一、中译英:请将下列三部分中文译成英文(50分)
(一)第一部分(10分)
1.世界贸易组织
2.亚太经合组织
3.国有企业改革
4.信息技术革命
5.机关干部分流
6.下岗职工就业
7.村民委员会
8.抗洪求灾
9.环保意识
10. 计划生育
(二)第二部分(20分)
华裔再获诺贝尔奖
甲、最近看报了没有、又一位华裔获得了诺言贝尔物理奖。
乙、在电视中看到了,他叫崔琦,老家河南,小时候家穷,父亲把他送到香港亲戚家,1958年去了美国。
甲、崔琦的童年十分坎坷,是那种永远向前看的精神才使他发奋读书,当上了一代著名科学家。
乙、不管怎么说,崔琦为华人争了光,这又一次说明,我们中国人有跻身世界民族之林的能力。
甲、对,我们应该向崔琦学习,把科学技稿上去争取在下世纪业成为中等发达国家。
(三)第三部分(20分)
千百年来,贫困一直如影随形地与我们相伴而行,抹不去贫困的阴影,建设一个光明灿烂、繁荣富强听国家是华夏几代人梦寐以求的理想,治穷先治愚,要摆脱经济上的贫困,首先要摆脱教育文上的贫困,科教兴国,发展以高科技为核心的知识经济,加快创造必珍才的培养,是我国现代化建设的一项基本战略方针。我国政府已经向全世界承诺,到2000年我国将基本消除贫困现象,为了这一庄严承诺言,我国吓估教育领域作出了巨大的努力,就充分展示了中国人民消除贫困的万丈雄心。
二、将下列英文文章中的前三段译成中文(50分)
The Beanty of Britain
J.B.Prestley
We live in one of the most beautiful islands in the world.This is a fact we are always forgetting.When beautiful islands are mentioned we think of Trinidad and Tahiti.These are fine, romantic places,but they are not really as exquisitely beautiful as our own Britain.Before the mines and fatories came; and long before,we went from bad to worse with our arterial roads and petrol sations and horrible brick bungalows, this coutry must have been an enchantment, Even now, after we have been bust for so long flinging mud at this fair pale face,the enchantment still remains, Sometimes I doubt if we deserve to possess it .There can be few parts of the world in which commercial greed and public indifference have combined to do more damage than they have here. The process continues.It is still too often assumed that any enterprising fellow after quick profits has a perfect right to destroy a loveliness that is the heritage of the whole community.
The beauty of our country is as hard to define as it is easy to enjoy.Remembering other and larger countries we see at once that one of its charms is that it is immensely varied within a small compass. We have here no vast mountain ranges, no illimitable plains. But we have superb variety. A great deal of everythins is packed into little space. I suspect that we are always, faintly conscious of the fact that this is a smallish island, whith the sea always round the corner. We know that everything has to be neatly packer into a small space,Nature, we feel ,has carefully adjusted things mountains, plans, rivers, lakes—to the scale of the island itself. Amountain 12,000 feet high would be a horrible monster here, as wrong as a plain 400 miles long, a river as broad as the Mississippi. Though the gaographical features of this island are comparatively small, and there is astonishing variety almost everywhere, that does not mean that our mountains are not mountains, our plains not plains.
My own favourite country, perhaps because I know it as a boy ,is that of the Yorkshire Dales. A day’s walk among them will give you almost everything fit to be seen on this earth. Within a few hours, you have enjoyed the green valleys, with their rivers, fine old bridges, pleasant villages, hanging woods, smooth fields, and then the moorland splpes,with their rushing streams, stone walls, salty winds and crying curlews, white farmhouses, and then the lonely heights which seem to be miles above the ordinary world, and moorland tracks as remote, it seems, as trails in Mongolia.
We have greater resources at our command tha our ancestors had,and we are more impatient than they were. Thanks to our new resources, we are better able to ruin the countryside and even the towns, than our fathers were, but on the other hand we are far more alive to the consequences of such ruin than they were.
Our children and their children after them must live in a beautiful country. It must be a country happily compromising between Nature and Man, blending what was best worth retaining rom the past with what best represents the spririt of our own age, a country as rich in noble towns as it is in trees, birds, and wild flowers.