首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
I met Cameron at his home in the village of Newtonmore, in the Scottish Highlands. He’s【C1】______, so when we went out of his co
I met Cameron at his home in the village of Newtonmore, in the Scottish Highlands. He’s【C1】______, so when we went out of his co
admin
2017-03-15
44
问题
I met Cameron at his home in the village of Newtonmore, in the Scottish Highlands. He’s【C1】______, so when we went out of his comfortable home, up onto the open hillside above the village. I could easily tell how much he loves【C2】______. As he looked round, enjoying the scenery and talking, his face lit up. But when I asked him about memorials to the dead in the countryside【C3】______. He talked about all the stuff he’s seen, left by people who’ve been on the mountains before him.【C4】______, he tells me. But also, more and more monuments, marble plaques, laminated photographs. 【C5】______ in plastic. Children toys cemented onto boulders. He hates them all, he says. He’s never destroyed a memorial himself, but he knows other people who have and he【C6】______.
On the other side of the argument are Mo and Morag—two women whose friend, Ailsa, died last year of breast cancer. Mo told me Ailsa was【C7】______. It’s difficult to believe that she’s one. And she talked about the plan for a sponsored walk up Britain’s highest mountain, Ben Nevis. The aim is【C8】______ a cancer charity, to help Ailsa’s friends say good-bye, and to build a small cairn of piled-up rocks in her memory—complete with【C9】______. Morag explained that they picked Ben Nevis because, on a grey day of mist and low cloud, the summit【C10】______. It was as though the decision had been made for them. And, she added, the top of the mountain is the closest【C11】______.
Ben Nevis towers over Fort William, a small town in the west of the Scottish Highlands. It promotes itself as【C12】______ the UK—not least because the mountain is on the doorstep. Admittedly, at one thousand three hundred and forty-three meters the Ben【C13】______ on a world scale. But it does feature some extraordinary wild and rugged scenery, which draws tens of thousands of people every year. They come【C14】______, and in all sorts of ways. Some walk up a wide, easy path to the top because it’s something to do on Sunday morning when it feels like everything else in Fort William is shut.【C15】______ the much more challenging Alpine-esque cliffs and ridges on the mountain’s north face. And some—like Mo and Morag—come to【C16】______, a family member, or a friend who’s died.
The mountaineers and walkers say all these memorials are crass, intrusive, and worse than leaving litter in a wild, unspoiled place.【C17】______ that mountains are special, spiritual places—but say that they should be free to leave monuments to the dead in the wilderness, if that’s what【C18】______.
It’s complicated. A sensitive and difficult subject. And it’s been dealt with in a variety of different ways. Some land-owners【C19】______ on hill and lake-sides. Others remove anything and everything they find even digging up snow-drops and other wild flowers that have been planted in places【C20】______.
Now the Mountaineering Council of Scotland is calling for a debate about what should—and shouldn’t—be allowed.
【C6】
I met Cameron at his home in the village of Newtonmore, in the Scottish Highlands. He’s a passionate hill walker, so when we went out of his comfortable home, up onto the open hillside above the village. I could easily tell how much he loves being outside in the wilderness. As he looked round, enjoying the scenery and talking, his face lit up. But when I asked him about memorials to the dead in the countryside his brow furrowed. He talked about all the stuff he’s seen, left by people who’ve been on the mountains before him. There’s litter and left-over food, he tells me. But also, more and more monuments, marble plaques, laminated photographs. Bunches of flowers wrapped in plastic. Children toys cemented onto boulders. He hates them all, he says. He’s never destroyed a memorial himself, but he knows other people who have and he has some sympathy with them.
On the other side of the argument are Mo and Morag—two women whose friend, Ailsa, died last year of breast cancer. Mo told me Ailsa was a very special person. It’s difficult to believe that she’s gone. And she talked about the plan for a sponsored walk up Britain’s highest mountain, Ben Nevis. The aim is to raise some money for a cancer charity, to help Ailsa’s friends say good-bye, and to build a small cairn of piled-up rocks in her memory—complete with an engraved memorial stone. Morag explained that they picked Ben Nevis because, on a grey day of mist and low cloud, the summit was spot-lit by golden sunshine. It was as though the decision had been made for them. And, she added, the top of the mountain is the closest you can get to heaven.
Ben Nevis towers over Fort William, a small town in the west of the Scottish Highlands. It promotes itself as the Outdoor Capital of the UK—not least because the mountain is on the doorstep. Admittedly, at one thousand three hundred and forty-three meters the Ben isn’t particularly impressive on a world scale. But it does feature some extraordinary wild and rugged scenery, which draws tens of thousands of people every year. They come for all sorts of reasons, and in all sorts of ways. Some walk up a wide, easy path to the top because it’s something to do on Sunday morning when it feels like everything else in Fort William is shut. Some are climbers drawn by the much more challenging Alpine-esque cliffs and ridges on the mountain’s north face. And some—like Mo and Morag—come to commemorate a loved one, a family member, or a friend who’s died.
The mountaineers and walkers say all these memorials are crass, intrusive, and worse than leaving litter in a wild, unspoiled place. The bereaved agree that mountains are special, spiritual, places—but say they should be free to leave monuments to the dead in the wilderness, if that’s what they feel they have to do.
It’s complicated. A sensitive and difficult subject. And it’s been dealt with in a variety of different ways. Some land-owners allow people to place memorials on hill and lake-sides. Others remove anything and everything they find even digging up snow-drops and other wild flowers that have been planted in places where people have died.
Now the Mountaineering Council of Scotland is calling for a debate about what should—and shouldn’t—be allowed.
选项
答案
has some sympathy with them
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/TASO777K
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Itiswellknownthatteenageboystendtodobetter【C1】________maththangirls,thatmalehighschoolstudentsaremorelikely
Innovationisalwaysabitofarace,andintheracecomesomeAmericancompanieswillloseouttoChinesecompetition.
下面你将听到外商有关中国零售业发展情况的一段讲话。China’seconomy,oncereliantonstatespendinginheavyindustry,hasincreasinglylookedtothe
我国金融改革的不断深化将为外资银行与中资银行的合作带来新的机遇。银监会鼓励外资银行通过参股中资银行,在业务、客户和市场方面获得突破;同时,在公司治理、内控、风险管理和经营理念方面带来先进的经验和做法,使中、外资银行在合作中共同获得发展。作为深化金
主席先生,女士们、先生们:目前,国际形势正处于深刻变化之中。和平与发展仍然是当今时代的主题,总体和平的国际环境为世界经济发展提供了有利条件;科技进步日新月异并孕育着新的重大突破,前所未有地提高了人类认识、把握宏观和微观世界的能力,展现了新的发展
A、Feasible.B、Impractical.C、Unpopular.D、Inefficient.A根据题干要求在原文中找寻反对党的意见,发现原文最后一段关于反对党派的意见有如下说法“...haveraisedquestionsabout
上海合作组织的成功经验,归结到一点,就是坚定不移地倡导和实践互信、互利、平等、协商、尊重多样文明、谋求共同发展的“上海精神”。“上海精神”已植根于各成员国的对外政策、价值观念和行为准则之中,越来越具有普遍的国际意义。纵观当今世界,和平、发展、合作已
OnlyafewhundredpeopleliveinYvoire,butthesmallvillageonthesouthernshoresofLakeGenevahasalottooffer.Iteve
ImetCameronathishomeinthevillageofNewtonmore,intheScottishHighlands.He’s【C1】______,sowhenwewentoutofhisco
随机试题
文学的审美效果表现在哪些方面?
A.抗一HAVIgGB.抗一HEVC.抗一HCVD.抗一HAVIgME.HCVRNA甲型肝炎近期感染的标志是
肝肾亏虚型痿病的治法除滋阴清热外,还应
硫脲类治疗甲状腺功能亢进的机制是
外感风热证,应选择何种性味的药物
我国专利法规定不授予专利权的是()
二级及以上公路工程施工招标文件中的通用条件,应()。
如果要对事物发展变化的未来趋势作出描述,例如对五年后技术变革方向进行预测,通常采用的方法()。
科尔沁沙地的主要景观有()。
教育制度在废止之前要求个体必须无条件地遵守,这说明教育制度具有一定的()
最新回复
(
0
)