搜档网
当前位置:搜档网 › 新发展研究生英语综合教程2第一单元课文内容及翻译

新发展研究生英语综合教程2第一单元课文内容及翻译

新发展研究生英语综合教程2第一单元课文内容及翻译
新发展研究生英语综合教程2第一单元课文内容及翻译

Growing Up

1 Fifty years ago parents still asked boys if they wanted to grow up to be president, and asked it not jokingly but seriously. Many parents who were hardly more than paupers still believed their sons could do it. Abraham Lincoln had done it. We were only sixty-five years from Lincoln. Many of grandfather who walked among us could remeber Lincoln. Men of grandfatherly age were the worst for asking if you wanted to grow up to be president. A surprising number of little boys said yes and meant it.五十年前父母大都会问男孩子们长大后想不想当总统,问这话时一本正经,并非开玩笑。许多穷得跟乞丐似的父母也仍然相信他们的孩子能当上总统。亚伯拉罕?林肯就做到了。我们与林肯那个时代仅仅差65年。依然健在的许多爷爷辈的人还能记得林肯时代。就是他们最喜欢问你长大后想不想当总统。回答说想当的小男孩数量多得惊人,而且他们是当真的。

2 I was asked many times myself. No, I didn?t want to grow up to be president. My mother was present during one of these interrogations. An elderly uncle, having posed the usual question and exposed my lack of interest in the presidency, asked, “Well, what do you want to be when you grow up.我就曾经被问过多次。我会回答说不,我长大后不想当总统。有一个年纪大的叔叔,当着母亲的面向我提出这个问烂了的问题,发现了我对当总统不感兴趣,他就接着又问:“那你长大了想干什么呢?”

3 I loved to pick through trash piles and collect empty bottles, tin cans

with pretty labels, and discarded magazines. The most desirable job on earth sprang instantly to mind. “I want to be a garbage man,” I said.我那时喜欢到垃圾堆上去拣东西,收集空瓶子、有漂亮标签的罐子和废弃的杂志。世界上最吸引我的工作立刻浮现在我的脑子里。“我想当一个垃圾工。”我说道。

4 My uncle smiled, but my mother had seen the first distressing evidence of a bump budding on a log. “Have a little gumption, Russell,” she said. Her calling me Russell was a signal of unhappiness. When she approved of me I was always “Buddy”.叔叔听后笑了,而母亲却觉察到了我那呆头呆脑的苗头,不免伤心。“有点上进心吧,拉塞尔。”她说道。她叫我“拉塞尔”表明她不高兴,因为她夸我的时候总是叫我“小家伙”。

5 When I turned eight years old she decided that the job of starting me on the road toward making something of myself could no longer be safely delayed, “Buddy ,” she said one day, “ I want you to come home right after school this afternoon. Somebody?s coming and I want you to meet him.”转眼间我长到了八岁,她觉得我得找个工作,开始踏上那条让我自己成就点什么的道路,而不能再四平八稳地坐失良机了。“巴迪”,有一天她跟我说,“今天放学后马上回家。有人要来,我要你见见他。”

6 When I burst in that afternoon she was in conference in the parlor with an executive of the Curtis Publishing Company. She introduced me. He bent low from the waist and shook my hand. Was it true as my mother

had told him, he asked, that I longer for the opportunity to conquer the world of business?那天下午我冲进家门的时候,她正在客厅里跟柯蒂斯出版公司的一个负责人谈话。他把我介绍给他。他弯下腰和我握了握手,问我是不是像母亲说的那样渴望获得进入商界的机会。

7 My mother replied that I was blessed with a rare determination to make to succeed in business.”母亲在一旁忙说我决意要使自己成为一个有所成就的人。

8 “That?s right,” I said.“是的。”我低声说。

9 “But have you got the grit, the character, the never-say-quit spirit it takes to succeed in business.”“那么,你是否具备在商业上获得成功所需要的刚强、勇气和绝不放弃的精神呢?”

10 My mother said I certainly did.母亲回答说我当然具备。

11 “That?s right,” I said.“是的。”我说。

12 He eyed me silently for a long pause, as though weighing whether I could be trusted to keep his confidence, then spoke man-to-man. Before taking a crucial step, he said, he wanted to advise me that working for the Curtis Publishing Company placed enormous responsibility on a young man. It was one of the great companies of America. Perhaps the greatest publishing house in the world. I had heard, no doubt, of the Saturday Post?他盯着我好一会儿,默不作声,似乎在掂量着我是否值得他的信任,然后和我坦率地谈了起来。他说,在走出关键性的一步之前,他得提醒我,年轻人为柯蒂斯出版公司工作要承担巨大的责任。它是美国最

了不起的公司之一,也许是世界上最了不起的出版公司。毫无疑问,我肯定听说过《星期六晚邮报》吧?

13 Heard of it? My mother said everyone in our house had heard of the Saturday Post and that, I, in fact, read it with religious devotion.岂止听说过母亲说全家人可是都知道《星期六邮报》的,而且说我实际上是它的忠实读者。

14 He said he had been so impressed by what he had seen of me that he was going to make me a representative of the Curtis Publishing Company. On the following Tuesday, he said, thirty freshly printed copies of the Saturday Evening Post would be delivered at our door. I would place these magazines still damp with the ink of the presses, in a handsome canvas bag, sling it over my shoulder, and set forth through the streets to bring the best in journalism, fiction, and cartoons to the American public.最后,他说他对我的印象非常深刻,打算吸纳我为柯蒂斯出版公司的一员。他说,下周二会有三十份刚印刷出来的《星期六晚邮报》送到我家门口。我要把这些还带着印刷油墨潮气的期刊放到一个漂亮的帆布包里,吊挂在我的肩上,然后走上大街小巷,把新闻、小说和卡通的精华带给美国大众。

15 He had brought the canvas bag with him. He presented it with reverence fit for a chasuble. He should me how to drape the sling over my left shoulder and across the chest so that the pouch lay easily accessible to my right hand, allowing the best in journalism, fiction, and cartoons to

be swiftly extracted and sold to a citizenry whose happiness and security depended upon us soldiers of the free press.他随身带着那个帆布包。他把它打开时那毕恭毕敬的神情简直像是神父在打开一件十字褡。他向我演示如何把吊带搭在我的左肩上,从胸前穿过,这样我的右手就能方便地伸到邮袋里,以便迅速地取出那些新闻、小说和卡通的精华卖给市民,他们的幸福和安全可全指望着我们这些自由报业的战士呢。

16 The following Tuesday I raced home from school, put the canvas bag over my shoulder, dumped the magazines in, and, tilting to the left to balance their weight on my right hip, embarked on the highway of journalism.星期二放学后我跑回家,把帆布包挎在肩上,装上杂志,左右移了移,让它的重量平衡,然后迈开步伐踏上了新闻业的征途。

17 We lived in Belleville, New Jersey, a commuter town at the northern fringe of Newark. It was 1932, the bleakest year of the Depression. My father had died two years before, leaving us with a few pieces of Sears Roebuck furniture and not much else, and my mother had taken Doris and me to live with one of her younger brothers. This was my Uncle Allen had made something of himself by 1932. As a salesman for a soft-drink bottler in Newark, he had an income of $30 a week, wore pearl-gray spats, detachable collars, and a three-piece suit; was happily married; and took in threadbare relatives.我们住在新泽西州贝勒镇,它位于纽瓦克北部边缘,处于一个市郊间上下班的枢纽上。那是1932年,大萧条最严峻的年代。父亲两年前就去世了,只留给我们几件从

希尔斯?罗巴克公司买来的家具,就没别的了。母亲带着多丽丝和我跟小舅舅艾伦住在一起。艾伦舅舅在1932年的时候就已经小有成就了。他在纽瓦克推销软饮料装瓶机。他每周的收入30美元;他总是脚上套着珠灰色的鞋套,颈上系着可脱卸衣领,身上穿着三件套的西服。他的婚姻也很美满。就是他接纳了我们这些穷亲戚。

18 With my load of magazines I headed toward Belleville Avenue. That?s where the people were. There were two filling stations at the intersection with Union Avenue, as well as an A&P, a fruit stand, a bakery shop, Zuccarelli?s drugstore, and a diner shaped like a railroad car. For several hours I made myself highly visible, shifting position now and then from corner to corner, from shop window to shop window, to make sure everyone could see the heavy black letting on the canvas bag that said The Saturday Evening Post. When the angle of the light indicated it was suppertime, I walked back to the house.我背着沉甸甸的期刊朝贝勒大街走去。那里是人最多、最热闹的地方。在与联邦大街交叉的十字路口,有两家汽车加油站,还有一个大西洋及太平洋茶叶公司、一个水果摊、一家面包店、一家理发店、祖卡雷利的杂货店和一家外形像火车车箱的小饭馆。接下来的几个小时,为了能让人们看到我,我不时地变换位置,从一个街口到另一个街口,从一个橱窗到另一个橱窗,确保每个人都能看到帆布包上印的又黑又粗的字:“星期六晚邮报”。当天色已晚,该吃晚饭了,我才往家走。

19 “How many did you sell, Buddy?” my mother asked.“你卖了几份,

小家伙?”母亲问道。

20 “None.”“一份没卖。”

21 “Where did you go?”“你去哪儿卖的?”

22 “The corner of Belleville and Union Avenue.”“贝勒大街和联邦大街的街口。”

23 “What did you do?”“你是怎么卖的?”

24 “Stood on the corner waiting for somebody to buy a Saturday Evening Post.”“站在那儿,等人来买喽。”

25 “You just stood there?”“就只站在那儿?”

26 “Didn?t sell a single one.”“一份也没卖出去。”

27 “For God?s sake, Russell!”“天啊,拉塞尔!”

28 Uncle Allen intervened. “I?ve been thinking about it for some time,”he said, “and I?ve about decided to take the Post regularly. Put me a nickel. It was the first nickel I earned.艾伦舅舅插话了。“我考虑了有一段时间了,”他说,“我决定定期看这份邮报,把我当个固定顾客吧。”我递给他一份期刊,他付给我一枚5分硬币。这是我挣到的第一枚硬币。

29 Afterwards my mother instructed me in salesmanship . Iwould have to ring doorbells, address adults with charming self-confidence, and break down resistance with a sales talk pointing out that no one, no matter how poor ,could afford to be without the Saturday Evening Post in the home.

之后母亲教了我一些推销术。我得去按人家的门铃,对大人们发表演说,要使他们无法拒绝,就得凭我三寸不烂之舌让他们相信,任何人——不管多穷——家里要是没有《星期六晚邮报》可是一个极大的损失。

30 I told my mother I?d changed my mind about wanting to succeed in the magazine business. 我跟母亲说我改主意了,不想在期刊业上有所成就了。

31 “If you think I?m going to raise a good-for-nothing,” she replied, “you?ve got another think coming.” She told me to hit the streets with the canvas bag and start ringing doorbells the instant school was out next day. I bowed to superior will and entered journalism with a heavy heart.“如果你认为我打算养一个饭桶,”母亲回答说,“那你可再得好好想想。”她要我第二天一放学就背着帆布包到大街上去按别人家的门铃。我只好领了圣旨,我带着一颗沉甸甸的心步入了新闻界。

32 By the time I was ten I had learned all my mother?s maxims by heart. The one I most despised was, “If at first you don?t succeed, try, try again.” This was the battle cry with which she constantly sent me back into the hopeless struggle whenever I moaned that I had rung every doorbell in town and knew there wasn?t a single potential buyer left in Belleville that week. After listening to my explanation, she handed me the canvas bag and said, “If at first you don?t succeed…”到我十岁的时候,我就熟记了母亲所有的格言。我最讨厌的那句就是:“如果开头失利,

尝试,再尝试。”这就像一声战斗的呐喊,就是这句话,她一再地把我遣返到那毫无希望的战斗中去,即使我申辩说我已经按了镇上所有人家的门铃,觉得那个星期贝勒镇上不会有哪个人再来买这份期刊,那也无济于事。听完我的解释之后,她依旧会把帆布包递给我,说:“如果开头失利不要紧……”

33 Three years in that job, which I would gladly have quit after the first day except for her insistence, produced at least one valuable result. My mother finally concluded that I would never make something careers that demand less competitive zeal.三年的卖报生涯——要不是她坚持,我本来在第一天就可以开开心心地不干了——至少产生了一个有价值的结果。母亲终于得出结论,我绝不能在商界干出什么名堂来,于是,她开始为我考虑其他不需要太多竞争热情的职业。

34 One evening when I was eleven I brought home a short “composition”on my summer vacation which the teacher had graded with an A. Reading it with her own schoolteacher?s eye, my mother agreed that it was top-drawer seventh grade prose and complimented me. Nothing more was said about it immediately, but a new idea had taken life in her mind. Halfway through supper she suddenly interrupted the conversation.十一岁那年的一天晚上,我拿回家一篇我写的关于暑假的短“作文”,老师在上面批了个“A”。母亲用她老师的眼光读了一遍,也认为这是一篇最优秀的七年级的散文,并表扬了我。当时她没再多说什么,但是一个新的想法已经在她的心里形成了。晚饭吃到

一半的时候,她突然打断我们的谈话。

35 “Buddy,” she said, “maybe you could be a writer.”“孩子,”她说,“也许你能当个作家。”

36 I clasped the idea to my heart. I had never met a writer, had shown no previous urge to write, and hadn?t a notion how to become a writer, but I loved stories and thought that making up stories must surely be almost as much fun as reading them. Best of all, though, and what really gladdened my heart, was the ease of the writer?s life. Writers did not have to trudge through the town peddling from canvas bags, defending themselves against angry dogs, being rejected by surly strangers. Writers did not have to ring doorbells. So far as I could make out, what writers did couldn?t even be classified as work.这个想法还真打动了我的心。我虽然从没见过作家,以前也没显示出迫切的写作欲望,更不知道当作家是什么概念,但是我喜欢读小说,因此我想,编小说一定跟看小说一样有趣。不过,最重要又真正让我心花怒放的是作家那安逸的生活。作家无需在镇上四处奔劳兜售帆布包里的期刊;也无需提防着那些恶狗,不会遭粗暴无礼的陌生人拒绝。作家可不用去按门铃。就我所理解的作家而言,作家所做的事情归起类来甚至不能莫是一种工作。37 I was enchanted. Writers didn?t have to have any gumption at all. I did not dare tell anybody for fear of being laughed at in the schoolyard, but secretly I decided that what I?d like to be when I grew up was a writer.我满心欢喜。作家根本就不需要什么上进心。因为担心在学校会被嘲

笑,我不敢告诉任何人,但是私下里我意已决:长大了要当作家。

The Art of Friendship

Making Friends in Midlife

One evening a few years ago I found myself in a funk. Nothing was really wrong —my family and I were healthy, my career was busy and successful —I was just feeling vaguely down and in need of a friend who could raise my spirits, someone who would meet me for coffee and let me rant until the clouds lifted. Trouble was, there was no chum to call and confide in. Over the course of a few years all of my oldest, closest girlfriends had moved out of town, one by one, in search of better jobs, better weather, better men.几年前的一个晚上,我发现自己陷入惶恐之中。并不是真地出了什么事——我家和家人都身体健康,我的事业也蒸蒸日上——我只是有一种隐隐约约的沮丧感,想找个朋友鼓鼓劲,找个人,能和我喝杯咖啡,让我尽情倾诉,直到阴霾散尽。问题在于,没有这样的好友可以打电话,可以交心。几年之间,与我交往最久,相知最深的女友,都一个接一个搬离了这个城,或是为了更好的工作,或是为了更好的气候,或是为了更好的男人。

I dialed my best friend, who now lives across the country in California, and got her voice mail. That?s when it started to dawn on me —lonesomeness was at the root of my dreariness. My social life had dwindled to almost nothing, but somehow until that moment I?d been too busy to notice. Now it hit me hard. My old friends, buddies since college

or even childhood, knew everything about me; when they had taken my context with them.我给我最好的朋友打了电话,她现在住在加利福尼亚那一边,我收到了她的语音留言。就在那时,我突然明白过来——寂寞就是我感到沮丧的根源。我的社交生活已经减至几乎为零,而我一向很忙,直至此刻才察觉到这一点。这给了我很大的打击。我从大学乃至小学就拥有的故交挚友,他们了解我的一切,当他们离开的时候,将我同他们的交情也带走了。

Research has shown the long-range negative consequences of social isolation on one?s health. But my concerns were more short-term. I needed to feel understood right then in the way that only a girlfriend can understand you. I knew it would be wrong to expect my husband to replace my friends: He couldn?t, and even if he could, to whom wounld I then complain about my husband?已经有研究显示社交孤立会对人的健康产生长期的负面影响。但我关心的是更为短期的事情。我需要那种只有女朋友才能给我的理解。我明白,指望的丈夫能够取代我的朋友是错误的。他做不到,即使他能做到,要是我想抱怨丈夫,我又去找谁呢?

So I resolved to acquire new friends —women like me who had kids and enjoyed rolling their eyes at the world a little bit just as I did. Since I?d be making friends with more intention than I?d ever given the process, I realized I could be selective, that I could in effect design my own social life. The downside, of course, was that I felt pretty initimidated.所以我决

定去结交新的朋友——和我一样有孩子、又对外面的世界很感兴趣的女士。同以往相比,这样的交友更具目的性,这使我意识到我可以有更多的选择,实际上,我可以设计我自己的社交生活。差劲的是,不消说,我太担惊受怕。

After all, it?s a whole lot harder to make friends in midlife than it is when you?re younger —a fact women I?ve spoken with point out again and again. As Lesile Danzig, 41, a Chicago theater direcror and mother sees it, when you?re in your teens and 20s, you?re more or less friends with everyone unless there?s a reason not to be. Your college roommate becomes your best pal at least partly due to proximity. Now there needs to be a reason to be friends. “There are many people I?m comfortable around, but I wouldn?t go so far as to call them friends. Comfort isn?t enough to sustain a real friendship,” Danzig says.毕竟,同年轻时比,人到中年结交朋友要艰难得多。这是我与之交谈过的女士们一遍又一遍指出的事实。正如莱斯里?丹齐克,一位41岁的芝加哥戏剧导演兼母亲,所观察到的,当你十几岁或是二十几岁时,除非有特殊原因,你同任何人都有着或多或少的交情。大学室友能成为你最好的朋友,至少有一部分的原因是因为空间距离的接近。现在要成为朋友则需要理由。“我同周围的许多人相处愉快,但还没达到叫他们朋友的地步。相处愉快并不足以维持一段真正的友谊。”丹泽说到。

At first, finding new companions felt awkward. At 40 I couldn?t run up to people the way my 4-year-old daughters do in the playground and ask,

“Will you be my friend?”“Every time you start a new relationship, you?re vulnerable again,” agrees Kathkeen Hall, founder and CEO of the Stress Institute, in Atlanta. “You?re asking, …Would you like to come into my life?? It makes us self-conscious.一开始,寻找新伴侣让人感到尴尬。在40岁的年龄,我不可能像我岁的女儿在操场上做的那样,跑到别人面前问“你愿意做我的朋友吗?”“每开始一段新的友谊,你又会很敏感”凯瑟琳?霍尔,亚特兰大职业压力协会的创始人兼首席执行官也有同感,“在询问‘你愿意和我往来吗?’时,我们会感到很难为情。”

Fortunately, my discomfort soon passed. I realized that as a mature friend seeker my vulnerability risk was actually pretty low. If someone didn?t take me up on my offer, so what: I wasn?t in junior high, when I might have been rejected for having the wrong clothes or hair. At my age I have amassed enough self-esteem to tealize that I have plenty to offer. One women I met at a friend?s shower didn?t keep up our connection, even though we?d clicked instantly. But because there have been times when I?ve failed to follow through with women I?ve liked every much, I knew that her busyness was the likely explanation.幸运的是,我的不安感很快就过去了。我意识到,作为一个成熟的寻找朋友者,我冒的敏感风险事实上是很小的。如果有人不接受我的好意,那又怎样。我又不是在初中,那时要是服装或是发型出错可是会遭拒绝的。在我这个年龄,我已经积累了足够的自尊,知道自己可以给与很多。一位我在送礼会

上遇到的女性朋友,虽然一见面就很投缘,却并没有和我保持联系。但是因为我有时也会疏于同自己非常喜欢的女性朋友保持联系,我相信她这样做大概是她很忙。

Friends That Make You a Better You

We?re all so busy, in fact, that mutual interests —say, in a project, class, or cause that we already make time for —become the perfect catalysts for bringing us in contact with candiates for camaraderie. Michelle Mertrs, 35, a teacher and mother of two in Wausau, Wisconsin, says a new friend she made at church came as a pleasant surprise. “In high school I chose friends based on their popularity and how being part of their circle might reflect on me. Now it?s our shared values and activities that count.”Mertes says her pal, with whom she organized the church?s youth programs, is nothing like her but their drive and organizational skills make them ideal friends.实际上,我们都很忙,共同的兴趣,比如说,在我们倾注了时间的项目上、班级里或事业上的共同兴趣,成为我们同潜在朋友发展友谊的最佳催化剂。米歇尔?默顿,35岁,住在威斯康星州沃索的一位教师兼两个孩子的母亲,谈到在教堂结交到的一位新朋友,令她又惊又喜。“在高中我选择朋友是看他受不受欢迎,看加入他们的圈子人们会怎么想我。现在重要的是我们的共同价值观和共同活动。”默顿说,这个与她一起组织过教会青年项目的朋友,同她一点也不像,但她们的干劲和组织能力使她们成为了理想的朋友。Happliy, as awkward as making new friends can be, self-esteem issues do

not factor in —or if they do, you can easily put them into prespective. Danzig tells of the mother of a child in her son?s preschool, a tall, beautiful woman who is married to a big-deal rock musician. “I said to my husband, she?s too cool for me,”she jokes. “I get intimidated by people. But once I got to know her, she turned out to be pretty laid-back and friendly.” In the end there was no chemistry between them, so they didn?t become good pals. “I realized that we weren?t each other?s type, but it wasn?t about hierarchy.” What midlife friendship is about, it seems, is reflecting the person you?ve become (or are still becoming) back at yourself, thus reinforcing the process you?ve made in your life.令人高兴的是,虽然结交新朋友可能使人不好意思,但是自尊心不再是一个问题,即使出问题,你也会很容易理性对待。丹齐克讲起她儿子学校的一个小孩妈妈,长得高挑漂亮,嫁给了一个知名的摇滚乐手,开玩笑说“我对我的丈夫说‘她对我来说太酷了些。’”“我被一些人给吓住了。可一旦对她熟悉了,我发现她很随意,很友善。”最后她们合不来,没有成为好朋友。“我意识到我们不是彼此的类型,但是这同等级无关。”中年人友谊的作用,似乎在反映你自身成了什么样的人(或是正在成为什么样的人),并因此而强化你在生活中所取得的进展。Harlene Katzman, 41, a lawyer in New York City, notes that her oldest friends knew her back when she was less sure of herself. As much as she loves them, she believes they sometimes respond to issues in light of who she once was. On the other hand, “New friends know me as a more

accomplished person,” says Katzman. “They see me as confident. An old chum has the goods on you. With recently made friends, you can turn over a new leaf.”哈琳?卡茨曼,41岁,一位纽约城的律师,谈到那些交往最久的老朋友们了解她的过去,而当时她还没有现在这么自信。虽然她爱那些老朋友,但她相信这些老朋友在处理问题时,仍然把她当成了过去的她。另一方面,“新朋友把我当成一个更有成就的人来结识。”卡茨曼说“她们认为我很自信。老朋友有着你的把柄。新朋友则让你重获新生。”

A new friend, chosen right, chosen right, can also help you point your boat in the direction you want to go. Hanna Dershowitz, 39, an attorney and mother in Los Angeles, found that a new acquaintance from work was exactly what she needed in a friend. In addition to liking and respecting Julia, Dershowitz had a feeling that the fit and athletic younger women would help her to get in shape. The two began working out together, and Dershowitz made sure to pursue the friendship actively. “She bring out my motivation and I really like that. She?s strong and successful, and she helps me emphaisze those things in myself.” I feel the same way about one of my new friends, Ronni, a stay-at-home morn whose daughter was in my girls?preschoool.一个新的朋友,如果选择正确,还能帮助你确定人生小船的航向。汉娜?德绍维兹,39岁,洛杉矶的一位律师兼母亲,发现一位工作上的新相识正好提供了她所需要的友谊。除了喜欢和尊敬朱丽亚,德绍维兹有一种感觉,这个健康、

喜欢运动的年轻女士将会帮助她获得健康。两个人开始一起锻炼。德绍维兹确信自己是在积极地寻求友谊。“她激发我的动机,这是我非常喜欢的。她强壮,成功,帮助我扬长避短。”我对罗尼,我的一个新朋友,一个全职妈妈,她女儿和我女儿在同一个学前班,有着同样的感觉。

Finding What?s Missing

I was drawn to her because she is lovely and warm. But what made me decide to be friends with her was what I knew I could learn from her. She makes the parts of motherhood I found overwhelming seem not only possible but easy, even fun. I like her resourcefulness, her patience, her calm in the face of toddler anarchy.我被她所吸引是因为她可爱、热情。但我下决心同她做朋友是因为我知道我可以向她学习。她把我认为不堪重负的母亲的职责不仅变成可能,而且变得很容易,甚至很有趣。我喜欢她在应对无法无天的小孩子时所表现出来的随机应变,耐心和镇静。

When I met Ronni I was working full-time, my marriage was as stressed as I was, and any time I spent with my kids felt like time away from something I needed to be doing to keep the whole machine running. We never discussed it, but my friendship with Ronni contributed to my decision to work part-time, so that I can enjoy my children in the way she does hers. She inspired me to take inventory of my own life and to attend to how it wasn?t making me happy.当我遇到罗尼的时候我有一份全职

的工作,我的婚姻和我的人一样处于压力之下。每次花时间和孩子们在一起的时候,都感到占用了自己使一切正常运行所需的时间。我们从未讨论过这个问题,但是我同罗尼的友谊,促使我下决定做非全职工作。这样我就可以以她的方式享受亲子之乐了。她鼓励我创新自己的生活方式,鼓励我留心怎么会过得不如意。

I keep up with my old friends as much as distance allows, but I?m finding my new friends equally nourishing. “She and I both say, …I wasn?t even looking for a friend when I met you,?” says Jenna McCarthy, 39, a mother of two in Santa Barbara of her friend of three year, Kirsten. “ But until I met her, I hadn?t realized how much was missing from my life.I?m happier now that she?s my friend.”只要距离许可,我尽量同老朋友们保持联系。但是我发现新朋友同样给我帮助。“她和我都说‘遇到你的时候根本没有想找朋友这回事。’”简娜?麦卡西,39岁,两个孩子的母亲,住在圣巴巴拉,这样说她认识了三年的朋友,“但是直到我遇到她,我才意识到原来自己的生活缺了多少的东西。她成为我的朋友让我比过去快乐多了。”

Be a Better Friend

While you?re busy making new friends, remember that you still need to nurture your old ones. We asked Marla Paul, auther of The Friendship Crisis: Finding, Making and keeping Friends When You?re Not a Kid Anymore, for the best ways to maintain these important relationships.当你忙于结交新朋友的时候,别忘了还要继续培养同老朋友间的友谊。

就维持这层珍贵关系的最佳方法,我们询问了玛勒?保罗,她是《友情危机:当你不再是孩子时,寻找、结交和拥有朋友》的作者。·Keep in touch. Your friends should be a priority; schedule regular lunch dates or coffee catch-up sessions, no matter how busy you are.保持联系。应该优先考虑你的朋友;不管你有多忙,定期安排聚在一起吃午餐或喝咖啡。

·Know her business. Keep track of important events in a friend?s life and show your support. Call or e-mail to let her know you?re thinking of her.了解她的事情。记下朋友一生中的重要事件,并给与你的支持。给她打电话或是发电子邮件,让她知道你在想她。

·Speak your mind. Tell a friend (politely) if something she did really upset you. If you can?t be totally honest, then you need to reexamine the relationship. 说出你的想法。如果有朋友做了让你不快的事情,(有礼貌地)告诉他。如果你无法做到真心诚意,那么你需要重新审视你们之间的关系。

·Accept her flaws. No one is perfect, so work around her quirks—she?s chronically late, or she?s a bit negative —to cut down on frustration and fights.接受她的缺点。没有人是完美的。所以要迁就她的怪癖——她老是迟到,或是她的消极——以减少失望和争吵。

·Boost her ego. Heartfelt compliments make everyone feel great, so tell her how much you love her new sweater or what a great job she did on a work project.增强她的自尊心。发自内心的赞美会让任何人都感到愉

综合英语(一)课文及翻译

Lesson One: The Time Message Elwood N, Chapman 新的学习任务开始之际,千头万绪,最重要的是安排好时间,做时间的主人。本文作者提出了7点具体建议,或许对你有所启迪。 1 Time is tricky. It is difficult to control and easy to waste. When you look a head, you think you have more time than you need. For Example,at the beginning of a semester, you may feel that you have plenty of time on your hands, but toward the end of the term you may suddenly find that time is running out. You don't have enough time to cover all your duties (duty), so you get worried. What is the answer? Control! 译:时间真是不好对付,既难以控制好,又很容易浪费掉,当你向前看时,你觉得你的时间用不完。例如,在一个学期的开始,你或许觉得你有许多时间,但到学期快要结束时,你会突然发现时间快用光了,你甚至找不出时间把所有你必须干的事情干完,这样你就紧张了。答案是什么呢?控制。 2 Time is dangerous. If you don't control it, it will control you. I f you don't make it work fo r you, it will work against you. So you must become the master of time, not its servant. As a first-year college student, time management will be your number one Problem. 译:时间是危险的,如果你控制不了时间,时间就会控制你,如果你不能让时间为你服务,它就会起反作用。所以,你必须成为时间的主人,而不是它的奴仆,作为刚入学的大学生,妥善安排时间是你的头等大事。 3 Time is valuable. Wasting time is a bad habit. It is like a drug. The more time you waste,the easier it is to go on wasting time. If seriously wish to get the most out of college, you must put the time message into practice. 译:时间是珍贵的,浪费时间是个坏习惯,这就像毒品一样,你越浪费时间,就越容易继续浪费下去,如果你真的想充分利用上大学的机会,你就应该把利用时间的要旨付诸实践。 Message1. Control time from the beginning. 4 Time is today, not tomorrow or next week. Start your plan at the Beginning of the term. 译:抓紧时间就是抓紧当前的时间,不要把事情推到明天或是下周,在学期开始就开始计划。 Message2. Get the notebook habit. 5 Go and buy a notebook today, Use it to plan your study time each day. Once a weekly study plan is prepared, follow the same pattern every week with small changes. Sunday is a good day to make the Plan for the following week.

研究生英语综合教程(上)熊海虹课文翻译

Unit One 核心员工的特征 大卫·G.詹森1核心员工究竟是什么样子的?几乎每次进行调查时,我都会从雇主们那里听到“核心员工”这个名词。我请一位客户——一位正参与研究的人事部经理,给我解释一下。“每家公司都有少数几个这样的员工,在某个专业领域,你可以指望他们把活儿干好。 在我的小组中,有七名化工流程工程师和生物学家,其中有那么两三个人是我赖以生存的,”他说,“他们对我的公司而言不可或缺。当请你们公司替我们招募新人的时候,我们期待你们会去其他公司找这样的人:其他公司经理不想失去的员工。我们只招募核心员工。” 2这是一段充满了鼓动性的谈话,目的是把猎头们派往竞争对手的公司去游说经验丰富的员工们做一次职业变更。他们想从另一家公司招募核心员工。然而,每家公司也从新人中招人。他们要寻找的是完全一样的东西。“我们把他们和公司顶级员工表现出的特质进行对照。假如他们看起来有同样特征的话,我们就在他们身上赌一把。”只是这样有点儿冒险。 3“这是一种有根据的猜测,”我的人事经理客户说。作为未来的一名员工,你的工作是帮助人事部经理降低这种风险,你需要帮助他们认定你有潜力成为一名核心员工。 4特征1:无私的合作者 职业顾问和化学家约翰·费策尔最早提出了这个特征。关于这个特征,人们已经写了大量的文章。它之所以值得被反复谈及,是因为这一特征是学术界和企业间最明显的差别。“这里需要合作,”费策尔说,“企业的环境并不需要单打独斗,争强好胜,所以表现出合作和无私精神的员工就脱颖而出了。在企业环境中,没有这样的思维方式就不可能成功。” 5许多博士后和研究生在进行这种过渡的过程中表现得相当费力。因为生命中有那么长一段时间他们都在扮演一个独立研究者的角色,并且要表现得比其他年轻的优秀人才更出色。你可以藉此提高在公司的吸引力:为追求一个共同的目标和来自其他实验室和学科的科学家们合作——并且为你的个人履历上的内容提供事迹证明。这个方法,加上你在描述业绩时开明地使用代词“我们”,而不是“我”,能使公司对你的看法从“单干户”转变成“合作者”。更为有利的是,要在你实验室内部,以及在和你们实验室合作的人们之间,培养一个良好声誉:一个鼓励并发动合作的人——还要保证让那些会接听调查电话的人们谈及你的这个品质。 6特征2:紧迫感 唐-豪特是一位给aaas.sciencecareers@org 网站论坛频繁写稿的撰稿人。他之前是一名科学家。许多年前他转向了企业,并一直做到高级管理的职位。他在3M公司一个部门负责策略和商业开发工作,这个部门每年上缴的税收高达24亿多美元。他就是一个重视紧迫感的人。 7“一年365天,一周7天,一天24小时,生意始终在进行,那意味着一年365天,一周7天,一天24小时,竞争也同样在进行,”豪特说,“公司取胜的方法之一就是要更快地到达‘目的地’。这就是说,你不仅要把所有能支持公司快速运转的功能都调动起来,而且还得知道如何决定‘目的地’是哪里。这样,不仅对那些行动快速的人们,也对那些思维敏捷,并有勇气按自己的想法行事的人们都提出了要求。这需要全公司各部门的运作,而不仅仅是管理部门的工作。” 8特征3:风险容忍度 企业要求员工能承受风险。“一名求职者需要表现出仅凭不准确、不完整的信息就做出决策的能力。他或她必须能接纳不确定因素并冒着风险做出结论,”一位客户在职业描述中写道。 9豪特赞同这一说法。“商业成功通常有这样一个特质:那就是能接受不确定因素和风险——个人的,组织上的和财务上的。这就让许多科学家感到不适应,因为学术上的成功其实是依靠认真而严谨的研究。更进一步说,伟大的科学常常是由找寻答案的过程和答案本身两者同时来定义的。因此科学家们往往沉迷于过程。在企业里,你需要了解过程,但最终你会迷上答案,然后根据你认为该答案对你的企业所具有的意义来冒风险。像这样敢冒风险是一套技能组合,是所有雇主在他们最好的员工身上所寻找的东西。”

研究生英语系列教材上unit1-原文+翻译

研究生英语系列教材上unit1-原文+翻译

TRAITS OF THE KEY PLAYERS 核心员工的特征 What exactly is a key play? 核心员工究竟是什么样子的? A “Key Player” is a phrase that I've heard about from employers during just about every search I've conducted. 几乎每次进行调查时,我都会从雇主们那里听到“核心员工”这个名词。 I asked a client —a hiring manager involved in recent search — to define it for me. 我请一位客户——一位正参与研究的人事部经理,给我解释一下。 “Every company has a handful of staff in a given area of expertise that you can count on to get the job done. “每家公司都有少数几个这样的员工,在某个专业领域,你可以指望他们把活儿干好。 On my team of seven process engineers and biologists, I've got two or three whom I just couldn't live without,” he said. 在我的小组中,有七名化工流程工程师和生物学

家,其中有那么两三个人是我赖以生存的,”他说, “Key players are essential to my organization. “他们对我的公司而言不可或缺。 And when we hire your company to recruit for us, we expect that you'll be going into other companies and finding just: 当请你们公司替我们招募新人的时候,我们期待你们会去其他公司找这样的人: the staff that another manager will not want to see leave. 其他公司经理不想失去的员工。 We recruit only key players.” 我们只招募核心员工。” This in part of pep talk intended to send headhunters into competitor's companies to talk to the most experienced staff about making a change. 这是一段充满了鼓动性的谈话,目的是把猎头们派往竞争对手的公司去游说经验丰富的员工们做一次职业变更。

新职业英语·职业综合英语1的课文翻译

新职业英语·职业综合英语课文翻译 第一课谷歌 上过互联网的人都见过谷歌,许多人要在互联网上查找某方面的信息时,他们都会去“谷歌”一下。作为全世界最有名的互联网搜索引擎,谷歌是网络业界功成名就的最好范例之一。 谷歌始于1996年1月斯坦福大学博士生拉里?佩奇的一个研究项目。为了找到一种能帮助网络用户搜索到相关网页的更好方法,佩奇设想可以通过检索网页之间的关系来实现。他认为其他网页链接最多的那些网页一定是最受欢迎的,这项技术结果看起来是成功的。 佩奇和他的合作伙伴谢尔盖?布林于1998年9月7日创建了自己的公司,并在之后的一周注册了https://www.sodocs.net/doc/371210227.html,这一网址。这个搜索引擎很快声名鹊起,2000年谷歌开始在自己的网站出售广告。在投资者的热情资助下,经过几年的发展,谷歌上市了,谷歌的很多雇员一夜之间成了百万富翁。 谷歌最近收购了互联网最大的视频共享网站https://www.sodocs.net/doc/371210227.html,,而且每天都在不断增加一些新功能,如工具栏、邮件和广告。当然,成长与成功也带来了竞争。微软最近就试图收购雅虎以便能在互联网搜索引擎领域与谷歌抗衡。 随着公司的壮大与知名度的提高,谷歌在美国公司就业吸引力的排名也上升到第一。他们尝试打破传统的办公室设计,努力把办公室变成员工感觉舒适、并能充分发挥自己才华的地方。 现在,谷歌已拥有YouTube、Blogger和其他一些热门网站,并且成为网络广告收入方面的领头羊。当初两个学生的一个小点子已发展成为一家拥有十亿美元资产的大公司,谷歌也成为全球最著名的商标之一。谷歌的发展史为当今的网络企业家树立了一个完美的典范,也提供了灵感。 第二课秘书 秘书可能会有很多其他不同的头衔,例如行政助理、文员或私人助理。尽管所有这些头衔都以行政工作为主旨,但它们却反映了不同种类的秘书工作。秘书岗位十分古老,例如,古希腊和罗马的商人和政客们就曾雇用私人秘书和文员来管理他们的事务。 秘书的工作就是使办公室顺利运转。秘书的职责范围很广,依据他们所在办公室的不同而各异。就最低要求来说,秘书要处理信函,跟踪日程安排,管理文件系统,操作电话、传真机、复印机等办公设备。许多秘书还要接听电话,并将其转给适当的人员。有些秘书还要负责办公室用品的采购,他们也可能会处理预算、簿记和人事文档。秘书应当具备使用电脑和其他电子设备的经验,因为他们将处理大量的电子资料,包括往来信函。

学术综合英语(罗立胜)1-6单元课文翻译

human creations, language may be the most remarkable. Through language we share experience, values, exchange ideas, transmit knowledge, and sustain culture. Indeed, language is vital to sense of reality by giving meaning to events. 在人类所有的创造中,语言也许是影响最为深远的。我们用语言来分享经验,表达(传递?)价值观,交换想法,传播知识,传承文化。事实上,对语言本身的思考也是至关重要的。和通常所认为的不同的是,语言并不只是简单地反映现实,语言在具体描述事件的时候也在帮助我们建立对现实的感知。——语序的调整。 Good speakers have respect for language and know how it works. Words are the tools of a speaker?s craft. They have special uses, just like the tools of any other profession. As a speaker, you should be aware of the meaning of words and know how to use language accurately, clearly,vividly,and appropriately. 好的演讲者对语言很重视,也知道如何让它发挥更好的效果。词语是演讲者演讲的重要“武器”,具有特殊的用途,这和任何其他的工作技艺没什么两样。作为演讲者,必须知道词语的具体含义,也要懂得如何做到用词准确、清晰、生动、适当。 Using language accurately is as vital to a speaker as using numbers accurately to a accountant. Never use a word unless you are sure of its meaning. If you are not sure, look up the word in the dictionary. As you prepare your speeches, ask yourself constantly, “What do I really want to say? What do I really mean?” Choose words that are precise and accurate. 演讲者准确地使用语言和会计准确使用数字是一样重要的。确定词意后再措词。如果不确定,请先查词典。当你在准备演讲的时候,要不断地问自己:“我到底要说什么?我到底想表达什么意思?”用词一定要精准。 Using language clearly allows listeners to grasp your meaning immediately. You can ensure this [by using familiar words (that are known to the average person and require no specialized background); by choosing concrete words in preference to more abstract ones, and by eliminating verbal clutter]. 用词清晰可以让听众迅速理解你的意思(抓到你的点)。要做到这一点,就要尽量使用一般人都熟悉的不需要专业知识就能懂的词语;多用具象词汇少用抽象词汇;还有要减少口误。 Using language vividly helps bring your speech to life. One way (to make your speech vivid)|is through imagery,or the creation of word pictures. You can develop imagery by using concrete language, simile, and metaphor. Simile is an explicit comparison between things (that are essentially different yet have something in common); it always contains the words “like”or “as”. Metaphor is an impli cit comparison between things that are different yet have something in common; it does not contain the words “like” or “as”. 生动地用词能让演讲鲜活起来!比喻,这种能产生文字图像的修辞,可以使演讲达到生动的效果。比喻要用具象的语言,分为明喻和隐喻。 明喻是指在本质上有区别但仍然有相同点的事物之间做一个明确的比较,一般句中会含有“像”或“似”。隐喻则是一种隐藏的比较,不会出现like 和as 这些连接词。 Another way to make your speeches vivid is by exploiting the rhythm of language. Four devices for creating rhythm are parallelism, repetition, alliteration, and antithesis. Parallelism is the similar arrangement of a pair or series of related words, phrases, or sentences. Repetition is the use of the same word or set of words at the beginning or end of successive clauses or sentences. Alliteration comes from repeating the initial constant sounds of close or adjoining words. Antithesis is the juxtaposition of

研究生英语系列教材综合教程课文翻译

研究生英语系列教材综合教程(上)课文翻译 Unit 1 核心员工的特征 1核心员工究竟是什么样子的?几乎每次进行调查时,我都会从雇主们那里听到“核心员工”这个名词。我请一位客户——一位正参与研究的人事部经理,给我解释一下。“每家公司都有少数几个这样的员工,在某个专业领域,你可以指望他们把活儿干好。在我的小组中,有七名化工流程工程师和生物学家,其中有那么两三个人是我赖以生存的,”他说,“他们对我的公司而言不可或缺。当请你们公司替我们招募新人的时候,我们期待你们会去其他公司找这样的人:其他公司经理不想失去的员工。我们只招募核心员工。” 2这是一段充满了鼓动性的谈话,目的是把猎头们派往竞争对手的公司去游说经验丰富的员工们做一次职业变更。他们想从另一家公司招募核心员工。然而,每家公司也从新人中招人。他们要寻找的是完全一样的东西。“我们把他们和公司顶级员工表现出的特质进行对照。假如他们看起来有同样特征的话,我们就在他们身上赌一把。”只是这样有点儿冒险。 3“这是一种有根据的猜测,”我的人事经理客户说。作为未来的一名员工,你的工作是帮助人事部经理降低这种风险,你需要帮助他们认定你有潜力成为一名核心员工。 4特征1:无私的合作者 职业顾问和化学家约翰·费策尔最早提出了这个特征。关于这个特征,人们已经写了大量的文章。它之所以值得被反复谈及,是因为这一特征是学术界和企业间最明显的差别。“这里需要合作,”费策尔说,“企业的环境并不需要单打独斗,争强好胜,所以表现出合作和无私精神的员工就脱颖而出了。在企业环境中,没有这样的思维方式就不可能成功。” 5许多博士后和研究生在进行这种过渡的过程中表现得相当费力。因为生命中有那么长一段时间他们都在扮演一个独立研究者的角色,并且要表现得比其他年轻的优秀人才更出色。你可以藉此提高在公司的吸引力:为追求一个共同的目标和来自其他实验室和学科的科学家们合作——并且为你的个人履历上的内容提供事迹证明。这个方法,加上你在描述业绩时开明地使用代词“我们”,而不是“我”,能使公司对你的看法从“单干户”转变成“合作者”。更为有利的是,要在你实验室内部,以及在和你们实验室合作的人们之间,培养一个良好声誉:一个鼓励并发动合作的人——还要保证让那些会接听调查电话的人们谈及你的这个品质。 6特征2:紧迫感 唐-豪特是一位给aaas.sciencecareers@org 网站论坛频繁写稿的撰稿人。他之前是一名科学家。许多年前他转向了企业,并一直做到高级管理的职位。他在3M公司一个部门负责策略和商业开发工作,这个部门每年上缴的税收高达24亿多美元。他就是一个重视紧迫感的人。 7“一年365天,一周7天,一天24小时,生意始终在进行,那意味着一年365天,一周7天,一天24小时,竞争也同样在进行,”豪特说,“公司取胜的方法之一就是要更快地到达‘目的地’。这就是说,你不仅要把所有能支持公司快速运转的功能都调动起来,而且还得知道如何决定‘目的地’是哪里。这样,不仅对那些行动快速的人们,也对那些思维敏捷,并有勇气按自己的想法行事的人们都提出了要求。这需要全公司各部门的运作,而不仅仅是管理部门的工作。” 8特征3:风险容忍度 企业要求员工能承受风险。“一名求职者需要表现出仅凭不准确、不完整的信息就做出决策的能力。他或她必须能接纳不确定因素并冒着风险做出结论,”一位客户在职业描述中写道。 9豪特赞同这一说法。“商业成功通常有这样一个特质:那就是能接受不确定因素和风险——个人的,组织上的和财务上的。这就让许多科学家感到不适应,因为学术上的成功其实是依靠认真而严谨的研究。更进一步说,伟大的科学常常是由找寻答案的过程和答案本身两者同时来定义的。因此科学家们往往沉迷于过程。在企业里,你需要了解过程,但最终你会迷上答案,然后根据你认为该答案对你的企业所具有的意义来冒风险。像这样敢冒风险是一套技能组合,是所有雇主在他们最好的员工身上所寻找的东西。” 10风险容忍度的另外一个要点是求职者对失败的承受度。失败很重要,因为这表示你不怕冒险。所以各家公司总会寻找有可能犯错误并敢于承认错误的求职者。大家都知道如何谈论成功——或者当他们在寻找工作的时候应该知道。但很少有人乐意谈论失败,更少有人知道如何从失败的边缘吸取教训和获得经验。“对我的企业来说,求职者需要坦然地谈论他或她的失败,而且他或她需要有真正的失败经历,而不是特意为面试而杜撰的东西。如果做不到的话,那么这个人冒的风险还不够,”豪特说。 11特征4:善于处理人际关系 瑞克·李奇在迪科德遗传工程公司从事业务拓展。李奇最近才转行到企业,做业务方面的工作。我向他咨询这个重要特征,是因为在他的新业务角色中,人际沟通能力在成功和失败之间发挥着很大的作用。“科学家毕生都在积累知识,培养技术上的敏锐感,”他说,“但为企业工作需要完全不同的东西——人际交往的能力。想转行到企业界的科学家们必须优先考虑他们的社会关系资源而不是技术资源。对一个以前一直根据专业知识水平被评价的人来说,突然之间要根据他的人际交往能力来评价他,真是十分令人恐惧。” 12然而,如果认为只有像李奇那样的生意人才需要熟练的人际沟通技巧,那就错了。事实上,我所遇见的在企业工作的核心费工们之所以取得成功,很大程度上是因为他们能够与公司上下各种各样的人共事。 Unit 4 爱和情感连系 1爱,对于人类的生存是不可或缺的。它既是一种情感,又是一种行为。家庭通常是我们最早和最重要的爱和

新标准大学综合英语2 unit1 课文翻译

NUIT1 大学已经不再特别了 有这么一种说法:“要是你能记得20世纪60年代的任何事情,你就没有真正经历过那段岁月。”对于在大麻烟雾中度过大学时光的那些人,这话可能是真的。但是,20世纪60年代有一件事人人都记得,那就是:上大学是你一生中最激动人心、最刺激的经历。 20世纪60年代,加州的高校把本州变成了世界第七大经济实体。然而,加州大学的主校园伯克利分校也以学生示威、罢课以及激进的政治氛围而著名。1966年,罗纳德?里根竞选加州州长,他问加州是否允许“一所伟大的大学被喧闹的、唱反调的少数人征服。”自由派人士回答说,大学之所以伟大正是因为它们有能力容忍喧闹的、唱反调的少数人。 在欧洲的大学校园里,大学生以新的姿态和激情投入到争取自由和正义的事业中去,大规模的社会主义或共产主义运动引发了他们与当权者之间日益升级的暴力冲突。许多抗议是针对越南战争的。可是在法国,巴黎大学的学生与工会联盟,发动了一场大罢工,最终导致戴高乐总统辞职。 20世纪60年代大学生活的特点并不仅仅是激进的行动。不论在什么地方,上大学都意味着你初次品尝真正自由的滋味,初次品尝深更半夜在宿舍或学生活动室里讨论人生意义的滋味。你往往得上了大学才能阅读你的第一本禁书,看你的第一部独立影人电影,或者找到和你一样痴迷吉米?亨德里克斯或兰尼?布鲁斯的志同道合者。那是一段难以想象的自由时光,你一生中最无拘无束的时光。 可如今那份激情哪儿去了?大学怎么了?现在,政治、社会和创造意识的觉醒似乎不是凭借大学的助力,而是冲破其阻力才发生的。当然,一点不假,高等教育仍然重要。例如,在英国,布莱尔首相几乎实现了到2010年让50%的30岁以下的人上大学的目标(即使愤世嫉俗的人会说,这是要把他们排除在失业统计数据之外)。不过,大学教育已不再是全民重视的话题了。如今,大学被视为人们急于逃离的一种小城镇。有些人辍学,但大多数已经有些麻木,还是坚持混到毕业,因为离开学校实在是太费事了。 没有了20世纪60年代大学生所发现的令人头脑发热的自由气氛,如今的大学生要严肃得多。英国文化协会最近做了一项调查,研究外国留学生在决定上哪所大学时所考虑的因素。这些因素从高到低依次是:课程质量、就业前景、学费负担、人身安全问题、生活方式,以及各种便利。大学已变成实现目的的手段,是在就业市场上增加就业几率的一个机会,上大学本身不再是目的,不再是给你提供一个机会,让你暂时想象一下:你能够改变世界。 童年与大学之间的距离已缩小了,大学与现实世界之间的距离也缩小了。其中的一个原因可能和经济有关。在一个没有保障的世界里,现在的许多孩子依赖父母资助的时间比以前的孩子更长。21世纪的学生大学毕业后根本无法自立门户,因为那太昂贵了。另一个可能的原因是通讯革命。儿子或女儿每学期往家里打一两回电话的日子一去不复返了。如今,大学生通过手机与父母保持着脐带式联系。至于寻找痴迷无名文学或音乐的同道好友,没问题,我们有互联网和聊天室来帮助我们做到这一点。

研究生学术综合英语1-6课课文及翻译

Presenting a speech (做演讲) Of all human creations, language may be the most remarkable. Through 在人类所有的创造中,语言也许是影响最为深远的。我们用语言 language we share experience, formulate values, exchange ideas, transmit 来分享经验,表达(传递?)价值观,交换想法,传播知识, knowledge, and sustain culture. Indeed, language is vital to think itself. 传承文化。事实上,对语言本身的思考也是至关重要的。[Contrary to popular belief], language | does not simply mirror reality but also helps to create our sense of reality [by giving meaning to events]. 和通常所认为的不同的是,语言并不只是简单地反映现实,语言在 具体描述事件的时候也在帮助我们建立对现实的感知。 ——语序的调整。 Good speakers have respect for language and know how it works. Words are the tools of a speaker’s craft. They have special uses, just like the tools of any other profession. As a speaker, you should be aware of the meaning of words and know how to use language accurately, clearly,vividly,and appropriately. 好的演讲者对语言很重视,也知道如何让它发挥更好的效果。词语是演讲者演讲的重要“武器”,具有特殊的用途,这和任何其他的工作技艺没什么两样。作为演讲者,必须知道词语的具体含义,也要懂得如何做到用词准确、清晰、生动、适当。 Using language accurately is as vital to a speaker as using numbers accurately to a accountant. Never use a word unless you are sure of its meaning. If you are not sure, look up the word in the dictionary. As you prepare your speeches, ask yourself constantly, “What do I really want to say? What do I really mean?”Choose words that are precise and accurate. 演讲者准确地使用语言和会计准确使用数字是一样重要的。确定词意后再措词。如果不确定,请先查词典。当你在准备演讲的时候,要不断地问自己:“我到底要说什么?我到底想表达什么意思?”用词一定要精准。 Using language clearly allows listeners to grasp your meaning immediately. You can ensure this [by using familiar words (that are known to the average person and require no specialized background); by choosing concrete words in preference to more abstract ones, and by eliminating verbal clutter]. 用词清晰可以让听众迅速理解你的意思(抓到你的点)。要做到这一点,就要尽量使用一般人都熟悉的不需要专业知识就能懂的词语;多用具象词汇少用抽象词汇;还有要减少口误。 Using language vividly helps bring your speech to life. One way (to make your speech vivid)|is through imagery,or the creation of word pictures. You can develop imagery by using concrete language, simile, and metaphor. Simile is an explicit comparison between things (that are essentially different yet have something in common); it always contains the words “like”or “as”. Metaphor is an implicit

研究生英语课文翻译

Unit One 旅行通用语 1 数十年来,法兰西语言研究院一直捍卫着法语的尊严。几年前,由于法国人对英语词汇的入侵非常敏感,该机构颁布了净化法语的法律,其内容甚至涉及专业术语。就拿波音747 (Boeing747)来说吧,现在法国人必须用法语词gros-porteur;表示出租的leasing也变成了credit-bail。此类例子不胜枚举,触及生活的方方面面。法国总统希拉克很可能会继续加大力度,直至连英特网internet和字节流(信息组)byte stream之类的词也找到相应的法语新词。哎,真不知未来的法语会变成什么样。 2 不幸的是(或许并非不幸),英语没有受到如此的保护。在美国,随处可见严重偏离英国标准英语的美式英语。“honour”普遍被写成“honor”,“night”也变成了“nite”。许多词意广为人知的英式英语单词被赋予新的解释,交流也变得有些困难。比如说,汽车的行李箱“boot”变成了“trunk”(一个在英国指代树干的单词);引擎盖“bonnet”变成了“hood”(英式英语中的风帽);老式婴儿尿布“nappy”变成了“diaper”(英式英语中的菱格花纹织物);婴儿小外套“matineejacket”也变成了“vest”(英国的内衣汗衫)。显而易见,两国英语曾同出一源,而如今却将两国彼此隔离。当然了,按美国人的观点,是英国人的语言表达出了问题。 3 实际使用中,甚至还有更糟的英语呢!只要你在外国旅游并注意一下菜单、海报、旅店、甚至当地日常生活中的英语,就可以证明过去的标准用语在这些地方已变得不伦不类,让我详例如下: 4 旅行作家波洛?菲利浦曾不惜笔墨地渲染自己的几番经历,我觉得该有更多的读者了解一下。他提及某份荷兰的灯泡目录,上面对用户承诺有“a speedy execution’——快速处死(毫无疑问,想表达的应是“送货及时”)。此外,东柏林的一个衣帽间告示要求客人“please hang yourself here”——请在这儿吊死自己(本想说的是“将衣帽挂在这儿”)。只希望没人会真的从字面上去理解。 5 我还可以补充一些多年周游世界时的亲身经历。例如,奥斯坦德的一家精品店正在宣扬其货品立意新颖,却用了“revolting new ideas”,即“令人作呕的立意”。孟买的几家糕饼屋也鼓吹自己是“No.1 loafers”,目口头号游手好闲者,可是其本意是要宣称自己的糕饼全市第一。 6 我并不知道基督教影响如此之广,直到我在香港看到一位牙医的宣传:“我们由最新的循道宗信徒拔牙”,这儿的“Methodists”(循道宗信徒)显然应改为“methods”,即“方法”。 7 恐怕没人能确定这些误用实际上是体现了英语的普及还是仅仅反映了局限于地方的习惯用法。但可以确定的是,海法医学会绝对应该阻止其会员挂这样的铜招牌:“妇女及其它疾病的专家”。 8 看来旅店对多语种告示颇为青睐,希望它们会有利于人们更好地使用现代化设施。没有它们,旅店就会显得沉闷而缺乏效率。然而,在布鲁塞尔的一家旅店中,这条电梯告示只会令毫无防范的房客更愿意爬楼梯:“使用电梯时,请按要去楼层的按钮。若更多人进入电梯,请分别按各自要去楼层的按钮。电梯会按楼层的字母顺序,依次送客。没复位的按钮显示着接收到的要去楼层的指令”。伊斯坦布尔的一则旅店告示则没这么复杂:“想要客房服务时,请开门喊叫‘客房服务’”。至少那儿的客人不用对付也许经常失灵的电子设备。 9 在土耳其,人们对于“直言不讳”的喜爱在一个已远近闻名的安卡拉导游册中得到了充分体现。导游册这样招揽顾客:“来我们餐馆吧,你会在欧洲救护车中享用中东风味美食”(显然这儿的救护车“ambulance”应为氛围“ambience”)。而另一家瑞士餐馆的菜单也同样吸引人:“我们的葡萄酒绝人他念”。(“our wines leave nothing to hope for'’一语双关,可本意显然是“我们的葡萄酒美味绝伦”)。 10在东欧,奥匈帝国时期的老牌大旅馆从未放弃过礼节。一则旅馆房间告示上写着“诚邀尊贵的客人在12点到14点之间占客房女服务员的便宜”(take advantage of t he chambermaids)。然而,这可能造成意外的交通阻塞。最近的一次莫斯科画展也未必能让偶尔光顾者欣然前往,根据其告示,“画展将展出俄罗斯艺术家的300幅作品,他们中的大部分人在过去十年中已被处死了”。 11 曼谷一家洗衣房的广告词邀请来访的顾客“留下你的衣服,尽情享受吧!”就像是鼓励人们在这座远东娱乐首府干些出格之事。

综合英语三课文翻译

Unit 1 Changes in the Way We Live 在美国,不少人对乡村生活怀有浪漫的情感。许多居住在城镇的人梦想着自己办个农场,梦想着靠土地为生。很少有人真去把梦想变为现实。或许这也没有什么不好,因为,正如吉姆·多尔蒂当初开始其写作和农场经营双重生涯时所体验到的那样,农耕生活远非轻松自在。但他写道,自己并不后悔,对自己作出的改变生活方式的决定仍热情不减。 Mr. Doherty Builds His Dream Life Jim Doherty 有两件事是我一直想做的――写作与务农。如今我同时做着这两件事。作为作家,我和E·B·怀特不属同一等级,作为农场主,我和乡邻也不是同一类人,不过我应付得还行。在城市以及郊区历经多年的怅惘失望之后,我和妻子桑迪终于在这里的乡村寻觅到心灵的满足。 这是一种自力更生的生活。我们食用的果蔬几乎都是自己种的。自家饲养的鸡提供鸡蛋,每星期还能剩余几十个出售。自家养殖的蜜蜂提供蜂蜜,我们还自己动手砍柴,足可供过冬取暖之用。 这也是一种令人满足的生活。夏日里我们在河上荡舟,在林子里野餐,骑着自行车长时间漫游。冬日里我们滑雪溜冰。我们为落日的余辉而激动。我们爱闻大地回暖的气息,爱听牛群哞叫。我们守着看鹰儿飞过上空,看玉米田间鹿群嬉跃。 但如此美妙的生活有时会变得相当艰苦。就在三个月前,气温降

到华氏零下30度,我们辛苦劳作了整整两天,用一个雪橇沿着河边拖运木柴。再过三个月,气温会升到95度,我们就要给玉米松土,在草莓地除草,还要宰杀家禽。前一阵子我和桑迪不得不翻修后屋顶。过些时候,四个孩子中的两个小的,16岁的吉米和13岁的埃米莉,会帮着我一起把拖了很久没修的室外厕所修葺一下,那是专为室外干活修建的。这个月晚些时候,我们要给果树喷洒药水,要油漆谷仓,要给菜园播种,要赶在新的小鸡运到之前清扫鸡舍。 在这些活计之间,我每周要抽空花五、六十个小时,不是打字撰文,就是为作为自由撰稿人投给报刊的文章进行采访。桑迪则有她自己繁忙的工作日程。除了日常的家务,她还照管菜园和蜂房,烘烤面包,将食品装罐、冷藏,开车送孩子学音乐,和他们一起练习,自己还要上风琴课,为我做些研究工作并打字,自己有时也写写文章,还要侍弄花圃,堆摞木柴、运送鸡蛋。正如老话说的那样,在这种情形之下,坏人不得闲――贤德之人也歇不了。 我们谁也不会忘记第一年的冬天。从12月一直到3月底,我们都被深达5英尺的积雪困着。暴风雪肆虐,一场接着一场,积雪厚厚地覆盖着屋子和谷仓,而室内,我们用自己砍伐的木柴烧火取暖,吃着自家种植的苹果,温馨快乐每一分钟。 开春后,有过两次泛滥。一次是河水外溢,我们不少田地被淹了几个星期。接着一次是生长季节到了,一波又一波的农产品潮涌而来,弄得我们应接不暇。我们的冰箱里塞满了樱桃、蓝莓、草莓、芦笋、豌豆、青豆和玉米。接着我们存放食品罐的架子上、柜橱里也开始堆

研究生英语系列教材上unit1-原文+翻译

TRAITS OF THE KEY PLAYERS 核心员工的特征 What exactly is a key play? 核心员工究竟是什么样子的? A “Key Player” is a phrase that I've heard about from employers during just about every search I've conducted. 几乎每次进行调查时,我都会从雇主们那里听到“核心员工”这个名词。 I asked a client — a hiring manager involved in recent search — to define it for me. 我请一位客户——一位正参与研究的人事部经理,给我解释一下。 “Every company has a handful of staff in a given area of expertise that you can count on to get the job done. “每家公司都有少数几个这样的员工,在某个专业领域,你可以指望他们把活儿干好。On my team of seven process engineers and biologists, I've got two or three whom I just couldn't live without,” he said. 在我的小组中,有七名化工流程工程师和生物学家,其中有那么两三个人是我赖以生存的,”他说, “Key players are essential to my organization. “他们对我的公司而言不可或缺。 And when we hire your company to recruit for us, we expect that you'll be going into other companies and finding just: 当请你们公司替我们招募新人的时候,我们期待你们会去其他公司找这样的人: the staff that another manager will not want to see leave. 其他公司经理不想失去的员工。 We recruit only key players.” 我们只招募核心员工。” This in part of pep talk intended to send headhunters into competitor's companies to talk to the most experienced staff about making a change. 这是一段充满了鼓动性的谈话,目的是把猎头们派往竞争对手的公司去游说经验丰富的员工们做一次职业变更。 They want to hire a “key player” from another company. 他们想从另一家公司招募核心员工。 Every company also hires from ranks of newbies, 然而,每家公司也从新人中招人。 and what they're looking for is exactly the same. 他们要寻找的是完全一样的东西。 “We hold them up to the standards we see in our top people. “我们把他们和公司顶级员工表现出的特质进行对照。 If it looks like they have these same traits, we'll place a bet on them.” 假如他们看起来有同样特征的话,我们就在他们身上赌一把。” It's just a bit risker.只是这样有点儿冒险。 “It's an educated guess,”“这是一种有根据的猜测,” says my hiring manager client.我的人事经理客户说。 Your job as a future employee is to help the hiring manager mitigate that risk. 作为未来的一名员工,你的工作是帮助人事部经理降低这种风险,

相关主题