2005年9月上海市中级口译笔试真题

时间:2006-3-28 15:10:44  作者:alex 鍙彲鑻辫-骞磋交浜虹殑鑻辫鍚璁粌骞冲彴
(D)      have always vanished without any trace

 

22.       The muscles of a fossilized animal can sometimes be reconstructed because _____.

 

(A)     they were preserved with the rest of the animal

 

(B)     they were lodged inside the animal’s skull

 

(C)     they were hardened parts of the animal’s body

 

(D)     they were attached to the animal’s skeleton

 

23. The reconstruction of a fossilized animal’s external appearance is considered necessary

 

       in order to _____.

 

(A)    satisfy popular curiosity

 

(B)     answer scientific questions

 

(C)     establish its activities

 

(D)    determine its eating habits

 

24. The word “equivocal” (para. 3) means _____.

 

(A)    equally important

 

(B)     definable

 

(C)     equally doubtful

 

(D)    deliberate

 

25. The third paragraph of the passage deals with the difficulties of restoring the following

 

       fossilized animals EXCEPT _____.

 

(A)     those which had complex internal structures

 

(B)     those which had no external hard parts

 

(C)     those which had fur-covered bodies

 

(D)     those which had no living relatives

 

 


Questions 26--30

 

There is a basic hypothesis that the majority of serious motoring offences are derived from accidents, and there is nothing in the offender’s personality or background that predisposes him to break the law. If an accident is a chance event that happens so quickly and suddenly that it is beyond anyone’s control to prevent it, then it is clear that this hypothesis is disproved. For only about 14 per cent of the 653 offences considered in a recent survey could possibly be called inadvertent accidents in this sense, and even this estimate is stretching credulity to its limits. In the great majority of cases the offences were largely of the offenders’ own making. In 11 per cent of the 653 cases and 21 per cent of 43 offenders who were interviewed there was evidence of selfish, and even ruthless, self-interest, but it was not possible to infer personality disturbance in more than 25 per cent of the 653 and 39 per cent of the 43 offenders. Though the inferences with regard to personality traits may be an overestimate in the interpretation of qualitative data, they could equally be an underestimate, since so very little was ever recorded about the offenders themselves. The lack of data is a consequence of the almost total lack of interest in motoring offenders as persons.

 

It must be assumed, therefore, in the absence of evidence to the contrary that the majority of serious motoring offenders considered in the survey were normal people, who succumbed to temptation when circumstances were favourable and it was expedient to take a chance, so perhaps there is something in the normal personality that predisposes a driver to break the law. Whatever it is, its presence is much more evident in males than in females, since the analysis of the national statistics shows a predominance of males over females of between 18:1 and 22:1. The real significance of these figures is hard to assess, because the relative proportions of each sex at risk are unknown. One research worker produced a ratio of six males to one female from his sample of insurance policy holders, but this is almost certainly an underestimate since many females—probably more than males—are likely to be driving on someone else’s policy. A ration of three to one is probably nearer to the real state of affairs. Females reached noticeable proportions only among the hit-and-run drivers, and there seems to be some justification for calling this the ‘feminine’ offence. The difference between the sexes in their relative propensity to break the law on the roads is important, because it shows that motoring offenders have a characteristic in common with offenders in other fields of criminal activity, where males predominate to a marked degree. One motor insurance underwriter recently announced his intention to offer discounts on premiums where the policy holder or the ‘named driver’ was a woman.

 

The basic hypothesis is further disproved by the very high incidence, among the offences studied, of failing to insure against third-party risks. Yet accidents brought to light only a very small percentage of this kind of crime. Moreover, it could not possibly be said that this, the most common of the serious offences, was brought about by providence. On the contrary, it can be regarded as a typical form of economic crime, which, although sometimes committed through inadvertence, is more usually quite deliberate and calculated.

 

 


26. The word “hypothesis” (line 1) means _____.

 

(A)     a wrong belief

 

(B)     an unproved theory

 

(C)     a demonstrable idea

 

(D)     a fundamental law

 

27. Inadequate statistical information about the personalities of motoring offenders is

 

largely the result of _____.

 

(A)     the difficulty of interpreting the self-evident facts

 

 

 


(B)     the inaccessibility of the police records

 

(C)     scanty recorded evidence of the offenders themselves

 

(D)     insufficient research into the recorded qualitative data

 

28. Women can sometimes get more favourable motoring insurance terms than men

 

because statistically _____.

 

(A)     they are much better at controlling a car

 

(B)     they are smaller and more important

 

(C)     they are less likely to commit grave offences

 

(D)     they are more unwilling to take out policies themselves

 

29. It can be inferred from the passage that _____.

 

(A)    women are unwilling to drive on someone else’s policy

 

(B)     women are more likely to be the hit-and-run drivers

 

(C)     men are regarded as criminals in road accidents

 

(D)    men are more likely to be insurance underwriters

 

30. A “third party” (para. 3) is essentially _____.

 

(A)    any insured woman driver

 

(B)     the driver of an insured car

 

(C)     a normal policy-holder

 

(D)    any other road-user

 

SECTION 3: TRANSLATION TEST (1)(30 minutes)

 

Directions: Translate the following passage into Chinese and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.

 

There is a growing number of economists who believe today’s brutally tough labor market is not a temporary American oddity. Falling wages, reduced benefits and rising job insecurity seem to be increasingly entrenched features of the job scene across most of Western Europe, the United States and other parts of the developed world. The number of insecure freelance positions is rising (as are working hours) while stable jobs with good benefits are being cut. Laid-off workers are much less likely to be rehired by their old companies and have to find new jobs or turn to self-employment. Those who still have jobs are working longer hours with little prospect of meaningful raises.

 

The new labor market is shaped by growing global competition, spurred by the rise of cheap manufacturers in China, India and Eastern Europe, and the price-chopping effect of both the Internet and giant retailers led by Wal-Mart. These forces compel Western companies to exercise a growing restraint on prices and labor cost. One thing globalization clearly does is to exert a leveling effect on wages.

SECTION 4: TRANSLATION TEST (2)(30 minutes)

Directions: Translate the following passage into English and write your version in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET.

    中国有句古话:“相知无远近,万里尚为邻”。中国与亚洲各国山水相连,共同铸就了灿烂的亚洲文明;古老而美丽的“丝绸之路”,谱写了中欧千年往来的美好篇章。中国与亚欧各国的互利合作正在步入一个全新的阶段。中国已成为亚欧和世界经济发展中的积极力量,我们将坚定走和平发展的道路,致力于同亚欧各国发展富有活力和长期稳定的全面合作关系,与亚欧各国相互支持,携手前进,共创美好的未来。

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