电子科技大学研究生统一入学考试试题
请注意:答案必须写在答题纸上(写在试题上无效)。
. Translate the following terms into Chinese. ( 15 points, 1 point for each )
  1. OTC
  2. IOC
  3. GPS
  4. CAD
  5. IPO 
  6. intralingual translation 
  7. irrevocable L/C 
  8. force majeure
  9. For Whom the Bell Tolls 
  10. minutes of a meeting
  11. high-end consumer product
  12. boomerang children 
  13. penalty kick
  14. lunar rover 
expressed翻译  15. Ebola phobia
. Translate the following terms into English. ( 15 points, 1 point for each )
  1. 沪港通
  2. 亚太自贸区
  3. 信息产业部 
  4. 芦笛岩
  5. 冬至 
  6. 落地签证 
  7. 传销窝点
  8. 舌尖上的中国
  9. 留守儿童 
  10. 农家乐
  11. 上海书展 
  12. 雾霾天气
  13. 学术
  14. 抗震救灾
  15. 商标侵权 
. Translate the following passage into Chinese. ( 60 points )
    No one can deny that in recent years the need to “save the planet” from global warming has become one of the most pervasive issues of our time. As Tony Blair’s chief scientific adviser, Sir David King, claimed in 2004, it poses “a far greater threat to the world than international terrorism”, warning that by the end of this century the only habitable continent left will be Antarctica. 
Inevitably, many people have been bemused by this somewhat one-sided debate, imagining that if so many experts are agreed, then there must be something in it. But if we set the story of how this fear was promoted in the context of other scares before it, the parallels which emerge might leave any honest believer in global warming feeling uncomfortable.
The story of how the panic over climate change was pushed to the top of the international agenda falls into five main stages. Stage one came in the 1970s when many scientists expressed alarm over what they saw as a disastrous change in the earth’s climate. Their fear was not of warming but global cooling, of “a new Ice Age”.
For three decades, after a sharp rise in the interwar years up to 1940, global temperatures had been falling. The one thing certain about climate is that it is always changing. Since we began to emerge from the last Ice Age 20,000 years ago, temperatures have been through significant swings several times. The hottest period occurred around 8,000 years ago and was followed by a long cooling. Then came what is known as the “Roman Warming”, coinciding with the Roman empire. Three centuries of cooling in the Dark Ages were followed by the “Mediaeval Warming”, when the evidence agrees the world was hotter than today.
    In the past three years, we have seen the EU announcing every kind of measure geared to fighting climate change, from building ever more highly-subsidised wind turbines, to a commitment that by 2050 it will have reduced carbon emissions by 60 per cent. This is a pledge that could only be met by such a massive reduction in living standards.
. Translate the following passage into English. ( 60 points )