时间:2018-12-03 作者:英语课 分类:2009年ESL之就医和人际交往


英语课

 



16 Getting Plastic Surgery 


GLOSSARY 


plastic surgery / cosmetic surgery – one of many medical procedures that 


involves cutting into one’s skin to make one more attractive or beautiful 


* She’s thinking about having plastic surgery to make her nose smaller. 


to go under the knife – to have surgery; to have a medical procedure that 


involves cutting into one’s skin 


* After the car accident, Kashif had to go under the knife three times for his knee 


and shoulder injuries. 


wrinkle – a small fold or line in one’s skin, usually caused by age and sun 


damage 


* Norah looked in the mirror and was surprised to see so many wrinkles around 


her eyes. 


sagging – hanging down and stretched longer than something shouldbe 


* Jim’s pants are sagging. I think it’s because he has lost over 50 pounds in the 


past year. 


Botox – a chemical substance that is injected into the skin on one’s face to 


reduce the appearance of wrinkles, making the skin smoother


* Have you considered using Botox to get rid of the lines on your forehead? 


facelift – a surgical procedure that removes loose skin on one’s face,making 


one’s face look younger 


* I wonder what percentage of movie stars have facelifts as they start to get 


older? 


tummy tuck – a surgical procedure that cuts away unwanted fat and skin on 


one’s abdomen (belly) to make one look thinner 


* Janice decided to get a tummy tuck so that she’d look better in her swimsuit.


plastic surgeon – a medical professional who does surgeries to improve 


people’s physical appearance, even if there are no healthbenefits 


* Lana became a plastic surgeon to help people with face injuries. 


liposuction – a surgical procedure that removes unwanted fat from one’s 


abdomen (belly) by using suction, pulling the fat out of one’s body 


* Mohamed was overweight and had liposuction, but he continued to eat too 


much food, so within a year he had a big belly again. 


nose job – a surgical procedure to change the shape of one’s nose, usually to 


make it smaller or straighter 


* I hate my big nose! Do you think I should get a nose job? 


to go all out – to do 100% of something; to do all of something, not missing or 


skipping anything; to do something to an extreme; to try very hard to do 


something 


* They went all out for their wedding, inviting more than 500 guests and serving 


them the best food and wine available. 


breast implants – bags of silicone that are placed inside a woman’s breasts 


through a surgical procedure to make her breasts bigger 


* Do men think women with breast implants are more attractive? 


to go off the deep end – to go crazy; to stop thinking or acting realistically or 


normally 


* When Shelby saw how inexpensive stocks were, she went off the deep end and 


spent all her money on stocks, not realizing how risky the investment was.


dead serious – extremely serious; not joking; speaking the truth 


* At first we thought he was joking about wanting to start his own business, but 


now we realize he was dead serious. 


over-the-hill – old; past the best part of one’s life 


* On Hal’s 50th


birthday, his employees decorated his office with balloons that 


read “over-the-hill.”


Barbie doll – a children’s toy; a small plastic doll that looks like a very beautiful 


woman, with large breasts, a small waist, and wide hips;a woman who works 


hard to make her body perfect 


* Yevgeny won’t let his daughter play with Barbie dolls because he thinks it will 


make her unhappy with her own body. 


(something) and all – a phrase used to emphasize that something is included in


the discussion 


* It’s time that we got rid of all this stuff we neveruse, CDs and all. 


COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS 


1. Which of these treatments doesn’t require going under the knife? 


a) A Botox injection. 


b) A facelift. 


c) A tummy tuck. 


2. Which of these treatments would an overweight person be most interested in? 


a) Liposuction. 


b) A nose job. 


c) Breast implants. 


______________ 


WHAT ELSE DOES IT MEAN? 


sagging 


The word “sagging,” in this podcast, means hanging down and stretched longer 


than something should be: “Have you noticed the sagging skin around my eyes?” 


Something that is “sagging” can also be weak or slow: “Weneed to find out why 


our company’s sales have been sagging.” As a verb, “to sag” means to be pulled 


down by something heavy: “The tree branches are sagging under the weight of 


so many apples.” The verb “to sag” can also mean to sit heavily, deep into a 


chair, especially when one is tired: “He sagged into his favorite chair at the end of 


the long day.” Finally, the acronym “SAG” represents theScreen Actors’ Guild, 


which is a professional group for American actors and actresses who work in 


television and the movies: “Are you a member of SAG?” 


to go all out 


In this podcast, the phrase “to go all out” means to do 100% of something, not 


missing or skipping anything, or to do something to an extreme: “They went all 


out decorating their daughter’s room. Absolutely everything is pink!” The phrase 


“to go out” means to leave one’s home to do something:“Do you go out most 


Friday nights?” Or, “I’m going out to get some milk.”The phrase “to go out with 


(someone)” means to date someone or to have a romantic relationship with 


someone: “Did you hear that Charity is going out with Albert?” Finally, the 


phrase “to go into (something)” means to begin working in a certain field or to 


start a certain type of business: “Why did you decide to gointo car sales?” Or, 


“Do you think our company should go into the book publishing business?” 


CULTURE NOTE 


Doctors have to meet many “requirements” (things that must be done) before 


they can “practice” (work as doctors) in the United States. They have to 


complete a certain amount of general education, general medical education, and 


education in their “specialty” (an area of specialization, or the type of medicine a 


doctor focuses on). Doctors also have to complete a “residency” (a period of 


time where a new doctor works under the close supervision of another, more 


experienced doctor). 


Many “boards” (professional organizations) “certify” (officially say that someone 


has met specific requirements) that someone has met published standards in 


particular specialties. These are usually a combination ofeducation and 


experience, as well as an exam. When the doctor has been certified by a board, 


we say that he or she is “board certified.” Certification usually lasts only a few 


years, so the doctors must recertify. This may require courses for “continuing 


education” (education after one has already earned thedegree) and additional 


exams. 


The American Board of Medical Specialties helps 24 different boards develop 


standards for different medical specialties. One of them, the American Board of 


Plastic Surgery (ABPS) certifies plastic surgeons in the United States. If you 


want to find a good plastic surgeon, ABPS can help you find a board-certified 


plastic surgeon in your area. Most people agree that working with a boardcertified plastic surgeon – or any other type of medical professional – is a good 


idea. If you don’t select a board-certified doctor, you“run the risk” (accept the 


chance that something bad might happen) of selecting a doctor who doesn’t have 


enough experience or education to correctly perform the surgery or procedure 


you need. 


______________ 


Comprehension Questions Correct Answers: 1 – a; 2 – a 


COMPLETE TRANSCRIPT 


Welcome to English as a Second Language Podcast number 511: Getting Plastic 


Surgery. 


This is English as a Second Language Podcast episode 511.  I’m your host, Dr. 


Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for Educational Development in 


beautiful Los Angeles, California. 


If you go to our website, eslpod.com, you can download aLearning Guide for this 


episode, an to 8- to 10-page guide that contains our vocabulary, definitions, 


sample sentences, additional definitions, cultural notes,comprehension 


questions, and, most importantly, a complete transcript ofeverything we say on 


this episode. 


This episode is a dialogue between George and Joan about “plastic surgery,” 


when people have medical procedures (surgeries) on theirbody to change the 


way it looks. Let’s get started. 


[start of dialogue] 


George: What are you doing? 


Joan: I’m looking through these magazines to try and decide which plastic 


surgery procedures I should have next year. 


George: You’re not thinking of going under the knife. 


Joan: Yes, I am. I’ve always wanted to improve on the way I look, and I’m tired 


of these wrinkles and sagging skin. I want to look 25 again! 


George: That’s ridiculous. Nobody who is 45 can look 25.People who get 


Botox, have facelifts, or tummy tucks look weird. 


Joan: That’s because they didn’t go to the best plastic surgeons. I won’t make 


that mistake. Help me decide. Should I get liposuctionand a nose job, or should 


I go all out and get breast implants, too? 


George: I think you’ve gone off the deep end. We’ve been friends for over 20 


years and you don’t need any cosmetic surgery. You’re perfect the way you are. 


Joan: You can’t be serious! 


George: I’m dead serious, and if you get all of that plastic surgery, you’ll look like 


an over-the-hill Barbie doll, and I’m not going to be seen in public with you. 


Joan: What’s wrong with a little plastic surgery? I just want to feel better about 


myself. 


George: You don’t need plastic surgery to do that. You just need to spend more 


time with me and your other friends who like you just the way you are! 


Joan: Sagging skin and all? 


George: What sagging skin? 


Joan: I feel younger already. 


[end of dialogue] 


The dialogue begins with George saying to Joan, “Whatare you doing?” Joan 


says, “I’m looking through these magazines to try and decide which plastic 


surgery procedures I should have next year.” “Plastic surgery,” sometimes called 


“cosmetic surgery,” is one of many different medical procedures that involve 


cutting into your skin, usually to make you more attractive or more beautiful. If 


you think your nose is too big, you may have plastic surgery tomake your nose 


smaller. My wife thinks my mouth is too big, so she wants me to have plastic 


surgery to make it smaller! 


Joan is interested in plastic surgery, which is very popular especially in cities like 


Los Angeles where everyone is trying to look beautiful, especially those who are 


on television or the movies. I, of course, am on a podcast, so you can guess 


how ugly I am! 


George says, “You’re not going under the knife.” The expression “to go under 


the knife” means to have surgery; not plastic surgery exclusively, it could be any 


kind of surgery. If you had a car accident you might have to have surgery, where 


the doctor cuts open your body. That’s going under the knife. Plastic surgery is 


just one type of surgery. 


Joan says, “Yes, I am. I’ve always wanted to improve on theway I look (to make 


myself look better), and I’m tired of these wrinkles and sagging skin.” “Wrinkles” 


are small lines (or folds, we might call them) in your skin, usually caused by age. 


As you get older, you have more wrinkles. They may also be caused by sun 


damage. People who like to go out into the sun and get a tan so they look 


younger, well, the problem is later in life then you have even more wrinkles and 


you look even older. “Sagging skin” is skin that hangs down; it is not as tight as it 


used to be. It would be, for example, loose skin on your face, rather than having 


your skin that was tight, as you would see among younger people. Not me, 


people who are really young! The word “sag” (sag) has several different 


meanings in English; take a look at that Learning Guidefor some additional 


explanations. 


Joan says, “I want to look 25 again.” George says, “That’s ridiculous. Nobody 


who is 45 can look 25.” That’s true; I’m 45 and I willnever look 25. In fact, even 


when I was 25, I didn’t look 25! George says, “People who get Botox, have 


facelifts, or tummy tucks look weird (look strange).” “Botox” (Botox) is a chemical 


substance that is injected or put into your skin on your faceso that you have 


fewer wrinkles. It makes your skin smoother. It also makes your skin unable to 


move so that when you smile or try to have some expressionon your face, your 


skin just stays the way it is; it doesn’t move. It looks very strange. It’s very 


popular among a lot of people here in Hollywood; they get Botox, especially 


women, but not just women. “To have a facelift” (one word) is to remove lose 


skin on your face, making it tighter. The idea is to try to make you look younger. 


A “tummy tuck” is a surgical procedure that cuts away fat and skin from your 


abdomen – from what we call your tummy, which is in the middle part of your 


body. The idea of a tummy tuck is to make you look thinner. 


Joan says that people who get Botox, have facelifts, or tummy tucks look weird 


because they don’t go to the best plastic surgeons. A “surgeon” is someone who 


does surgery. A “plastic surgeon” is a medical doctor who does surgeries that 


make people look better or younger. Joan says, “I won’t make that mistake (I 


won’t go to any thing but the best plastic surgeons).” If you ever are in Los 


Angeles and you pick up one of the weekly entertainment magazines or 


newspapers, which are often distributed for free at coffee shops and restaurants, 


you can open up the newspaper or magazine and you can see advertisements 


from doctors who are plastic surgeons. It’s sort of funny;they’re so popular here 


in Los Angeles that they advertise in the newspaper. Usually, the advertisement 


has a beautiful woman in a bikini who has a very – how should we say – large 


top of her body and a very small bottom of her body, obviously the result of 


plastic surgery. 


Joan says, “Help me decide (meaning help me make a decisionGeorge). 


Should I get liposuction and a nose job, or should I go all out and get breast 


implants?” “Liposuction” is a type of plastic surgery that removes unwanted fat 


from your belly – your abdomen, your tummy. It pulls thefat out of your body so 


that you look less fat. The “nose job” is when you get surgery to make your nose 


smaller or to make it have a different shape. The expression “to go all out” 


means to do 100 percent of something, to do everythingpossible, to go to the 


extreme, to try very hard to do something. These are all meanings of “to go all 


out.” “They’re going to go all out on their wedding,” they’re going to invite 500 


people and spend 50,000 dollars – they’re going to go all out. “To go out” has 


several different meanings in English; take a look at the Learning Guide for some 


additional explanations of that phrasal verb. 


So, Joan is wondering if she should go all out and getbreast implants. “To 


implant (something)” is to put something underneath your skin or in your body. 


“Breast implants,” for women usually, are when the woman’s breasts (her chest; 


the top front of her body) are changed, usually madebigger by putting in little 


bags of a type of plastic – of silicone. When I was talking about the 


advertisements for the plastic surgeons in the newspapers in Los Angeles, well, 


usually those are of women in bikinis who have breast implants. 


George says to Joan, “I think you’ve gone off the deep end.” “To go off the deep 


end” means to go crazy, to stop being realistic. George says, “We’ve been 


friends for over 20 years and you don’t need any cosmetic surgery.” Remember, 


cosmetics surgery is the same as plastic surgery. “You’re perfect the way you 


are.” Joan says, “You can’t be serious (meaning you’re kidding, right?)!” 


George says, “I’m dead serious.” When someone says they’re “dead serious,” 


they’re saying they’re very serious, they’re extremely serious, they’re not joking 


at all. George says, “if you get all of that plastic surgery, you’ll look like an overthe-hill Barbie doll.” There’s two expressions there: first, “over the hill” means 


old; it’s an informal expression, somewhat of a negative expression. If somebody 


says, “You’re over the hill,” they mean that you have already gotten to the top of 


your life, and now you’re on the second part of your life. You’re old, in other 


words. That’s what my nieces and nephews tell me, I’m over the hill: “You’re 


over the hill Uncle Jeff!” A “Barbie doll” is a child’s toy, usually a young girl’s toy. 


It’s a small doll that has, usually, blonde hair. It’s been around for several years, 


since probably the middle part of the 20th


century. They’re very popular. Usually 


they are dolls that are very beautiful women with large breasts and a small waist 


– a small bottom. George says, “I’m not going to be seen in public with you.” 


Joan says, “What’s wrong with a little plastic surgery? I just want to feel better 


about myself.” And, of course, that’s one unfortunate reason why some women 


have plastic surgery, I think. George says, “You don’t needplastic surgery to 


(feel better about yourself). You just need to spend more time with me and your 


other friends who like you just the way you are!” Joan says, “Sagging skin and 


all?” The phrase “and all” is used to emphasize that something is included in the 


discussion. It would be another way of “even my sagging skin.” George says, 


“What sagging skin?” Joan says, “I feel younger already,” meaning telling me 


that makes me feel younger. 


Now let’s listen to the dialogue, this time at a normal speed. 


[start of dialogue] 


George: What are you doing? 


Joan: I’m looking through these magazines to try and decide which plastic 


surgery procedures I should have next year. 


George: You’re not thinking of going under the knife. 


Joan: Yes, I am. I’ve always wanted to improve on the way I look, and I’m tired 


of these wrinkles and sagging skin. I want to look 25 again! 


George: That’s ridiculous. Nobody who is 45 can look 25.People who get 


Botox, have facelifts, or tummy tucks look weird. 


Joan: That’s because they didn’t go to the best plastic surgeons. I won’t make 


that mistake. Help me decide. Should I get liposuctionand a nose job, or should 


I go all out and get breast implants, too? 


George: I think you’ve gone off the deep end. We’ve been friends for over 20 


years and you don’t need any cosmetic surgery. You’re perfect the way you are. 


Joan: You can’t be serious! 


George: I’m dead serious, and if you get all of that plastic surgery, you’ll look like 


an over-the-hill Barbie doll, and I’m not going to be seen in public with you. 


Joan: What’s wrong with a little plastic surgery? I just want to feel better about 


myself. 


George: You don’t need plastic surgery to do that. You just need to spend more 


time with me and your other friends who like you just the way you are! 


Joan: Sagging skin and all? 


George: What sagging skin? 


Joan: I feel younger already. 


[end of dialogue] 


The script for this episode was written by someone who never goes off the deep 


end, Dr. Lucy Tse. 


From Los Angeles, California, I’m Jeff McQuillan. Thank you for listening. Come 


back and listen to us next time on ESL Podcast. 


English as a Second Language Podcast is written and produced by Dr. Lucy Tse, 


hosted by Dr. Jeff McQuillan, copyright 2009 by the Centerfor Educational 


Development. 




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