2018 江苏南京航空航天大学翻译硕士英语考研真题
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I. Vocabulary and Structure (20 points)
Directions: There are 20 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there
are four choices marked A., B., C. and D. Choose the ONE answer that best completes
the sentence. Then write down your answer on the Answer Sheet.
1.Since the couple would not _____ their differences, they decided to get a divorce.
A. resignB. complyC. coincideD. reconcile
2.Alone in a deserted house, he was so busy with his research work that he felt ____
lonely.
A. everything butB. all butC. anything butD. nothing but
3. If each manager makes his usual speech, the meeting will be _____ about 45 minutes.
A. exceededB. delayedC. prolongedD. expanded
4.The boy’s father said, “You’ll learn what discipline is like when you go into
the army. You can’t do as you like there, you know, you have to _____.”
5.If profit and money are your first ______, and commitment to people your least
concern, you have failed education.
A. potentialityB. priorityC. superiorityD. responsibility
6.Her stubbornness _____ her in relationships with other people.
A. prevailedB. prohibitedC. hinderedD. forbade
7.So far as he could, John had always tried to _____ the example he saw in Lincoln.
A. live up toB. set forthC. call forD. cut out
8.With sufficient scientific information a manned trip to Mars should be _______.
A. obtainableB. potentialC. considerableD. feasible
9.The new safety regulations were agreed on after _____ with the workforce.
A. conferenceB. participationC. interventionD. consultation
10. There is not much time left; so I’ll tell you about it _______.
A. in detailB. in beliefC. in shortD. in all
11. ______ men have learned much from the behavior of animals is not new.
A. ThatB. ThoseC. WhatD. Whether
12. He must have had an accident, or he ______ then.
A. would have been hereB. had to be here
C, should be hereD. would be here
13.The second book was _____ by August 1952, but two years later, the end was still
nowhere insight.
A. completedB. to have completedC. to completeD. to have been completed
14.Only by shouting at the top of his voice ______.
A. was he able to make himself hear
B. he was able to make himself hear
C. he was able to make himself heard
D. was he able to make himself heard
15. Having no money but _____ to know, he simply said he would go without dinner.
A. not to want anyoneB. not wanting anyone
C. want no oneD. to want no one
16.People who refuse to _____ with the law will be punished.
A. obeyB. consentC. concealD. comply
17.These excursions will give you an ever deeper ____ into our language and culture.
A. inquiryB. investigationC. inputD. insight
18.Every society has its own peculiar customs and _____ of acting.
A. waysB. behaviorC. attitudesD. means
19.If a person talks about his weak points, his listener is expected to say something
in the way of _____.
A. assuranceB. persuasionC. encouragementD. confirmation
20.China started its nuclear power industry only in recent years, and should _____
no time in catching up.
A. delayB. loseC. lagD. Lessen
II. Reading Comprehension (30 points)
Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some
questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked
A., B., C. and D. You should decide on the best choice and write down your answer
on the Answer Sheet.
Passage 1
The report from the Bureau of Labour Statistics was just as gloomy as anticipated.
Unemployment in January jumped to a 16‐year high of 7.6 percent, as 598,000 jobs
were slashed from US payrolls in the worst single‐month decline since December,
1974. With 1.8 million jobs lost in the last three months, there is urgent desire
to boost the economy as quickly as possible. But Washington would do well to take
a deep breath before reacting to the grim numbers.
Collectively, we rely on the unemployment figures and other statistics to frame our
sense of reality. They are a vital part of an array of data that we use to assess
if we’re doing well or doing badly, and that in turn shapes government policies
and corporate budgets and personal spending decisions. The problem is that the
statistics aren’t an objective measure of reality; they are simply a best
approximation. Directionally, they capture the trends, but the idea that we know
precisely how many are unemployed is a myth. That makes finding a solution all the
more difficult.
First, there is the way the data is assembled. The official unemployment rate is
the product of a telephone survey of about 60,000 homes. There is another survey,
sometimes referred to as the “payroll survey” that assesses 400,000 businesses
based on their reported payrolls. Both surveys have problems. The payroll survey
can easily double‐count someone: if you are one person with two jobs, you show up
as two workers. The payroll survey also doesn’t capture the number of self‐employed,
and so says little about how many people are generating an independent income.
The household survey has a larger problem. When asked straightforwardly, people tend
to lie or shade the truth when the subject is sex, money or employment. If you get
a call and are asked if you’re employed, and you say yes, you’re employed. If you
say no, however, it may surprise you to learn that you are only unemployed if you’ve
been actively looking for work in the past four weeks; otherwise, you are
“marginally attached to the labour force” and not actually unemployed.
The urge to quantify is embedded in our society. But the idea that statisticians
can then capture an objective reality isn’t just impossible. It also leads to
serious misjudgments. Democrats and Republicans can and will take sides on a number
of issues, but a more crucial concern is that both are basing major policy decisions
on guesstimates rather than looking at the vast wealth of raw data with a critical
eye and an open mind.
21.What do we learn from the first passage?
A.The US economic situation is going from bad to worse.
B.Washington is taking drastic measures to provide more jobs.
C.The US government is slashing more jobs from its payrolls.
D.The recent economic crisis has taken the US by surprise.
22.What does the author think of the unemployment figures and other statistics?
A. They form a solid basis for policy‐makingC. They signal future economic trends
B. They represent the current situation.D. They do fully reflect the reality.
23. One problem with the payroll survey is that _____.
A. it does not include all the businessesC. it magnifies the number of the jobless
B. it fails to count in the self‐employedD. it does not treat all companies equally
24.The household survey can be faulty in that ______.
A.people tend to lie when talking on the phone
B.not everybody is willing or ready to respond
C.some people won’t provide truthful information
D.the definition of unemployment is too broad
25.At the end of the passage, the author suggests that ______.
A.statisticians improve their data assembling methods
B.decision‐makers view the statistics with a critical eye
C.politicians listen more before making policy decisions
D.Democrats and Republicans cooperate on crucial issues.
Passage 2
A few years back, the decision to move the Barnes, a respected American art
institution, from its current location in the suburban town of Merion, Pa., to a
site in Philadelphia’s museum district caused an argument‐‐‐not only because
it shamelessly went against the will of the founder, Albert C. Barnes, but also
because it threatened to dismantle a relationship among art, architecture and
landscape critical to the Barnes’s success as a museum.
For any architect taking on the challenge of the new space, the confusion of moral
and design questions might seem overwhelming. What is an architect’s responsibility
to Barnes’s vision of a marvelous but odd collection of early Modern artworks housed
in a rambling 1920s Beaux‐Arts pile? Is it possible to reproduce its spirit in such
a changed setting? Or does trying to replicate the Barnes’s unique atmosphere only
doom you to failure? The answers of the New York architects taking the commission
are not reassuring.
The new Barnes will include many of the features that have become virtually mandatory
in the museum world today‐‐‐conservation and education departments, temporary
exhibition space, auditorium, bookstore, café‐‐‐ making it four times the size
of the old Barnes. The architects have tried to compensate for this by laying out
these spaces in an elaborate architectural procession that is clearly intended to
replicate the peacefulness, if not the fantastic charm, of the old museum.
But the result is a complicated design. Almost every detail seems to ache from the
strain of trying to preserve the spirit of the original building in a very different
context. The failure to do so, despite such an earnest effort, is the strongest
argument yet for why the Barnes should not be moved in the first place.
The old Barnes is by no means an obvious model for a great museum. Inside the lighting
is far from perfect, and the collection itself, mixing masterpieces by Cezanne,
Picasso and Soutine with second‐rate paintings by lesser‐known artists, has a
distinctly odd flavor. But these apparent flaws are also what have made the Barnes
one of the country’s most charming exhibition spaces.
But today the new Barnes is after a different kind of audience. Although museum
officials say the existing limits on crowd size will be kept, it is clearly meant
to draw bigger numbers and more tourists dollars. For most visitors the relationship
to the art will feel less immediate.
26.The Old Barnes becomes a successful museum mainly because of _______.
A.the beneficial geographical position in a suburban town
B.its unique design and orderly collection of arts
C.the influence of its founder Albert C. Barnes
D.the perfect connection among art, architecture and landscape
27.The biggest challenge architects face in building the new Barnes is _______.
A.the ethical and design problems
B.the difficulty to retain its original peacefulness
C.the lack of confidence in undertaking the task
D.the difficulty to put all the artworks in a smaller space
28.According to the passage, the new Barnes will ______.
A. be completely the same as the old one
C. be changed into an art education center
B. take up more space than the old one
D. be forced to be modern in appearance
29.Why does the author oppose to relocate the Barnes?
A.The relocation means disrespect to the person who runs it.
B.Architectures’ complicated design will make the museum charmless.
C.The spirit of the old Barnes will be gone in a different place.
D.The multiple functions of the new Barnes will destroy the collection.
30.What do we know about the old Barnes from the fifth paragraph?
A.It is a food example of the great modern museums.
B.It is downgraded by the mixture of different paintings.
C.The world‐famous painters’ works make it a charming place.
D.It is the seeming imperfection that makes it attractive.
Passage 3
For me, scientific knowledge is divided into mathematical sciences, natural sciences
or sciences dealing with the natural world (physical and biological sciences), and
sciences dealing with mankind (psychology, sociology, all the sciences of cultural
achievements, every kind of historical knowledge). Apart from these sciences is
philosophy, about which we will talk later. In the first place, all this is pure
or theoretical knowledge, sought only for the purpose of understanding, in order
to fulfill the need to understand what is intrinsic and consubstantial to man. What
distinguishes man from animal is that he knows and needs to know. If man did not
know that the world existed, and that the world was of a certain kind, that he was
in the world and that he himself was equally necessary for man and are of the greatest
importance, because they also contribute to defining him as man and permit him to
pursue a life increasingly more truly human.
But even while enjoying the results of technical progress, he must defend the primacy
and autonomy of pure knowledge. Knowledge sought directly for its practical
applications will have immediate and foreseeable success, but not the kind of
important result whose revolutionary scope is in large part unforeseen, except by
the imagination of the Utopians. Let me recall a well‐known example. If the Green
mathematicians had not applied themselves to the investigation of conic sections(圆
锥曲线), zealously and without the least suspicion that it might someday be useful,
it would not have been possible centuries later to navigate far from shore. The first
men to study the nature of electricity could not imagine that their experiments,
carried on because of mere intellectual curiosity, would eventually lead to modern
electrical technology, without which we can scarcely conceive of contemporary life.
Pure knowledge is valuable for its own sake, because the human spirit cannot resign
itself to ignorance. But, in addition, it is the foundation for practical results
that would not have been reached if this knowledge had not been sought
disinterestedly.
31. The most important advances made by mankind come from _____.
A. technical applicationsB. apparently useless information
C. the natural sciencesD. philosophy
32. The author does not include among the sciences the study of _______.
A. chemistryB. astronomyC. economicsD. anthropology
33. In the paragraph that follows this passage, we may expect the author to discuss
_____.
A. the value of technical researchB. the value of pure research
C. philosophyD. scientific foundations
34. The title below that best expressed the ideas of this passage is _______.
A. Technical ProgressB. A Little Learning Is a Dangerous Thing
C. Man’s Distinguishing CharacteristicsD. Learning for Its Own Sake
35. The practical scientist _______.
A. knows the value of what he will discoverB. is interested in the unknown
C. knows that the world existsD. conceives of contemporary life
Passage 4
Every year thousands of people are arrested and taken to court for shop‐lifting.
In Britain alone, about HK $ 3 000 000’s worth of goods are stolen from shops every
week. This amounts to something like HK$150 million a year, and represents about
4 percent of the shop’s total stock. As a result of this “shrinkage” as the shops
call it, the honest public has to pay higher prices.
Shoplifters can be divided into three main categories: the professionals, the
deliberate amateur, and the people who just can’t help themselves. The
professionals do not pose much of a problem for the store detectives, who, assisted
by closed circuit television, two‐way mirrors and various other technological
devices, can usually cope with them. The professionals tend to go for high value
goods in parts of the shops where security measures are tightest. And, in any case,
they account for only a small percentage of the total losses due to shoplifting.
The same applies to the deliberate amateur who is, so to speak, a professional in
training. Most of them get caught sooner or later, and they are dealt with severely
by the courts.
The real problem is the person who gives way to a sudden temptation and is in all
other respects an honest and law‐biding citizen. Contrary to what one would expect,
this kind of shoplifter is rarely poor. He does not steal because he needs the goods
and cannot afford to pay for them. He steals because he simply cannot stop himself.
And there are countless others who, because of age, sickness or plain absent‐
mindedness, simply forget to pay for what they take from the shops. When caught,
all are liable to prosecution and the decision whether to send for the police or
not is in the hands of the store manager.
In order to prevent the quite incredible growth in shop‐lifting offences, some
stores, in fact, are doing their best to separate the thieves from the confused by
prohibiting customers from taking bags into the store. However, what is most worrying
about the whole problem is, perhaps, that it is yet another instance of the innocent
majority being penalized and inconvenienced because of the actions of a small
minority. It is the aircraft hijack situation in another form. Because of the
possibility of one passenger in a million boarding an aircraft with a weapon, the
other 999 999 passengers must subject themselves to searches and delays. Unless the
situation in the shops improves, in ten years’ time we may all have to subject
ourselves to a body‐search every time we go into a store to buy a tin of beans!
36. Why does the honest public have to pay higher prices when they go to the shops?
A. There is “shrinkage” in market values.B. Many goods are not available.
C. Goods in many shops lack varietyD. There are many cases of shoplifting
37. The third group of people steal things because they _______.
A. are mentally illB. are quite absent‐minded
C. can not resist the temptationD. can not afford to pay for goods
38.According to the passage, law‐abiding citizens ______.
A.can possibly steal things because of their poverty
B.can possibly take away goods without paying
C.have never stolen goods from the supermarkets
D. are difficult to be caught when they steal things
39.Which of the following statements is NOT true about the main types of shop‐
lifting?
A big percentage of the total losses are caused by the professionals
B.The deliberate amateurs will be punished severely if they get caught.
C.People would expect that those who can’t help themselves are poor.
D.The professionals don’t cause a lot of trouble to the store detectives.
40 The aircraft hijack situation is used in order to show that _______.
A. “the professionals do not pose much of a problem for the stores”
B. some people “simply forget to pay for what they take from the shops”
C. “ the honest public has to pay higher prices”
D. the third type of shoplifters are dangerous people
III. Translation A(20 points)
Directions: Translate the following passages into Chinese. Please write your version
in the corresponding space on your Answer Sheet.
1.In 2011, many shoppers chose to avoid the frantic crowds and do their holiday
shopping from the comfort of their computer. Sales at online retailers gained by
more than 15%, making it the biggest season ever. But people are also returning those
purchases at record rates, up 8% from last year.
What went wrong? Is the lingering shadow of the global financial crisis making it
harder to accept extravagant indulgences? Or that people shop more impulsively
‐‐‐and therefore make bad decisions ‐‐‐when online? Both arguments are
plausible. However, there is a third factor: a question of touch. We can love the
look but, in an online environment, we cannot feel the quality of a texture, the
shape of the fit, the fall of a fold or, for that matter, the weight of an earring.
And physically interacting with an object makes you committed to your purchase.
2.The basic delivery system for the distance‐education mega‐universities is
television, supplemented by other technologies or even some online instruction in
more developed countries. Some distance‐education systems use two‐way interactive
video connections to particular locations where students gather; others supplement
with the Internet, and still others deliver only by Internet. With video‐and audio
‐streaming now available, the Internet appears to be the technology of choice for
systems where students have access to computers. Of course, these technologies
merely add to the radio‐delivered courses that have been offered for years in many
countries around the world.
IV. Translation B (15 points)
Directions: Translate the following passages into English. Please write your version
in the corresponding space on the ANSWER SHEET.
1.中国是一个发展中的大国, 在工业化的过程中, 环境问题比较突出, 因此国家把环境
保护列为一项基本国策。 近年来, 中国政府采取了各种措施来加强环境治理, 如大力发
展和广泛建立自然保护区;颁布了《环境保护法》; 加强环境保护的宣传和教育。 目前, 环
境治理已取得了明显成效, 大部分城市环境和农业生态环境得到了改善,工业污染防治能
力大大提高。环境保护已成为人人关心的话题,日益得到人们的重视。
2.儒家思想由孔子(Confucius)在春秋时期创立,并迅速成为中国文化的核心内容之一。儒
家重视道德和人与人之间的关系,着力于关注人类社会的秩序的和谐安定;对于虚无缥缈的
神灵世界(illusory divine),尽量采取回避的态度, 或按照自己的观念加以改造而得到强
化。 儒学对中国文化产生了巨大的影响,其价值观念渗透在中国人民的生活、思想和习俗
中。
V. Writing (15 points)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed to write an essay commenting on the remark
“The happiest people are not those getting more, but those giving more.” You can
cite examples to illustrate your point. You should write at least 150 words but no
more than 200 words.