists meet the legacy of poets such as Clare, Wordsworth, Hughes and Heaney, there emerges a language as vivid as any cultural achievement.That this language is still alive and kicking and read every day in a newspaper is astounding. So to hold a century's worth of country diaries is, for an interloper like me, both an inspiring and humbling experience. But is this the best way of representing nature, or is it a cultural default? Will the next century of writers want to shake loose from this tradition? What happens next? Over the years, nature writers and country diarists have developed an increasingly sophisticated ecological literacy of the world around them through the naming of things and an understanding of the relationships between them. They find ways of linking simple observations to bigger issues by remaining in the present, the particular. For writers of my generation, a nostalgia for lost wildlife and habitats and the business of bearing witness to a war of attrition in the countryside colours what we're about. The anxieties of future generations may not be the same.Articulating the "wild" as a qualitative character of nature and context for the more quantitative notion of biodiversity will, I believe, become a more dynamic cultural project. The re-wilding of lands and seas, coupled with a re-wilding of experience and language, offers fertile ground for writers. A response to the anxieties springing from climate change, and a general fear of nature answering our continued environmental injustices with violence, will need a reassessment of our feelings for the nature we like—cultural landscapes, continuity, native species—as well as the nature we don't like—rising seas, droughts, "invasive" species.Whether future writers take their sensibilities for a walk and, like a pack of wayward dogs unleashed, let them loose in hills and woods to sniff out some fugitive truth hiding in the undergrowth, or choose to honestly recount the this-is-where-I-am, this-is-what-I-see approach, they will be hitched to the values implicit in the language they use. They should challenge these. Perhaps they will see our natural history as a contributor to the commodification of nature and the obsessive managerialism of our times. Perhaps they will see our romanticism as a blanket thrown over the traumatised victim of the countryside. But maybe they will follow threads we found in the writings of others and find their own way to wonder.16. The major theme of the passage is about ______.(A) the 19th century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche(B) the development of the discipline of natural history(C) the English language tradition of nature writing(D) the style of nature writing and country diaries17. In writing the essay, the author seems to be directly talking to the "future generations" and "future writers" probably because ______.(A) they will carry forward the tradition of nature writing(B) they will confront a changing environment and have their own perspective of natural history(C) they will study the causes of climate change and promote the notion and significance of biodiversity(D) they will value more the sophisticated ecological literacy of the nature writers and country diarists。