2023年安徽大学 研究生读写译教程课文总结翻译答案上册(全).docx
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1、2023年安徽大学 研究生读写译教程课文总结翻译答案上册(全) Unit One Text A How to Read A Book Introductory Remarks Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested. Francis Bacon warned readers several hundred years ago.However, what are the criteria for those books to be chewed and
2、digested? How to tell good literature from bad literature? On these iues, people dont seem to have reached an agreement. In the article, Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky first states that peoples life is generally much shorter than books, and that it is important for people to select good books to read
3、.Yet, the author further argues that selecting good books from the ocean of literary works is no easy job; even book reviewers cant help much.In the end, the author suggests that reading poetry is the way to develop good taste in literature, because it is the supreme form of human locution, the most
4、 concise way of conveying the human experience, and offers the highest poible standards for any linguistic operation. Text-related Information 1.The Last Judgment The last judgment (sometime referred to as universal judgment) is a firmly held belief of Roman Catholicism.Immediately upon death each s
5、oul undergoes a particular judgment, and, depending upon the state of that persons soul, goes to heaven, purgatory, or hell.The last judgment will occur after the resurrection of the dead and the reuniting of a persons soul with his or her own physical body.At the time of the last judgment Christ wi
6、ll come in his glory, and all the angels with him, and in his presence the truth of each mans relationship with God will be laid bare, and each person who has ever lived will be judged with perfect justice.Those already in heaven will remain in heaven; those already in hell will remain in hell; and
7、those in purgatory will be released into heaven.The Roman Catholic Church holds no doctrinal position on the fate of those in Limbo.Following the last judgment, the bli of heaven and the pains of hell will be perfected in that those present will also be capable of physical bli/pain.After the last ju
8、dgment the universe itself will be renewed with a new heaven and a new earth. 2.The rhetoric “anticlimax” In rhetoric, climax is a figure of speech, in which words, phrases, or clauses are arranged in order of increasing importance.Climax comes from the Greek word for ladder. 1 Examples: There are t
9、hree things that will endure: faith, hope, and love.But the greatest of these is love.I think weve reached a point of great decision, not just for our nation, not only for all humanity, but for life upon the earth. George Wald A Generation in Search of a Future, March 4, 1969. .Lost, vaded, broken,
10、dead within an hour.William Shakespeare, The Paionate Pilgrim, XIII.the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happine. Martin Luther King, I Have a Dream. Similarly an anticlimax is an abrupt declension (either deliberate or unintended) on the part of a speaker or writer from the d
11、ignity of the idea which he appeared to be aiming at; as in the following well-known distich:- The great Dalhousie, he, the god of war, Lieutenant-colonel to the earl of Mar. An anticlimax can be intentionally employed only for a jocular or satiric purpose.It frequently partakes of the nature of ant
12、ithesis, as in, Die and endow a college or a cat. 3.Belles lettres Belles letters (from the French for literature, literally fine letters) refers to literature that is appreciated for the beauty, artistry, and originality of its style and tone rather than for its ideas and informational content.Earl
13、ier the term was synonymous with literature, referring particularly to fiction, poetry, drama, criticism, and eays.However, belletristic literature has come to mean light, artificial writing and eays extolling the beauties of literature. Language Points 1.On the whole, books are le limited than ours
14、elves.Often they sit on the shelves absorbing dust long after the writer has turned into a handful of dust - and it is precisely the appetite for this posthumous dimension that sets ones pen in motion. On the whole, books have longer lives than the writers who write them.Long after the writer has di
15、ed, his or her books may remain on bookshelves absorbing dust.It is due to the desire to be remembered after death that motivates the author to write continuously. 2 2.So as we to and turn these rectangular objects in our hands we wont be terribly ami if we surmise that we fondle, as it were, the ur
16、ns with our returning ashes.Therefore, when we take a book in our hands, it is not totally wrong for us to think that we are, actually, handling the urn containing our own ashes. ami adj.: not functioning properly; e.g. A few words of introduction may not come ami. Is there anything ami? surmise v:
17、infer from incomplete evidence; e.g.We surmised that he must have had an accident. Theres so little to go on, we can only surmise what happened.n.: a meage expreing an opinion based on incomplete evidence e.g.His surmise proved correct. Your first surmise was right. 3.Whoever said that to philosophi
18、ze is an exercise in dying was right in more ways than one, for by writing a book nobody gets younger.Some people say that to think philosophically is to experience the proce of death.That is right in many aspects, as in the proce of writing a book, the author only gets older and older. philosophize
19、 v.: conduct philosophical thinking; reason philosophically e.g., They spend their time philosophizing about the mysteries of life. a tendency to philosophize about racial harmony 4.The paradox, however, lies in the fact that in literature “good” is defined by its distinction from “bad”. But, what s
20、eems contradictory is that in literature good works are identified by its distinction from bad works, i.e., a piece of work is good because it is not bad. 5.Thats what may constitute bad literatures best defense at the Last Judgment.That may be the reason why there exist so many pieces of bad litera
21、ture. 6.Of course, there is no denying the pleasure of holding up with a fat, slow-moving, mediocre novel; but in the end, we read not for readings sake but to learn.Of course, there is pleasure of some kind in reading a thick, lengthy and ordinary novel; but in the end, we do not read just for the
22、sake of reading but read for learning something. there is no denying: it cannot be denied; one cannot deny the fact that 3 e.g.There is no denying the enjoyment of a vacation after long period of hard work. There is no denying the fact that he is a faithful husband. 7.Hence the need for the works th
23、at bring the human predicament into its sharpest poible focus.Hence, too, the need for some compa in the ocean of available printed matter.Therefore, we need to read works that reflect the puzzle of human beings.We also need some guidance in search of good works among all the books ever printed. bri
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