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专家答问|Finger quotes:手式问号

2017-08-22 张欣 翻吧

本期专家答问邀请到中国日报资深编辑张欣老师来回答读者的问题。


Please explain "finger quotes" in this passage:


"There was a lot of drinking. At first, it didn't seem like such a big deal to have a beer to celebrate Halloween or the end of finals. There was always some reason to 'celebrate," he says, using finger quotes to accentuate the word celebrate.“But soon, it wasn't just a beer. It was a lot of beers. And I wasn't celebrating. I was coping. And all of a sudden, I realized that I was drinking way too much just trying to get a handle on all my stress and mood problems."


He raised his fingers by his ears and formed quotation marks ("...") to bring attention to the word "celebrate".


Meaning?


Well, with context, we can infer that the speaker doesn't mean "celebrate" seriously. Given the context, we know that there were no real causes for celebration. Guys just wanted to drink – and drink.


Anyways, "finger quotes" are also known as "air quotes", because you raise your fingers up in the air to make the gesture for others to see clearly. To do it, you raise your hands to the ear, one on each side, and hold up the index and middle fingers of each hand and twitch them once or twice – or thrice, sometimes – to simulate quotation marks ("…").


Here are a few recent and hopefully all better media examples by way of making up:


1. If you were alive and cognizant prior to the 1990s, you probably remember that nutrition labels on foods looked different; they didn't have percent-daily values based on a 2,000-calorie diet. That's because the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act was signed into law in 1990, requiring manufacturers to be more transparent about their dietary claims -- for example, if a yogurt's going to be touted as high-protein, consumers would know exactly how much protein is in a serving.


These new labels also made it easier for people to track their daily fat and salt intake. "Because the allowable [saturated fat and sodium] limits would vary according to the number of calories consumed, the FDA needed benchmarks for average calorie consumption," writes Marion Nestle in Why Calories Count: From Science to Politics.


Enter 2,000.


Why land on 2,000 calories?


Doctors didn't just pull it out of thin air, did they? Of course not! They used (finger quotes) SCIENCE. Although a male college athlete's caloric needs vastly differ from those of a postmenopausal woman, for example, there's no way all those different benchmarks would fit on the side of a cereal box. So the FDA decided to go for a middle-ground approach. "The FDA wanted a single number so their recommendations would be simple to follow, and also they did not want to encourage overeating," Dr. Quebbemann says.


The FDA arrived at 2,000 using surveys of how much food people consumed per day, Dr. Quebbemann says. This ranged anywhere from 1,600 calories to 3,000 calories. It averaged the data and came up with a single number, which was… not 2,000. The FDA initially proposed setting the daily value at 2,350 calories, which gives you at least an extra snack, but decided on lowering the amount to 2,000 after asking for public comments and deciding that anything above 2,000 might encourage people to overeat. Which probably isn't a bad assumption, knowing Americans, even though going down to 2,000 is a significant reduction.


-- WHY THE 2,000 CALORIES-PER-DAY RECOMMENDATION IS COMPLETELY MEANINGLESS, Thrillist.com, July 15, 2016.


2. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who lost the 2008 presidential race, sharply criticized Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Thursday for not pledging to accept the result of the November election.


McCain said the loser's obligation to concede was about "respect."


"I didn't like the outcome of the 2008 election. But I had a duty to concede, and I did so without reluctance," McCain said in a statement. "A concession isn't just an exercise in graciousness. It is an act of respect for the will of the American people, a respect that is every American leader's first responsibility. Whatever our differences we owe each other that respect, which we express by defending the democratic values and practices that protect us all."


During Wednesday's presidential debate, Trump was asked whether he would pledge to accept the election results despite his numerous claims that the system is "rigged" against him.


"I will look at it at the time," he replied. On Thursday, Trump elaborated, saying he will accept the result ― if he wins.


McCain said accepting the will of the voters is an American tradition.


"I don't know who's going to win the presidential election," McCain said. "I do know that in every previous election, the loser congratulates the winner and calls them, ‘my president.' That's not just the Republican way or the Democratic way. It's the American way."


Citing no evidence, Trump has repeatedly questioned whether President Barack Obama can legitimately serve as president. He has publicly questioned whether Obama is really a U.S. citizen, called him as "your president" and used air quotes when referring to him as president.


In October 2008, as McCain and Obama were in the final stretch of their campaigns, the Arizona senator also spoke about the importance of accepting the result of the election.


-- John McCain Skewers Donald Trump For Refusing To Pledge To Accept Election Results, HuffingtonPost.com, October 20, 2016.


3. I live in a world of hooah, go to, can do and take no prisoners because if there is no pain, there is no gain. I live in the military world. I am currently a military spouse stationed overseas. I am also a veteran, a former army soldier. I grew up in this world. My parents are both retired military. I formally joined this world when I became a soldier and married this world when I married my husband, who has been in 18 years. This world is all I have known, the one I was born into when I was born on an Army post overseas. I was content with this world, understood all the rules and appreciated the black and white of it — that was until I was diagnosed with lupus.


Mind you, it took a few years to discover what was really wrong with me. There were all sorts of diagnoses, hospitalizations, misdiagnoses. This part of my journey is the same as many of us with a chronic disease. During my arduous journey, I came to realize a sad fact of my beloved world: it is a world of suck it up and shut up. Not only do we deal with the crushing symptoms of our illnesses, but then we are forced to deal with a culture of health care that is by its very nature not equipped or trained to evaluate, treat or understand the chronically ill autoimmune patient, and we are suffering for it.


At first I thought I was the only one. I had never heard of anyone else in my community with lupus or even an autoimmune disease. I noticed something right off the bat: my doctors started treating me differently. Even with my labs as proof, the whiplash of my providers' relationship with me from when I was healthy and in for an occasional flu to baffling symptoms was shocking. I have had my share of eye rolls, to outright long sighs, to "Mrs. Hayden, what do you want me to do?" …um, diagnose me, fix me, be my doctor. Only with positive lab results was I given any sliver of respect in the military doctor's office. My last internist told me on the side how he could not understand the rise in the diagnosis of "autoimmunes." He used air quotes and raised eyebrows. He went on to imply it is catch-all diagnosis for the "crazy, lonely, complaining, hypochondriac" military spouses. While there are compassionate, caring providers in the military health care system, it is my experience they are few and far between.


To manage and deal with my illness I started support groups for my fellow spouses. I soon discovered the military program for dealing with illness within their ranks, the much toted EFMP (Exceptional Family Member Program), was a catch-all mainly for family members with school-age children. There is still no support in place for chronically ill spouses. The program will go out of its way to help you conquer and overcome a treatable disease but has no sustainable systems in place for diseases that have no cure. So, in response I started support groups and came to realize my story was not at all unique.


-- The Sad Truth About the Military and Chronic Illness, by Nonja Hayden, TheMighty.com, January 19, 2017.



注:本文转载自中国日报网英语点津,略有删节。


About the author: 

Zhang Xin is a trainer at chinadaily.com.cn. He has been with China Daily since 1988, when he graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University. Write him at: zhangxin@chinadaily.com.cn, or raise a question for potential use in a future column.



 Writ large=at large?

 Living in the now:活在当下

☑ Signature move 标志性动作

 Golden handcuffs:金饭碗

 Never done anything by halves?

☑ eat the crow:输了吃屎?

☑ Hold court:上朝




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