¿Õ³ËÈËÔ±"°µÓï"´óÆعâ
The secret language of flight attendants revealed
A flight attendant has revealed the definition of a series of unusual words and phrases used by cabin crew.
½üÈÕ,ÃÀ¹úһλ¿Õ½ãÆعâÁËÒ»×é»ú×é³ÉÔ±³£ÓõÄÌØÊâ´Ê»ãºÍ¶ÌÓï.
For most people, hearing the expression 'bidding', 'slam-clicker' and 'coach-roach' will mean virtually nothing at all.
¶Ô´ó¶àÊýÈËÀ´Ëµ,"bidding"¡¢"slam-clicker"¡¢"coach-roach"ÕâЩ´Ê¸ù±¾ºÁÎÞÒâÒå.
But to the experienced stewards and stewardesses, it is a language they are very familiar with.
µ«ÔÚ¾Ñé·á¸»µÄ¿Õ³ËÈËÔ±¿´À´,Õâ¿ÉÊÇËûÃÇÈÕ³£Ê¹ÓõÄÒ»ÖÖ"°µÓï".
Sarah Steegar, a flight attendant with a majorUScarrier for the past 15 years, explains the hidden meaning behind many of the words.
ÈøÀ¡¤Ë¹µÙ¸ñÊÇÃÀ¹úÒ»¼Ò´óÐͺ½¿Õ¹«Ë¾µÄ¿Õ½ã,¹¤Áä15Äê.ËýÏòÎÒÃǽâÊÍÁËÆäÖÐһЩ´Ê±³ºóµÄº¬Òå.
Bidding: 'This is the monthly process of telling the airline what you'd like for your next work schedule ¡ª a competition based on seniority.'
"Ͷ±ê"£¨Bidding£©£º"ÿÔÂÏòº½¿Õ¹«Ë¾Ìá½»ÏÂÔÂÀíÏ빤×÷ʱ¼ä±íµÄ³ÌÐò¡ª¡ªÒ»³"´×ÊÅű²µÄ¾ºÕù."
Deadhead: Everybody loves this one, but few use it correctly. It means flying as a passenger ¡ª as a company assignment.
"Ãâ·Ñ³Ë¿Í"£¨Deadhead£©£ºÈËÈ˶¼Ï²»¶Õâ¸ö´Ê,µ«ÔÚ¿Õ³ËÈËÔ±¿´À´,ÓöԵÄÈ˺ÜÉÙ.Õâ¸ö´ÊµÄÒâ˼µÄÈ·ÊÇÃâ·Ñ´î³Ëº½°à¡ª¡ªµ«µÃÊÇ×÷Ϊº½¿Õ¹«Ë¾µÄ¹¤×÷ÈÎÎñ.
Basically, the airline needs you to be somewhere other than where you are, and you cannot or are not needed to work the flight. Best guess is it's an old theatre term.
³£¼ûµÄÇé¿ö,ÊǺ½¿Õ¹«Ë¾ÐèÒªÄãÇ°Íù¹¤×÷º½ÏßÒÔÍâµÄµØ·½,¶øÄãÓÖ²»ÄÜ»òÎÞÐèÔÚÕâÒ»º½°àÉϽøÐпճ˷þÎñ.Õâ¸ö´Ê×îÓпÉÄÜÔ´ÓÚ¾ÉʱµÄ¾ç³¡´Ê»ã.
Furlough: When airlines need to shrink, most don't 'lay off,' they 'furlough.'
"ÔÝʱ½â¹Í"£¨Furlough£©£ºº½¿Õ¹«Ë¾¼õԱʱ,ÍùÍù²»»áÑ¡ÔñÖ±½Ó"½â¹Í"£¨lay off£©,¶øÊDzÉÓÃ"ÔÝʱ½â¹Í"µÄ·½Ê½.
Copyright ©1999-2018
Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.