1、I seem to be suffering from all the illnesses imaginable.
, V! d0 _( i1 d4 O' d. @# F2 K 这里的“suffer from……”是个固定搭配:(遭受、忍受的意思。)
) A7 c0 s0 M' J/ P V& u+ B& ` 2、To crown it all, I had an accident the other day.
- ]% Z7 m) I5 R# t" S To crown it all:(更糟糕的是)the other day:前几天。
1 A$ T; y% x& Z1 n 3、I get short of breath.
4 G, K6 i5 l! P) I U short of breath:呼吸短促。" T% D" {! z3 s. N: z6 _
4、For the sake of your health, keep off alcohol. If possible, give up smoking.+ H, y" s1 A9 S. h
谈谈 “for the sake of” 与“in order to”的区别:
& ]; R) e# C0 Z/ \% w1 q for the sake of 由于.. 或者是"看在...的份上"
* a# D) F7 q) B* V2 s8 w/ I& ] for the sake of God 看在上帝的份上8 M' e3 ]7 q# a& F, S4 T* L5 r
in order to 为了...
8 z% r% n) M( b( D2 q Many students listen to the teacher carefully in order to receive a good mark.0 r7 S" R3 F; U
学生上课认真听讲是为了得到好成绩' Q. u5 T _" M$ X [. ?
for the sake of + 名词
5 R, Y% e9 ]2 |$ f G in order to + 动词% ?8 p% N5 N9 b* a
虽然二者都是表示"为了"这个意思 G; u, t. m$ R+ h" o5 u9 q
可以这么看,前者 是 为了某个东西,所以+ 名词+ j3 @/ y* p' b+ r5 f6 g
后者是为了做某事,所以+ 动词
0 A* e8 f9 E) o' p& ? 5、Likewise, many changes are taking place in hospitals, where the costs of medical equipment and care is skyrocketing.$ O* D0 b7 X1 A0 R, y5 \1 [
同样,医院里正发生着很多的改变,医疗设备与医疗保健的费用突升猛涨。0 I( \. @9 ]+ T% t3 j/ |
6、Because of the high costs, patients now spend a limited number of days in the hospital, depending on their illness.+ T6 n/ E4 x! x6 m6 _4 I/ d
因为高价的花费,现在,病人们根据自身的病情,尽量花更少的时间呆在医院里。* x* z1 d# m( N1 x. M+ m
7、It has worried me a good deal for the last week, and so now I am going to put it on my dressing-table and watch it ache.
' I4 w2 I- t' O; `* R 上周牙疼一直困扰着我,所以现在我要把它摆放在我的梳妆台,看它还怎么疼!
6 T1 A& G7 N6 P# z Passage:
8 o5 t1 N$ g1 r) Q u. G For all it flaws, medical care in the United States has been reformed gigantically over the past several decades. Deaths from heart disease have fallen by 40 percent since 1970. thanks to better detection and treatment, cancer advances have helped to raise U.S. life expectancy from an average of 68 years in 1950 to 77 years today.
7 u5 c R& k" K9 D% k# t P/ E( ^6 \ Not only have American lives grown longer, but their quality has improved. The proportion of people over 65 with one or more chronic disabilities—such as the inability to walk, or to get dressed, without aid—declined from greater than 25 percent in 1982 to less than 20 percent in 1999. and the development of vision-correction surgery, among many other drugs and procedures, has allowed many Americans to prolong pleasures historically with youth.
1 a6 n; @3 a6 r2 v Of course, not all the recent improvements in American health and longevity can be directly attributed to our health-care system; some are as much the result of adopting healthier habits( exercise, better diet) or of dropping unhealthy ones (smoking, too much alcohol-drinking). Still, better medical care is the principal cause of improvements in American health and life span over the past 50 years.) [; w& M8 \! a6 i3 g# A
But the problem is that since 1960 health-care spending has grown significantly faster than the economy, meaning that we’re spending an ever larger portion of our incomes on medical core. In 1960 health care constituted 5.1 percent of the U.S. economy; in 1980 it constituted 8.8 percent; today it constitutes 13.3 percent. Meanwhile, private health-insurance premiums—which rose by 14 percent last year alone —are becoming unaffordable for ever Americans. The number of things we can do to pay for them. 41 millions of our citizens are now uninsured. So the key question is not whether health care should be rationed in the United States; it already is. Rather the question is how health care should be rationed. How should the potential benefits of reduced pain, improved quality of life, or extended life be weighted against the high costs of the medications or procedures involved? And who should weigh them? These are hard questions with high moral stakes. But we do hope that the health-care system will cover more people.. A( Q0 {- e, |1 @7 T' R, @
参考译文:; R; D X- Q% w( z/ _
因为存在缺陷,所以美国的医疗保健在过去几十年里进行了重大改革。心脏疾病导致的死亡自1970年以来下降了40%。由于较先进的监测和治疗,癌症死亡率自1990年以来一直处于下降趋势。总的来看,医疗进步使美国人均寿命从1950的68岁提高到现在的77岁。
3 y3 X+ A* b* j( B) p 美国人不仅提高了寿命,而且还提高了生活质量。65岁以上患有至少一种长期残疾——如在无人帮助下不能独立行走,或不能自己穿衣——的比例从1982年的20%以上下降到1990年的20%以下。视力矫正手术的发展,以及其他药品和治疗程序的发展,使得许多美国人历史性地延长了与年轻有关的生活乐趣。 |