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
38
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.
【C3】
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
his brow furrowed
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/WASO777K
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
Theprotesters’________waswhippedupbyrecentreportsinthenewspapersaboutthescandalinmeatindustry.
中国的对外开放是“引进来”与“走出去”相结合的对外开放。中国政府在鼓励外商来华投资的同时,支持并鼓励有实力的中国企业到海外投资。在中国政府的大力推进下,近年来,中国企业实施“走出去”战略实现了较大跨越。截至2006年底,中国企业在160多个国家和地区投资设
China’seconomy,oncereliantonstatespendinginheavyindustry,hasincreasinglylookedtotheretailsectorforgrowth.Mark
信息通讯技术进步带来无限机遇,推动商务和生产走向高增值,并改善了香港公民的生活质量。同时,这一进步也在多方面带来了新挑战,例如信息安全、数码环境中知识产权及私稳保护、媒体交汇趋势下的适当监管模式方面。领先的数码经济体系需抓住机遇,接受挑战,才能稳居世界前列
TheUniversityintransformation,editedbyAustralianfuturistsSohailInayatullahandJenniferGidley,presentssome20highly
TheSupremeCourt’sdecisionsonphysician-assistedsuicidecarryimportantimplicationsforhowmedicineseekstorelievedying
A、Shehadneverreadthemagazineherself.B、Sheknewwhousuallyreadthemagazine.C、Shewasquiteinterestedinthenewdevic
A、Herlittleboywouldnotbeinterestedinthatlocalschool.B、Thatnewstateschoolistoofarawayfromherhome.C、Shemigh
随机试题
止回阀的安装可以不考虑工艺介质的流向。()
各种金融工具都有共性,但这些共性不包括()
膀胱炎的表现为急性前列腺炎的表现是
开放性气胸急救处理时应立即
A.βHCGB.AFPC.CA125D.CEAE.以上都不是睾丸精原细胞瘤和非精原细胞瘤患者都表达
男,左上1238,右上1238缺失,口腔余牙均健康。关系正常。这属于Kennedy分类中的
劳动者被视为提供了正常劳动的情况包括()。
下面程序段,运行后的结果是PrivateSubCommand1_ClickDimb%(1To4),i%,t#Fori=1To4b(i)=iNextt=Tof(b())
DNAsequencesfromsomeofthemostdeadlypathogens(病原体)knowntomancanbeboughtovertheInternet,theGuardianhasdiscover
A、$2,030.B、$2,013.C、$2,300.D、$2,330.A女士回答说,学费是2030美元,故选A。注意区分30和13的发音,以免误选B。
最新回复
(
0
)