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1、口译听辨源语的听辨理解作为口译工作过程的初始步骤,对口译的成败起着关键的作用。从语音听辨到语流听辨译员通常采用语流听辨的方式译员要注意听辨并理解源语的信息内容,其目标是对信息内容进行译语复述口译现场的译员似乎并不需要清楚地听到源语的每一个音就能达成对源语的听辨理解。具备“心理完型”的能力。从听词到听意:脱离源语语言外壳Listen for the ideas and not the words口译的听辨过程是一个积极理解的过程,口译听辨的目的是为了充分理解源语发言人的意思(ideas)。只有理解了源语的意思,口译的传意沟通的目的才有可能达成。世界著名的口译教学机构- 巴黎第三大学高等翻译学院所
2、主张的“释意理论”认为,口译的理解过程是以“脱离源语语言外壳”为核心的。口译过程大致可分为三个阶段:1 听到带有一定含义的源语声音流。通过分析和解释,理解语言并领悟其意思。2 立即审慎地丢开原来的措辞,记住源语所表达的思想内容(概念、见解等)3 把意思用译语表达出来口译听辨的意义:a 信息的构成要素 谁对谁做了什么 b 语言的内在含义the underlying meaning of a word or expression 口译理解是一个“语言分析+认知补充”的过程C=KL+ELK+AUS Vice Presidents Speech at Fudan University美国副总统在复旦大
3、学的演讲开场白Thank you very much, Mr. Mayor. I appreciate your kind words of introduction. And were delighted to be here today. My wife and I are privileged to have the opportunity once again to travel in China. We are grateful for the welcome we have received, especially for the kind of reception here at
4、 Fudan University. We thank you for the honor, and we bring you good wishes from President George W. Bush and the people of the United States. I know that many of you will soon graduate from this great university. I am told the standards are extremely demanding here, and a degree from Fudan Universi
5、ty signifies years of hard work and discipline.I congratulate each one of you on your achievement, and I commend your teachers for upholding the tradition of excellence that marks the 99-year history of Fudan University.王光亚在普林斯顿大学的演讲开场白女士们、先生们:晚上好。很荣幸应邀到普林斯顿大学参加你们的研讨会。对我本人、我的同事及许多中国人来讲,普林斯顿大学的名字早已是耳
6、熟能详。她的历史比这个国家还长,从这个校园里走出了美国第28任总统伍德罗威尔逊、伟大科学家爱因斯坦、著名诗人T.S.艾略特等众多杰出人物。正如前总统克林顿先生在1996年普大建校250周年时所说:“在美国历史上的每一个紧要关头,普林斯顿大学及其师生都发挥了关键作用。”令人高兴的是,在座诸位对中国事务都抱有研究兴趣。虽然我们两国地理上相距万里,但在日常生活中却非常相近。好莱坞影片、麦当劳快餐成了许多中国人生活中的内容。而中国加工的服装、日用品也天天伴随着美国人民。我希望通过今天的交流,能增进在座诸位对中国和中国外交政策的了解,为未来彼此的友谊与合作锦上添花。Speech at inauguart
7、ion of new facilityDistinguished guests,Ladies and gentlemen,Good afternoon and welcome to the opening ceremony of our first factory in China. We appreciate your taking the time to share this wonderful occasion with us today.On behalf of the company Id like to say a big “thank you” to all of our sup
8、pliers, customers, employees and business associates that are here in attendance with us today.The management team is very proud of this facility and the very capable staff that has developed and brought this operation up to world-class status. This facility is a symbol of the focus and commitment t
9、hat we have made to China.To our suppliers, we look forward to working with you to grow our business to new heights.To our dealers, we plan to continue to supply you with state-of-the-art, high quality products that will allow you to support your customers and improve the lives of many people here i
10、n China and Southeast Asia.To our neighbours and friends, we plan to be a good corporate citizen and will work with you to uphold high business standards throughout China.And last but not least, to our employees, we are committed to providing you with a safe and enjoyable working environment. Thank
11、you all once again for taking the time to share this wonderful occasion with us.布什清华演讲英文Vice President Hu, thank you for your words of welcome. I am grateful for your hospitality, and honored by this reception at one of Chinas great universities. Tsinghua University was founded, with the support of
12、America, to further the ties between our two nations. I know how important this place is to the Vice President, who earned his degree here and even more important, met his gracious wife Liu Yongqing here.I also thank the students here for this opportunity to meet with you, to talk a little bit about
13、 my country and answer some of your questions.The standards and reputation of this university are known around the world, and I know what an achievement it is to be hereMy wife Laura and I have two daughters in college, one at Yale and the other at the University of Texas.We are proud of our daughte
14、rs just like I am sure your parents are proud of you.My visit to China comes on an important anniversary.Thirty years ago this week, an American President arrived in China on a trip designed to end decades of estrangement and confront centuries of suspicion.President Richard Nixon showed the world t
15、hat two vastly different governments could meet on the grounds of common interest, and in a spirit of mutual respect.As they left the airport that day, Premier Zhou Enlai said to President Nixon, Your handshake came over the vastest ocean in the world ? twenty-five years of no communication.During t
16、he 30 years since, America and China have exchanged many handshakes of friendship and commerce.And as we have had more contact with each other, the citizens of our two countries have gradually learned more about each other.Once, America knew China only by its history as a great and enduring civiliza
17、tion.Today, we see a China that is still defined by noble traditions of family, scholarship, and honor. And we see a China that is becoming one of the most dynamic and creative societies in the world as demonstrated by all the knowledge and potential right here in this room.China is on a rising path
18、, and America welcomes the emergence of a strong, peaceful, and prosperous China.The Questions That MatterPresident Richard C. LevinSeptember 1, 2007Yale UniversityMembers of the class of 2011, I am delighted to join Dean Salovey in welcoming you to Yale College. And I want to extend _ also to the p
19、arents, relatives, and friends who have _ you here. To parents especially, I want to say thank you for your very talented and promising children to us. We are delighted to have them with us, and we pledge to do our best to provide them with _to learn and thrive in the four years ahead.Three weeks ag
20、o, as you were beginning to prepare yourselves for your journey to New Haven, I spent a very _ weekend reading a new book by one of our distinguished Sterling Professors, the former Dean of the Yale Law School, Anthony Kronman, who now teaches humanities courses in Yale College. I had one of those e
21、xperiences that I hope you have time and again during your four years here. I was disappointed to finish reading the book. It was beautifully written, _, and _ in its exposition and its logic. I was disappointed because I wanted the pleasure of my reading to go on and on, through the lovely summer a
22、fternoon and well into the evening.Professor Kronmans book,Educations End,1is at once an _of the essential value of the humanities in undergraduate education and a critique of the humanities curriculum as it has evolved over the past forty years. Professor Kronman begins with a presumption that a co
23、llege education should be about more than acquainting yourself with a body of knowledge and _. This presumption is widely shared. Many who have thought deeply about higher education including legions of university presidents starting most eloquently with Yales Jeremiah Day in 1828 go on to argue tha
24、t a university education should develop in you what President Day called the “_” the capacity to think clearly and independently, this classical formulation of the rationale for_. He argues that undergraduate education should also encourage you to wrestle with the deepest questions concerning lived
25、experience: What constitutes a good life? What kind of life do you want to lead? _? What kind of community or society do you want to live in? And how should you reconcile the claims of family and community with your individual desires? In short, Professor Kronman asserts that an important component
26、of your undergraduate experience should be seeking answers to the questions that matter: questions about .The four years ahead of you offer a _ to pursue your intellectual interests wherever they may lead, and, wherever they may lead, you will find something to reflect upon that is pertinent to your
27、 quest for meaning in life. It is true that your professors are unlikely to give you the answers to questions about what you should value and how you should live. _. But I want to make very clear that we encourage you to ask the questions, and, in seeking the answers, to use the _ resources of this
28、place a brilliant and learned faculty, library and museum resources that are the equal of any campus anywhere, and curious and diverse classmates who will accompany you in your quest.Because of their subject matter, the humanities disciplines have a special role in inspiring you to consider how you
29、should live. But I also want to suggest to each of you that questions that _will arise in whatever subjects you choose to study. You will find that virtually every discipline will provide you with a different _ on questions of value and lead you to fresh insights that will _.Your philosophy professo
30、rs, for example, arent likely to teach you the meaning of life, but they will train you to _ and to discern more readily what constitutes a logically consistent argument and what does not. And they will lead you through texts that wrestle directly with the deepest questions of how to live, from Plat
31、o and Aristotle to Kant and Nietzsche and beyond.Your professors of literature, music, and art history will not tell you how to live, but they will teach you to read, listen, and see closely, with _ for the artistry that makes literature, music, and visual art sublime representations of human emotio
32、ns, values, and ideas. And they will lead you through great works that present many different models of how, and how not, to lead a good life.In your effort to think through how you wish to live and what values matter most to you, you will find that challenging questions arise not only in the humani
33、ties. Long ago, I taught _ in Yale College. I always began by telling the students that the course would change their lives. I still believe this. Why? Because economics will open you to an entirely new and different way of understanding how the world works. Economics wont _ for you how society shou
34、ld be organized, or the extent to which individual freedom should be subordinated to collective ends, or how the fruits of human labor should be distributed at home and around the world. But understanding the logic of markets will give you a new way to think about these questions, and, because life
35、is lived within society and not in abstraction from it, economics will help you to think about _.Your biology and chemistry professors will not tell you how to live, but the discoveries made in these fields over the last century have already extended human life _ in the United States. As the secrets
36、 of the human genome are unlocked and the mechanisms of disease uncovered, life expectancy may well increase by _. You may want to ponder how a longer life span might alter your thinking about how to live, how to balance family and career, and how society should best be organized to realize the full
37、 potential of _.Finally, it is at the core of the physical sciences that one finds some of the deepest and most fundamental questions relating to the meaning of human experience. How was the physical universe created? How long will it endure? And _in the order of the universe?For the next four years
38、, each of you has the freedom to _ and prepare for shaping the world around you. You will learn much about yourself and your capacity to contribute to the world not only from your courses, but also from the many friends you make and the rich array of _. Your courses will give you the tools to ask an
39、d answer the questions that matter most, and your friendships and activities will give you the opportunity to test and refine your values through experience.Let me warn you that daily life in Yale College is so intense that it may sometimes _. But, in truth, you have four years free from the pressur
40、es of career and family obligations that you will _ later to reflect deeply on the life you wish to lead and the values you wish to live by. _. It may prove to be the most important and enduring accomplishment of your Yale education.On this day, prescribed by law and marked by ceremony, we celebrate
41、 _ of our constitution and recall the deep commitments that unite our country. I am grate for the honor of this hour, mindful of the_ in which we live,and to fulfill the oath that I have_ and you have _. At this second gathering, our duties are defined not by the words I use, but by the _we have see
42、n together. For a half century, America defended our own freedom by standing watch on _. After the shipwreck of communism came years of relative quiet, years of repose, years of _-and then there came a day of fire. We have seen our _ and we have seen its deepest source. For as long as whole regions
43、of the world simmer in _-prone to ideologies that feed hatred and excuse murder - _, and multiply in destructive power, and cross the most defended borders, and raise a _. There is only one force of history that can break the reign of_, and expose the pretensions of tyrants, and reward the hopes of the decent and tolerant, and that is_ . We are led, by events and common sense, to one conclusion: The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the _ in other lands. The best hope for peace in our world is the_of freedom in all the world.Practice 2
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