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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Todd: OK, now Jeff, I've know you for along time. You are a very resourceful person. You always have these crazy jobs, and recently you had at a hospital, but you weren't a doctor. Could you please describe your job?
Jeff: Todd, it was a pharmaceutical1 company clinic that I was working at and it was, I was a guinea pig, a medical guinea pig which means that a new drug that is being introduced into a foreign country must be tested on an individual before it can be sold on the open market so I'm a guinea pig. It's tested on me, and once the results come back and everything is OK then it is sold to the public.
Todd: So when you say you were a guinea pig, like what did they do to you everyday, or what was your routine?
Jeff: Well let me qualify2 that it's not good work. You can't really make a living at it and bring up children but it pays very well,..., very very well. It's very lucrative3 so that's one of the enticements for doing this kind of work but it's just, your day is you get up are administered4 the drug, for example a flu medicine and then you remain in the clinic all day long and you read and write. You have the freedom to do whatever you like, but it's very monitored so you can't leave the clinic but you can do whatever you like to do in the clinic.
Todd: OK, so you're in the clinic and what would a daily routine be? What do you do? Do you get up and exercise or what?
Jeff: A daily routine varies between individuals, so with me there were twelve on the study, twelve young men, and some of the guys would get up late and sleep until noon. Well, they would get up for breakfast. You have to have breakfast at seven a.m. and what you eat is monitored and then you eat lunch at noon and you eat your dinner at six. In between a lot of the guys read or watched movies or played video games. I used my time by doing yoga or reading, doing work, studying Japanese. I tried to use my time a little bit constructively5, whereas6 some of the other guys sort of just used it as a vacation.
Todd: OK, so you're in this clinic for a week or whatever. So when you get out from being sequestered7 in there, what is the first thing you do?
Jeff: The first thing that I did when I got out was..no, OK, no....I can't say that. The second thing I did when I got out of the clinic was have a nice meal because the food in the clinic wasn't very good so, the second thing was that I had a really good meal, a nice meal of food.
Todd: Alright, Jeff. Thank you for sharing that.
1 pharmaceutical | |
adj.药学的,药物的;药用的,药剂师的 | |
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2 qualify | |
vt.取得资格,有资格,限定,描述;vi.取得资格,有资格 | |
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3 lucrative | |
adj.赚钱的,可获利的 | |
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4 administered | |
管理( administer的过去式和过去分词 ); 治理(国家); 给予; 执行 | |
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5 constructively | |
ad.有益的,积极的 | |
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6 whereas | |
conj.而,却,反之 | |
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7 sequestered | |
adj.扣押的;隐退的;幽静的;偏僻的v.使隔绝,使隔离( sequester的过去式和过去分词 );扣押 | |
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