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英语一阅读翻译

英语一阅读翻译
英语一阅读翻译

2007 Text 1

①If you were to examine the birth certificates of every soccer player in 2006's World Cup

tournament, you would most likely find a noteworthy quirk: elite soccer players are more likely to

have been born in the earlier months of the year than in the late months. ②If you then examined

the European national youth teams that feed the World Cup and professional ranks, you would find

this strange phenomenon to be ever more pronounced.

如果你打算在2006年世界杯锦标赛上调查所有足球运动员的出生证明,那么你很有可能发现一个引人注目的巧合:优秀足球运动员更可能出生于每年的前几个月而不是后几个月。如果你接着调查世界杯和职业比赛的欧洲国家青年队的话,那么你会发现这一奇怪的现象甚至更明显。

③What might account for this strange phenomenon? Here are a few guesses: a) certain

astrological signs confer superior soccer skills; b) winter born babies tend to have higher oxygen

capacity, which increases soccer stamina; c) soccer-mad parents are more likely to conceive

children in springtime, at the annual peak of soccer mania; d) none of the above.

什么可以解释这一奇怪的现象呢?下面是一些猜测:a)某种占星术征兆使人具备更高的足球技能;b)冬季出生的婴儿往往具有更高的供氧能力,这增加了踢足球的持久力;c)热爱足球的父母更可能在春季(每年足球狂热的鼎盛时期)怀孕;d)以上各项都不是。

Anders Ericsson, a 58-year-old psychology professor at Florida State University, says he

believes strongly in “none of the above.”Ericsson grew up in Sweden, and studied nuclear

engineering until he realized he would have more opportunity to conduct his own research if he

switched to psychology. His first experiment, nearly 30 years ago, involved memory: training a

person to hear and then repeat a random series of numbers. “With the first subject, after about 20

hours of training, his digit span had risen from 7 to 20,”Ericsson recalls. “He kept improving, and

after about 200 hours of training he had risen to over 80 numbers.”

58岁的安德斯?埃里克森是佛罗里达州立大学的一名心理学教授,他说,他坚信“以上各项都不是”这一猜测。在瑞典长大的埃里克森,一直研究核工程,直到他认识到,如果他转向心理学领域,他将会有更多机会从事自己的研究。他的首

次试验是在大约30年以前进行的,与记忆相关:训练一个人先听一组任意挑选的数字,然后复述这些数字。“在经过大约20小时的训练之后,第一个试验对象(复述)的数字跨度从7个上升到20个,”埃里克森回忆说。“该试验对象不断进步,在接受大约200个小时的训练后,他复述的数字已经达到80多个。”

④This success, coupled with later research showing that memory itself is not genetically

determined, led Ericsson to conclude that the act of memorizing is more of a cognitive exercise

than an intuitive one. In other words, whatever inborn differences two people may exhibit in their

abilities to memorize, those differences are swamped by how well each person “encodes”the

information. And the best way to learn how to encode information meaningfully, Ericsson

determined, was a process known as deliberate practice. Deliberate practice entails more than

simply repeating a task. Rather, it involves setting specific goals, obtaining immediate feedback

and concentrating as much on technique as on outcome.

这一成功,连同后来证明的记忆本身不是遗传决定的研究,使得埃里克森得出结论,即记忆过程是一种认知练习,而不是一种本能练习。换句话说,无论两个人在记忆力能力上可能存在怎样的天生差异,这些差异都会被每个人如何恰当地“解读”所记的信息所掩盖。埃里克森确信,了解如何有目的地解读信息的最佳方法就是一个为人所知的有意练习过程。有意练习需要的不仅仅是简单地重复一个任务。相反,它包括确定明确的目标、获得即时的反馈以及技术与结果的浓缩。Ericsson and his colleagues have thus taken to studying expert performers in a wide range of

pursuits, including soccer. They gather all the data they can, not just performance statistics and

biographical details but also the results of their own laboratory experiments with high achievers.

⑤Their work makes a rather startling assertion: the trait we commonly call talent is highly

overrated. Or, put another way, expert performers –whether in memory or surgery, ballet or

computer programming–are nearly always made, not born.

因此,埃里克森和他的同事开始研究包括足球领域在内的广泛领域中专业执行者。他们收集了能够收集的所有资料,不只是表现方面的统计数据和传记详细资料,还包括他们自己对取得很高成就的人员进行的实验室实验结果。他们的研究得出了一个非常令人惊奇的结论——我们通常称为天分的特征被高估了。或者,换句话说,专业执行者――无论是在记忆还是手术方面,在芭蕾还是计算机编程领域――几乎总是培养的,而不是天生的。2007 Text 2

For the past several years, the Sunday newspaper supplement Parade has featured a column called

“Ask Marilyn.”People are invited to query Marilyn vos Savant, who at age 10 had tested at a mental

level of someone about 23 years old; that gave her an IQ of 228 –the highest score ever recorded. IQ

tests ask you to complete verbal and visual analogies, to envision paper after it has been folded and cut,

and to deduce numerical sequences, among other similar tasks. So it is a bit confusing when vos Savant

fields such queries from the average Joe (whose IQ is 100) as, What's the difference between love and

fondness? Or what is the nature of luck and coincidence?①It's not obvious how the capacity to

visualize objects and to figure out numerical patterns suits one to answer questions that have eluded

some of the best poets and philosophers.

在过去的几年,《星期日报》的增刊《漫步》开设了一个名为“询问玛丽琳”的专栏。人们被邀请去询问玛丽琳?沃斯?萨文特,玛丽琳?沃斯?萨文特在10岁时测试的智力水平达到别人23岁时的水平,这使得她的智商高达228――是有记录的最高水平。智商测试要求你完成口头和视觉分析,要求你在纸张被折叠、剪切后想象它的形状,要求你推论数字的顺序,还有其他类似的项目。所以,当沃斯?萨文特面对普通人(智商为100)提出的像“热爱与喜爱之间的区别是什么?”或者“运气与巧合的特征是什么?”这样的问题时,她感到有点困惑。设想物体、判断数字模式的能力如何使一个人能够回答难倒了一些最杰出的诗人和哲学家的问题,这可并不那么显而易见。

Clearly, intelligence encompasses more than a score on a test. Just what does it mean to be smart?

How much of intelligence can be specified, and how much can we learn about it from neurology,

genetics, computer science and other fields?

毫无疑问,智力包含的不仅仅是一次测试所得的分数。而聪明意味着什么?可以明确显示智力有多少?我们能够从神经学、遗传学、计算机科学以及其他领域了解的智力又有多少?

The defining term of intelligence in humans still seems to be the IQ score, even though IQ tests are

not given as often as they used to be. The test comes primarily in two forms: the Stanford-Binet

Intelligence Scale and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales (both come in adult and children's version).

Generally costing several hundred dollars, they are usually given only by psychologists, although

variations of them populate bookstores and the World Wide Web. ②Superhigh scores like vos Savant's

are no longer possible, because scoring is now based on a statistical population distribution among age

peers, rather than simply dividing the mental age by the chronological age and multiplying by 100. Other

standardized tests, such as the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) and the Graduate Record Exam (GRE),

capture the main aspects of IQ tests.

人类有关智力的定义性术语似乎仍然是智商分数,即使人们并不像以前那样经常进行智商测试。智商测试主要表现为两种形式:斯坦福—比奈特智力衡量表和威斯勒智力衡量表(两种都包含成人和儿童测试类型)。由于这些测试一般要花费几百美元,因此通常只有心理学家才进行这些测试,尽管这些测试的变种存在于书店和环球网上。像沃斯?萨文特得到这样的超高分数也再不可能,因为现在的

分数依据的是相同年龄者的统计学群体分布状况,而不是简单地通过实足年龄乘.以100来划分智能年龄。其他标准测试,比如学术能力检测以及研究生入学考试,包含了智商测试的主要方面。

Such standardized tests may not assess all the important elements necessary to succeed in school

and in life, argues Robert J. Sternberg. In his article “How Intelligent Is Intelligence Testing?”,③Sternberg notes that traditional test best assess analytical and verbal skills but fail to measure creativity

and practical knowledge, components also critical to problem solving and life success. Moreover, IQ test

do not necessarily predict so well once populations or situations change. Research has found that IQ

predicted leadership skills when the tests were given under low-stress conditions, but under high-stress

conditions, IQ was negatively correlated with leadership –that is, it predicted the opposite. Anyone who

has toiled through SAT will testify that test-taking skill also matters, whether it's knowing when to guess

or what questions to skip.

罗伯特?杰?斯顿伯格认为,这样的标准测试不可能评估在学校和生活中取得成功所需的所有重要因素。在其名为“智力测试如何明智?”的文章中,斯顿伯格指出,传统的测试最恰当地评估了分析能力和语言表达能力,但没有测量创造性和实际知识,这些也是解决问题和在生活中取得成功的关键因素。而且,一旦种群或环境发生变化,智商测试就不一定预测得那么准确。研究发现,如果在低压力状况下进行智商测试,那么这种测试就可以预测出领导才能,但是,在高压力状况下,智商测试所得的结果与领导才能的关系是否定的,也就是说,它预测的结果是相反的。任何经历过学术能力检测的人都会认为,应试能力也很重要,无论是知道何时应该进行推测,还是知道应该忽略什么问题。2007 Text 3

①During the past generation, the American middle-class family that once could count on hard

work and fair play to keep itself financially secure had been transformed by economic risk and new

realties.Now a pink slip, a bad diagnosis, or a disappearing spouse can reduce a

family from solidly

middle class to newly poor in a few months.

在过去的十几年里,美国那些曾经可以依靠辛勤劳动和公平条件以维持其收入稳定的中产阶层家庭被经济风险和新现实改变了。如今,一份解雇通知书、一个不利的诊断结果或者配偶的去世都可能在几个月之内将一个家庭从稳定的中产阶层家庭降格成为一个新贫困家庭。

In just one generation, millions of mothers have gone to work, transforming basic family economics.

②Scholars, policymakers, and critics of all stripes have debated the social implications of these changes,

but few have looked at the side effect: family risk has risen as well. Today's families have budgeted to

the limits of theirs new two-paycheck status. ③As a result, they have lost the parachuted they once had

in times of financial setback –a back-up earner (usually Mom) who could go into the workforce if the

primary earner got laid off or fell sick. ④This “added-worker effect”could support the safety net

offered by unemployment insurance or disability insurance to help families weather bad times. But today,

a disruption to family fortunes can no longer be made up with extra income from an otherwise-stay-at-home partner.

在仅仅一代人的时间里,数百万母亲出去工作,改变了基本的家庭经济状况。学者、决策者以及各类批评人士对这些变化的社会意义争论不休,但是,很少有人关注这些变化的副作用:家庭的风险增加了。如今的家庭根据其新的双收入限度安排开支。因此,它们失去了它们在经济萧条时期曾经有过的缓解举措——一个后备挣钱者(通常是妈妈),如果家庭的主要挣钱者失业了或者病倒了,她可以出去工作。这种“额外工人效应”可以支撑失业保险或残疾保险提供的安全网,以便帮助家庭渡过难关。但现在,家庭财产的损失再也不可能通过呆在家里的其他伴侣的额外收入弥补了。

retirement

their in risk more much absorb to asked been have families period, same the During income.⑤Steelworkers, airline employees, and now those in the auto industry are joining millions of

families who must worry about interest rates, stock market fluctuation, and the harsh reality that they

may outlive their retirement money. ⑥For much of the past year, President Bush campaigned to move

Social Security to a saving-account model, with retirees trading much or all of their guaranteed

payments for payments depending on investment returns. For younger families the picture is not any

better. ⑦Both the absolute cost of healthcare and the share of it borne by families have risen –and

newly fashionable health-saving plans are spreading from legislative halls to

Wal-Mart workers, with

much higher deductibles and a large new dose of investment risk for families' future healthcare. ⑧Even

demographics are working against the middle class family, as the odds of having a weak elderly parent –

and all the attendant need for physical and financial assistance –have jumped eightfold in just one

generation.

在同一时期,要求家庭在其退休收入中承担更多风险。钢铁厂的工人、航空公司的职员以及汽车产业工人加入了数百万不得不担心利率、股市波动以及可能比其退休收入存在时间更长的严酷现实家庭。在去年的大部分时间里,布什总统一直致力于将社会保险体制转变成一种储蓄存款账户模式,要求退休人员将其大多数或所有保障报酬用来交换依靠投资回报所得的报酬。对于更年轻的家庭来说,前景不容乐观。卫生保健和家庭承担份额的绝对成本都上涨了——而且,最近实施的健康储蓄计划正在从立法机关扩展到沃尔玛员工,包含大量更高的减免,并且给家庭未来的卫生保健带来许多新投资风险。甚至人口统计状况也对中产阶层家庭不利,因为有一个体弱、年迈的父母——以及由此而产生的所有物资和经济援助——就在仅仅一代人的时间里增长了8倍。

⑨From the middle-class family perspective, much of this, understandably, looks far less like an

opportunity to exercise more financial responsibility, and a good deal more like a frightening

acceleration of the wholesale shift of financial risk onto their already overburdened shoulders. The

financial fallout has begun, and the political fallout may not be far behind.

从中产阶层家庭的角度来看,大多数情况是可以理解的,这根本不像一种发挥更多支付能力的机会,而是像一种将经济风险大规模转向那些已经负担过重的家庭的令人恐惧的加速行为。经济副作用已经开始,政治副作用可能也将开始。2007 Text 4

It never rains but it pours. ①Just as bosses and boards have finally sorted out their worst

accounting and compliance troubles, and improved their feeble corporation governance, a new problem

threatens to earn them –especially in America –the sort of nasty headlines that inevitably lead to heads

rolling in the executive suite: data insecurity. ②Left, until now, to odd, low-level IT staff to put right,

and seen as a concern only of data-rich industries such as banking, telecoms and air travel, information

protection is now high on the boss's agenda in businesses of every variety.

不鸣则易,一鸣惊人(本来从不下雨的,却下起了倾盆大雨)。就在老板和董事会用最终挑选出其最严重的清算帐目和顺从问题以及改善其无效的公司管理之际,一个新的问题预示着让他们——特别是在美国——赢得那种令人不愉快的头条

新闻的危险,这些头条新闻不可避免地给这些领导者带来管理方面的附属效应:信息的不安全性。迄今为止,信息保护工作一直被留给临时的、低层次的信息技术人员承担,并且只被看成是信息资源丰富产业所关切的一个方面,比如银行业、电信业以及航空旅行业,如今,信息保护则成为各类商业老板议事日程中需要优先考虑的问题。

③Several massive leakages of customer and employee data this year –from organizations as

diverse as Time Warner, the American defense contractor Science Applications International Corp and

even the University of California, Berkeley –have left managers hurriedly peering into their intricate IT

systems and business processes in search of potential vulnerabilities.

今年,好几次消费者和员工信息的重大泄密事件使得管理人员匆忙检查其复杂的信息系统和商业程序,以便寻找潜在的弱点——这些泄密事件发生在像时代华纳、美国国防部承包的科学应用国际公司以及加州大学伯克利分校这样的不同机构。“Data is becoming an asset which needs to be guarded as much as any other assets, says Haim

Mendelson of Stanford University's business school. “The ability to guard customer data is the key to

market value, which the board is responsible for on behalf of shareholders.”Indeed, just as there is the

concept of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), perhaps it is time for GASP, Generally

Accepted Security Practices, suggested Eli Noam of New York's Columbia Business School. “Setting

the proper investment level for security, redundancy, and recovery is a management issue, not a technical

one,”he says.

斯坦福大学商学院的海姆?门德尔森认为“信息正在成为一种需要像保护其他财

产一样而保护的财产”。“保护消费者信息的能力是市场价值的关键因素,这是董事会应该为了股东的利益而承担的责任”。纽约哥伦比亚商学院的埃尼?诺姆暗示,事实上,正如存在公认会计原则的观念一样,或许可能应该是采取公认安全措施的时候了。他表示“为安全、备份以及恢复确定适当的投资标准是一个管理问题,不是技术问题。”。

The mystery is that this should come as a surprise to any boss. Surely it should be obvious to the

dimmest executive that trust, that most valuable of economic assets, is easily destroyed and hugely

expensive to restore –and that few things are more likely to destroy trust than a company letting

sensitive personal data get into the wrong hands.

其神秘在于,对任何老板来说,这可能是一个意外。然而,对于最迟钝的管理人员来说,显而易见的应该是,作为最珍贵经济财产的诚信被轻易破坏,而要恢复诚信却代价高昂,而且,很少有什么比一个公司让敏感的个人信息落入不妥当人

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hemostpart,theresponsehasbeenfavorable,tosaytheleast.“Hooray!Atlast!”wroteAnthonyTo mmasini,asober-sidedclassical-musiccritic。 2009年纽约交响乐团突然宣布聘用艾伦·吉尔伯特为下一位乐曲指挥,从那时起一直到现在,这次任命都成为古典音乐界的话题。退一步说,从总体上看,反应还是不错的。如冷静的古典音乐评论家安东尼·托姆西尼就这样写:从长时间来看,这次委命是英明的。 ,orbootupmycomputeranddownloadstillmorerecordedmusicfromiTunes。 就我的观点而言,我不知道吉尔伯特是不是一位伟大的指挥家,甚至连他是不是算好的指挥家也不敢确定。可以确信的是,虽然他演出了很多令人印象深刻的有趣的乐曲。然而,我不需要访问AveryFisherHall(可能是纽约交响乐团所在地,即吉尔伯特表演之所),或者其他地方才能听到有趣的管弦乐。(作者意思是,不需要听吉尔伯特,到处可以听到有趣的管弦乐。)我所做的,只需要到我的CD棚里去,随便打开我的电脑,从ITUNES上就可下载比那(当指吉尔伯特表演的)多得多的类似的音乐。

新理念英语阅读初一第3册全文翻译

Unit1 Chapter1 本,查德,布兰卡和朱迪每个月的第三个星期四举行发明家俱乐部会议。他们轮流展示他们的新发明。 明天轮到本展示他的新发明。唯一的问题就是他到现在还没有想出一个发明··· 本正坐在餐桌旁吃着一杯冰淇淋。 “我能做什么呢?”他一边吃冰淇淋一边问自己。 本对自己要发明什么毫无头绪。他吃完冰淇淋,准备再去弄些来。但是,冰淇淋一点也不剩了。 “我知道了,”他兴奋地说,“我要发明一个冰淇淋机!” 词组:hold meeting召开会议 take turns轮流,更替 think of考虑;想起;有···想法 sit at坐,在···坐 a bowl of一碗 have no idea不知道,不了解 Chapter2 本抓起几张纸和支钢笔,然后他就画出了他的冰淇淋机设计草图。这个草图看起来不太像个冰淇淋机,但是本确信它是可行的。 “我不需要试验,”本对自己说,“好吧,我没时间去试验了。” 本只有找材料的时间了。 第二天下午,查德、布兰卡还有朱迪都在本的卧室。本带着一只麻袋出现了。他倒提着麻袋,许多稀奇古怪的东西掉了出来。 “一堆废品,”布兰卡说,“那真是个好发明。” “哈哈,”本说,“你们就等着瞧吧。” 词组:look much like看起来很像 say to oneself暗想,自言自语 turn up开大;翻起;出现 upside down颠倒,倒转;混乱地 fall out争吵;结果;解散;掉队 a pile of一堆 wait and see等着看;拭目以待;观望;走着瞧 Chapter3 本捡起的第一个东西又大又圆,是用钢做的。它是洗衣机的核心零部件。 本举起那部分,看了看底部的洞。 “那个洞是你钻的吗?”查德问。 “是啊,”本说。 “你这个做得不是很好,”查德说。 “只要有用就行了,”本告诉查德。 “你要知道东西也得看上去好才行,”查德说。 接着,本抓起一根软管,把它装入他钻的那个洞里。 “我想我知道这是什么了,”朱迪激动地说,“它是一个鼠窝!” “一个什么?”布兰卡和查德异口同声问道。 “一个鼠窝,”朱迪说,“老鼠通过软管爬进家里。” 朱迪经常说些奇怪的话,但其他人认为这是她说过的最奇怪的事之一。 本在地上放了一个塑料的冰淇淋盒,把软管的另一端放了进去。然后,他拿起一根细绳,把它绕在洗衣机零部件上。 当绳子紧紧地缠绕到零部件外面后,本往后退了退,仔细瞧着他的发明。 “好吧,这是什么?”布兰卡、查德和朱迪一同问道。 “它当然是一个冰淇淋机啦!”本说。 “那它如何工作呢?”查德问。 “它行不通的,”布兰卡说。

初三英语阅读理解带翻译

初三英语阅读理解带翻译 (一) Little Tom down the street calls our dog "The keep dog".Zip is a sheep dog. But when Tom tries to say" Seep", it comes out "keep". And in a way Tom is right. Zip is always bringing things hoem for us to keep! I'll tell you about some of them. Zip's first present was a shoe. It was made of green silk. We didn't know how Zip found the shoe. But after a moment Mary, my big sister, told me the shoe had a strange smell. I nodded(点头)and held my nose. "What do you think it is?" "It smells like something for cleaning. I think someone tried to clean a spot (污点) off the shoe. Then he put it at the door to dry." "Along came Zip. And good-bye shoe!" I said."We should take it back." "We can't ".said my sistter. "Maybe little Tom is right," Mary said. "Maybe Zip is a keep dog!" 1.The writer and Mary didn't know______. A.what Zip's first present was B.how Zip carried its first present home C.who owned Zip's first present D.what Zip's first present was made of

中考英语阅读理解(附带解析和全文翻译)之十五

Last Friday a storm swept through two villages in the New Territories, destroying (摧毁) fourteen homes. Seven others were so badly damaged (破坏) that their owners had to leave them, and fifteen others had broken windows or broken roofs. One person was killed, several were badly hurt and taken to hospital, and a number of other people received smaller hurt. Altogether over two hundred people were homeless after the storm. A farmer, Mr. Tan, said that the storm began early in the morning and lasted for over an hour. “I was eating with my wife and children,” he said, “When we heard a loud noise. A few minutes later our house fell down on top of us. We tried our best to climb out but then I saw that one of my children was missing. I went back inside and found him, safe but very frightened.” Mrs. Woo Mei Fong said that her husband had just left for work when she felt that her house was moving. She ran outside at once with her children. “There was no time to take anything,” she said, “A few minutes later, the roof came down.” Soldiers helped to take people out of the flooded (水淹的) area and the welfare department (福利机构) brought them food, clothes and shelter. 1. How many homes altogether (总共) were damaged in the storm? A. Fourteen B. Twenty-one C. Twenty-nine D. Thirty-six 选D。根据第一段出现的三个数字14,7,15即可知D为正确答案。 2. Where was Mr. Tan when the storm first began? A. He was in bed. B. He was inside the house. C. He was outside the house. D. He was on the roof. 选B。根据“I was eating with my wife and children.”可排除A和D,由下文可知C也不合题意。 3. Mrs. Woo and her family didn’t get hurt because _________. A. her husband knew there would be a storm B. they were all outside the house when the storm became worse C. she felt the house was moving

英语阅读理解及翻译

1.A strange thing happens to nearly everybody at night(英语阅读理解) A strange thing happens to nearly everybody at night. They turn off the lights, pull up the covers and close their eyes. Six or seven sleeping hours later, they wake up again. Strange, isn't it? 一个奇怪的事情发生在几乎每个人身上,并且都在晚上。他们关上灯,拉上了窗帘和闭上他们的眼睛。六或七小时的睡眠后,他们再次醒来。奇怪,不是吗? Sleep is a great puzzle. Scientists and doctors would like to talk about why one can't fall asleep. They are not so sure what causes sleep. 睡眠是一个伟大的谜。科学家和医生谈谈为什么不能入睡。他们不知道什么是睡眠的原因。 You will sleep best both when you are in good health and when you don't eat too much or too little. No worries and a comfortable place to sleep are important, too.你会睡得最好当你身体健康时,你不要吃太多或太少。不用担心,一个舒适的睡眠环境是重要的。 Strange things happen during sleep. For example, you often move. You would feel tired ever if you didn't move. You also dream. Part of your brain is still awake when you dream. Dreaming happens when the memory and imagination parts of your brain are still awake. 奇怪的事情发生在睡眠期间。例如,你经常搬家。你会觉得累,如果你没有动。你也做梦。你大脑的一部分仍然是清醒的时候,您也做梦。做梦时发生的记忆和想象的部分你的大脑仍然清醒。 Don't worry if you dream. Some great stories and poems were finished while the writers were dreaming. 别担心,如果你有梦想。一些伟大的故事和诗歌的作家会完成梦想。 根据短文内容,判断下列句子正(T)、误( F) 。 1. A strange thing happens to only someone at night.T 2. Scientists and doctors are both sure what causes people's sleep.F 3. When you are in good health, you can sleep very well at night.T 4. The writer means that some dreams are good for people.T 5. If you eat too much or too little before sleep, you won't sleep well.T 2. At the Barber's Shop 在理发店 Jack went to a barber's shop and had his hair cut, but when he came out, he 杰克去一家理发店剪了头发,但是当他出来时,他 was not happy with the result. When his friend Bob saw him, he laughed 是不满意的结果。当他的朋友鲍波看到他时,他笑了 and said, "What has happened to your hair,Jack?" 说,“你的头发怎么了,杰克?” Jack said, "I tried a new barber's shop today, because I wasn't quite satisfied 杰克说,“我今天尝试了新的理发店,因为我不是很满意 with my old one, but this one seems even worse." 旧的,但是这一次似乎更差。” Bob agreed. "Yes, I think you're right, Jack. Now I'll tell you what 他同意了。”是的,我想你是对的,杰克。现在我要告诉你 to do when you go into a barber's shop next time: look at all the barber's hair, 做的时候,你走进一家理发店下时间:看所有理发师的头发, find out whose hair looks worst, and then go straight to him."

英语四级真题阅读理解(带翻译)

Passage1 Reading leadership literature, you’d sometimes think that everyone has the potential to be an effective leader. 读领导文学,你有时会认为每个人都有可能成为一个有效的领导者。 I don’t believe that to be true. In fact, I see way fewer truly effective leaders than I see people stuck in positions of leadership who arc sadly incompetent and seriously misguided about their own abilities. 我不相信这是真的。事实上,我认为真正有效的领导者的方式比我看到的人都陷在领导的职位上,遗憾的是他们自己的能力不称职,严重误导了他们。 Part of the reason this happens is a lack of honest self-assessment by those who aspire to(追求)leadership in the first place. 对产生这种现象的原因一部分是由那些渴望缺乏诚实的自我评估(追求)放在首位的领导 We've all met the type of individual who simply must take charge. Whether it's a decision-making session, a basketball game, or a family outing, they can't help grabbing the lead dog position and clinging on to it for dear life. They believe they're natural born leaders. 我们都遇到了个人的类型,他们必须负责。无论是决策会议,篮球比赛,还是家庭外出,他们都不能不抓住领导的狗的地位,并紧紧抓住它,因为亲爱的生命。他们相信他们是天生的领袖。 Truth is, they're nothing of the sort. True leaders don't assume that it's their divine(神圣的)right to take charge every time two or more people get together. Quite the opposite. A great leader will assess each situation on its merits, and will only take charge when their position, the situation, and/or the needs of the moment demand it. 事实是,他们没有什么样的。真正的领导者不认为这是他们的神圣(神圣的)负责每次两个或两个以上的人在一起吧。恰恰相反。一个伟大的领导者会对每一个情况进行评估,并在他们的位置、情况和/或需要的情况下,只会负责。 Many business executives confuse leadership with action. They believe that constant motion somehow generates leadership as a byproduct. Faced with any situation that can’t be solved by the sheer force of activity, they generate a dust cloud of impatience. Their one leadership tool is

考研英语阅读理解全文翻译.doc

年考研英语阅读理解全文翻译.doc

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Text1 Habits are a funny thing. We reach for them mindlessly, setting our brains on auto-pilot and relaxing into the u nconscious comfort of familiar routine. “Not choice, but habit rules the unreflecting herd,” William Wordsworth said in the 19th century. In the ever-changing 21st century, even the word “habit” carries a negative connotation. So it seems antithetical to talk about habits in the same context as creativity and innovation. 习惯是件有趣的事情。我们无意识间养成了一些习惯,我们的大脑是自动运转的,轻松进入熟知套路所带来的不自觉舒适状态。“这并非选择,而是习惯控制了那些没有思想的人”,这是威廉?华兹华斯(William Wordsworth)19世纪时说的话。在现在这个日新月异的21世纪,甚至习惯这个词本身也带有负面涵义。因此,在创造和革新的背景下来谈论习惯,似乎显得有点矛盾。 But brain researchers have discovered that when we consciously develop new habits, we create parallel synaptic paths, and even entirely new brain cells, that can jump our trains of thought onto new, innovative tracks. But don’t bother trying to kill off old habits; once those ruts of procedure are worn into the hippocampus, they’re there to stay. Instead, the new habits we deliberately ingrain into ourselves create parallel pathways that can bypass those old roads. 但大脑研究人员发现,当我们有意识地培养新的习惯的时候,我们创建了平行路径,甚至是全新的脑细胞,可以让我们的思路跳转到新的创新轨道上来。但是,不必费心试图摈弃各种旧习惯;一旦这些程序惯例融进大脑,它们就会留在那里。相反,我们刻意培养的新习惯会创建平行路径能避开原来那些老路。 “The first thing needed for innovation is a fascination with wonder,” says Dawna Markova, author of “The Open Mind” and an executive change consultant for Professional Th inking Partners. “But we are taught instead to ‘decide,’ just as our president calls himself ‘the Decider.’ ” She adds, however, that “to decide is to kill off all possibilities but one. A good innovational thinker is always exploring the many other possib ilities.”

2009年考研英语阅读理解全文翻译.doc

2009年考研英语阅读理解全文翻译.doc

Text1 Habits are a funny thing. We reach for them mindlessly, setting our brains on auto-pilot and relaxing into the unconscious comfort of familiar routine. “Not choice, but habit rules the unreflecting herd,” William Wordsworth sai d in the 19th century. In the ever-changing 21st century, even the word “habit” carries a negative connotation. So it seems antithetical to talk about habits in the same context as creativity and innovation. 习惯是件有趣的事情。我们无意识间养成了一些习惯,我们的大脑是自动运转的,轻松进入熟知套路所带来的不自觉舒适状态。“这并非选择,而是习惯控制了那些没有思想的人”,这是威廉?华兹华斯(William Wordsworth)19世纪时说的话。在现在这个日新月异的21世纪,甚至习惯这个词本身也带有负面涵义。因此,在创造和革新的背景下来谈论习惯,似乎显得有点矛盾。 But brain researchers have discovered that when we consciously develop new habits, we create parallel synaptic paths, and even entirely new brain cells, that can jump our trains of thought onto new, innovative tracks. But don’t bother trying to kill off old habits; once those ruts of procedure are worn into the hippocampus, they’re there to stay. Instead, the new habits we deli berately ingrain into ourselves create parallel pathways that can bypass those old roads. 但大脑研究人员发现,当我们有意识地培养新的习惯的时候,我们创建了平行路径,甚至是全新的脑细胞,可以让我们的思路跳转到新的创新轨道上来。但是,不必费心试图摈弃各种旧习惯;一旦这些程序惯例融进大脑,它们就会留在那里。相反,我们刻意培养的新习惯会创建平行路径能避开原来那些老路。 “The first thing needed for innovation is a fascination with wonder,” says Dawna Markova, author of “The Open Mind” and an executive change consultant for Professional Thinking Partners. “But we are taught instead to ‘decide,’ just as our president calls himself ‘the Decider.’ ” She a dds, however, that “to decide is to kill off all possibilities but one. A good innovational thinker is always exploring the many other possibilities.”

英语阅读理解带翻译篇

英语阅读理解带翻译10篇:给予Like most people, I was brought up to look upon life as a process of getting. It was not until in my late thirties that I made this important discovery: giving-away makes life so much more exciting. You need not worry if you lack money. This is how I experimented with giving-away. If an idea for improving the window display of a neighborhood store flashes to me, I step in and make the suggestion to the storekeeper. One discovery I made about giving-away is that it is almost impossible to give away anything in this world without getting something back, though the return often comes in an unexpected form. One Sunday morning the local post office delivered an important special delivery letter to my home, though it was addressed to me at my office. I wrote the postmaster a note of appreciation. More than a year later I needed a post-office box for a new business I was starting. I was told at the window that there were no boxes left, and that my name would have to go on a long waiting list. As I was about to leave, the postmaster appeared in the doorway. He had overheard our conversation. “Wasn’t it you that wrote us that letter a year ago about delivering a special delivery to your home?”I said yes. “Well, you certainly are going to have a box in this post office if we have to make one for you. You don’t know what a letter like that means to us. We usually get nothing but complaints.” 像大多数人,我长大看待生命是一个过程获得。直到我在30月底,我作出这一重要发现:给予,距离使我们的生活如此更令人兴奋的。您不必担心如果缺乏资金。这是我尝试让-消失。如果一个主意,可以改善窗口显示一个闪烁附近商店给我,我的步骤,并提出上述建议的仓库保管员。一发现我付出,离开是,它几乎是不可能放弃任何在这个世界上,没有得到回报,尽管返回往往在一个意想不到的形式。一个星期天上午,当地邮局作了重要特别

最新考研英语(一)阅读理解全文翻译及解析

Text 1 ①Of all the changes that have taken place in English-language newspapers during the past quarter-century, perhaps the most far-reaching has been the inexorable decline in the scope and seriousness of their arts coverage. ①It is difficult to the point of impossibility for the average reader under the age of forty to imagine a time when high-quality arts criticism could be found in most big-city newspapers. ②Yet a considerable number of the most significant collections of criticism published in the 20th century consisted in large part of newspaper reviews. ③To read such books today is to marvel at the fact that their learned contents were once deemed suitable for publication in general-circulation dailies. ① We are even farther removed from the unfocused newspaper reviews published in England between the turn of the 20th century and the eve of World War 2,at a time when newsprint was dirt-cheap and stylish arts criticism was considered an ornament to the publications in which it appeared. ②In those far-off days, it was taken for granted that the critics of major papers would write in detail and at length about the events they covered. ③Theirs was a serious business. and even those reviews who wore their learning lightly, like George Bernard Shaw and Ernest Newman, could be trusted to know what they were about. ④These men believed in journalism as a calling, and were proud to be published in the daily press. ⑤So few authors have brains enough or literary gift enough to keep their own end up in ournalism,Newman wrote, "that I am tempted to define "journalism" as "a term of contempt applied by writers who are not read to writers who are". ①Unfortunately, these critics are virtually forgotten. ②Neville Cardus, who wrote for the Manchester Guardian from 1917 until shortly before his death in 1975, is now known solely as a writer of essays on the game of cricket. ③During his lifetime, though, he was also one of England's foremost classical-music critics, and a stylist so widely admired that his Autobiography (1947) became a best-seller. ④He was knighted in 1967, the first music critic to be so honored. ⑤Yet only one of his books is now in print, and his vast body of writings on music is unknown save to specialists. ①Is there any chance that Cardus's criticism will enjoy a revival? ②The prospect seems remote.③Journalistic tastes had changed long before his death, and postmodern readers have little use for the richly uphostered Vicwardian prose in which he specialized. ④Moreover,the amateur tradition in music criticism has been in headlong retreat. 全文翻译: 在过去的25 年英语报纸所发生的变化中,影响最深远的可能就是它们对艺术方面的报道在范围上毫无疑问的缩小了,而且这些报道的严肃程度也绝对降低了。 对于年龄低于40岁的普通读者来讲,让他们想象一下当年可以在许多大城市报纸上读到精品的文艺评论简直几乎是天方夜谭。然而,在20世纪出版的最重要的文艺评论集中,人们读到的大部分评论文章都是从报纸上收集而来。现在,如果读到这些集子,人们肯定会惊诧,当年这般渊博深奥的内容竟然被认为适合发表在大众日报中。

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