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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
After my last podcast, I am sure that many of you have applied1 for jobs as spies for the British Secret Intelligence Service. But what will you do if they say no? If they say that they don’t want you; they have enough spies already; and they don’t think you would be very good at spying anyway?
Well, in most big cities nowdays, you can get a job in McDonalds, the chain of fast-food restaurants. You can make and sell burgers and chips (or “French fries” as the Americans call them). You can clear the tables and do the washing-up. Or you can sweep up the rubbish which people leave in the car park. It probably isn’t very interesting work, and probably McDonalds won’t pay you much money. But it is at least a job.
Or a McJob, as some people say. A McJob is a low-paid boring job with few prospects2 in a service industry, like McDonalds restaurants. The word McJob has been used for at least 20 years, and for the last 6 years it has been in the Oxford3 English Dictionary, which means that it is officially recognised as part of the English language.
But McDonalds don’t like this. They say that the word “McJob” is an insult4 to the wonderful, hard-working men and women who work in their restaurants. They say that work in the fast-food industry today is fun, exciting and well-paid. And they want the Oxford English Dictionary to change the definition5 of McJob. They have persuaded a number of leading business people to write a letter to the dictionary, and they have organised a petition6 that anyone can sign.
The Oxford English Dictionary will probably reply that it is not their job to change what words mean. If people use the word “McJob” to mean a badly paid job in a fast-food restaurant, then it is right for the dictionary to say that that is what the word means. There are lots of words in the dictionary which people use in cruel, unfair or insulting7 ways – but that is not the fault of people who write dictionaries. They might even say that it is insulting to poorly paid people to pretend that they have wonderful jobs when actually their jobs are not wonderful. And that it is insulting to French people for McDonalds to call their chips “French fries”.
The truth is that most jobs in fast-food restaurants are boring and badly-paid. There are few benefits or career prospects, and many people only work there for a few months until they find something better. Like a job as a spy for example.
点击收听单词发音
1 applied | |
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用 | |
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2 prospects | |
n.希望,前途(恒为复数) | |
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3 Oxford | |
n.牛津(英国城市) | |
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4 insult | |
vt.侮辱,凌辱;n.侮辱的言词或行为 | |
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5 definition | |
n.定义;限定,确定;清晰度 | |
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6 petition | |
n.请愿书,申请书,诉状;v.请愿,正式请求 | |
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7 insulting | |
侮辱的 | |
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8 session | |
n.会议,开庭期,市盘,学期;adj.短期的 | |
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