考研英语二翻译真题及解析

学人智库 时间:2018-02-10 我要投稿
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  2014年考研英语二真题翻译题型分析

  分析:众所周知,英语二与英语一在翻译题上是有不小的差距的,首先从题型上就与英语一不同,英语二翻译部分是两段话的翻译,具有连贯性,这样可明显降低翻译难度,而英语一是五句话的翻译,这无疑需要考生联系上下文才能准确翻译出句中的代词、新词等。

  2014年考研英语二翻译与往年选材新的特点不同,今年的翻译题选自09年三月份的时代杂志,但依旧保持往年的难度,内容贴近生活,易于理解。文章中并没有特别难理解的句子出现,有一些常见的从句和复合句,考生只要平时在做《考研真相》和《考研圣经》的过程中,多注意书中长难句分析部分,这部分摘录出真题中长句、难句进行框架分析,考生可以很直观的理解并学习其中分析句子的能力和翻译要领,长此以往,英语二的翻译题部分就基本可以拿到不错的成绩。

  2014考研英语二真题完型填空文章出处

  原文出处:时代杂志

  原文标题:A Primer for Pessimists

  刊登时间:March, 2009

  原文节选:Most people would define optimism as being eternally hopeful, endlessly happy, with a glass that’s perpetually half full. But that’s exactly the kind of false cheerfulness that positive psychologists wouldn’t recommend. “Healthy optimism means being in touch with reality,” says Tal Ben-Shahar, a Harvard professor who taught the university’s most popular course, Positive Psychology, from 2002 to 2008. “It certainly doesn’t mean thinking everything is great and wonderful.”

  Ben-Shahar, who is the author of Happier and The Pursuit of Perfect, describes realistic optimists an “optimalists”—not those who believe everything happens for the best, but those who make the best of things that happen.

  In his own life, Ben-Shahar uses three optimalist exercises, which he calls PRP. When he feels down—say, after giving a bad lecture—he grants himself permission (P) to be human. He reminds himself that not every lecture can be a Nobel winner; some will be less effective than others. Next is reconstruction (R). He analyzes the weak lecture, learning lessons for the future about what works and what doesn’t. Finally, there’s perspective (P), which involves acknowledging that in the grand scheme of life, one lecture really doesn’t matter.

  Studies suggest thatpeople who are able to focus on the positive aspects of a negative event—basically, cope with failure—can protect themselves from the physical toll of stress and anxiety. In a recent study at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), scientists asked a group of women to give a speech in front of a stone-faced audience of strangers. On the first day, all the participants said they felt threatened, and they showed fear hormones. On subsequent days, however, those women who had reported rebounding from a major life crisis in the past no longer felt the same subjective threat over speaking in public. They had learned that this negative event, too, would pass and they would survive. “It’s a back door to the same positive state because people are able to tolerate and accept the negative,” says Elissa Epel, one of the psychologists involved in the study.

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