Reader question:
Please explain “the job is yours to lose” in this sentence: Once you have the face-to-face interview, the job is yours to lose
My comments:
Put it another way: Once they grant you a face-to-face interview, the job is virtually yours.
Don’t be intimidated by the word “lose”. “Yours to lose” is an American expression which actually means your chance of winning is great.
In our example, to make your feel better, they might have told you simply: “Pass the interview and the job is yours.”
Normally they won’t do that and I don’t even know if those encouraging words help even if they do tell you that. Being human, sometimes the closer we’re to the finish line and victory in sight, the more we choke and fail to perform.
Anyways, “yours to lose” simply stresses the point that you may still lose it.
Why is the face-to-face interview that important?
For a number of reasons, the most important of which has to do with the fact that most companies asking to see if you’re fit for their job really mean to give it to you if you’re fit for it. In other words, they’re not advertising for job vacancies that don’t exist just to waste their time and yours.
No, when they say they have vacancies, they do have vacancies to fill, and they need you to come to work soon too, or their overall business is affected.
That’s why they have, say, put up adverts on television announcing they have two jobs on offer. Then they have sorted through some 70 CVs to finalize a list of three people for a face-to-face interview.
Let’s say the first interviewee passes the interview with flying colors and is given the job. The second person somehow fails to impress and therefore is eliminated. That leaves you the only person left for the second and last job on offer.
That is a perfect situation for someone to say to you, by way of encouragement “the job is yours to lose”, meaning so long as you don’t make a major fool of yourself in the interview terribly, the job is yours.
One vacancy, one applicant. It obviously is yours, but you may still lose it. That’s why people, especially Americans, like to say: It’s yours to lose.
Alright?
All right, here are a few media examples of the real-world situation where some prize becomes somebody’s to lose – and, no doubt, other people’s to win.
1. So what happens next?
All the pressure is on Sarah Palin for the vice presidential debate. She goes in with many voters concerned about her answers to media questions over the last week or so. A significant number of Americans do not believe she is qualified to be president. And concern and infighting is beginning to surface among Republicans about her performance.
In fact, many Republicans are saying the problem is that the McCain campaign needs to “let Palin be Palin”. (Hmmm, I remember well many folks saying that about Bush after some mistakes in his campaigns, and thinking, well, sometimes we didn’t want Bush to be Bush.)
This kind of statement by Republicans encourages me to add another rule to some rules I have come up with which are tell-tale signs a campaign is in trouble.
Rule One: When a campaign starts attacking the media, things aren’t going well.
Rule Two: When a campaign says the polls are wrong, things aren’t very good.
Rule Three: When a campaign says “the only poll that counts is the one on election day” usually means a campaign is about to lose.
Now we could probably add a new one: when partisans start saying let the candidate be the candidate, it means things are off course.
What will McCain and Palin do at this point? My guess is the campaign will encourage Palin to make some off the wall accusations at the debate in order to get under Biden’s skin, and hope he makes a mistake by engaging her too passionately.
Or maybe McCain will fly to Afghanistan and look for Osama Bin Laden himself. You just never know.
At this point, this race is Obama’s to lose, and absent a significant mistake it will be tough for McCain to win. McCain’s destiny is no longer in his hands. Though in a strange election, strange things can happen.
- Obama’s race to lose; Pressure points on Palin, HuffingtonPost.com, September 30, 2008.
2. With seven different champions in the last seven grand slam tournaments, it is nearly inconceivable that Serena Williams would be seen as the overwhelming choice to win the U.S. Open.
But after her Wimbledon and Olympic triumphs, many of her rivals seem to think the year’s final grand slam is hers to lose.
“Serena is probably the favorite coming in given her recent form,” said Australian Samantha Stosur, the defending champion. “No matter who you are, I don’t think you can really deny that.”
- Serena Williams: Why she is the favorite at 2017 US Open, Reuters, August 27, 2017.
3. Brendan Rodgers has said the Boxing Day visit to Manchester City holds no fear for Liverpool despite his belief that the Premier League title is City's to lose.
Manuel Pellegrini’s side enjoy an unblemished home record in the league, winning all eight games at the Etihad Stadium with a remarkable return of 35 goals, an average of 4.37 goals per game.
City have put six goals past Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur in the past month but with Liverpool boasting the second-highest goals tally in the Premier League, the competition’s finest player in Luis Suárez and a one-point lead over City, Rodgers insists there will be no trepidation at the Etihad Stadium.
“We arrive there with no fear,” said Liverpool’s manager. “We outplayed Manchester City last year, home and away. We had two draws and we should have won both games but we will go there with every respect for them. I believe with the squad they have, it is their title to lose.
“For us, we will go there and play our game. We will go there and be aggressive and to press the football. We had 23 shots on goal against Cardiff [on Saturday]. They will have seen from Cardiff and from Tottenham [whom Liverpool beat 5-0 at White Hart Lane this month], that we can score goals.”
- We don’t fear trip to Manchester City, says Liverpool’s Brendan Rodgers, The Guardian, December 25, 2013.
About the author:
Zhang Xin is 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.
英语六级听力对话应试技巧和策略
英语四级考试听力训练办法和需注意问题
新四级关注运用能力增选词填空和快速阅读
新大学英语四级考试分题型讲解和技巧点拨
英语六级考试作文题型和其写作构思
认清翻译的本来面目且做好新四级汉译英
四六级写作如何做到行文流畅文笔连贯
英语四六级作文命题六大趋势剖析
大学英语四级新题型分析和考试技巧总结
四六级专家辅导冲刺题型与作文预测
造成四六级考试听力反应慢几个因素分析
双管齐下轻取英语四级考试复合式听写
四级新题型快速阅读中需要注意几个问题
英语四级考试考核要求和各题型解题技巧
四六级考试猜词技巧大补贴
熟悉考点应信心百倍
大学四六级考试作文写作的考前指导
考核要求和解题技巧
新英语四级听力改革概述和高分必夺技巧
四六级听力四要素是速度素质记忆理解
贡献老师开学谈六级复习方法
考生必看英语四级考试失败五大致命原因
北京四级辅导名师谈科学考场的写作方法
冲刺必看英语六级写作的应试策略
要考出四六级高分需掌握英文快速阅读技巧
12月英语四级考试的最后角逐10天搞定四级词汇
汪忠平陈文笠谈英语四六级冲刺
决战英语六级考试最后一个月的冲刺方法
国内最详尽英语四六级口语考试细节指导
破解英语四六级阅读理解四个技巧
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |