[CHATTERING
ON TV]
|
|
What can I tell you, Kathy?
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|
My parents aren't home yet.
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|
Oh, don't worry,
|
|
I'm going to get the car.
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|
They already said I could use it.
|
|
Uh-huh.
|
|
No, I promise we won't miss
|
|
the concert. Bye.
|
|
- If we miss that concert...
|
|
- Unbelievable.
|
|
I know. They're an hour late.
|
|
No. I'm talking about
|
|
Wall St. Week in Review.
|
|
This guy is sitting there...
|
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...with a straight face
|
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talking about gold...
|
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...like it's valuable or something.
|
|
Well, gold is valuable.
|
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- And so is time.
|
|
- You're kidding.
|
|
You may not believe this,
|
|
but on Melmac...
|
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...gold is worthless.
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|
On Melmac,
|
|
the most valuable thing is foam.
|
|
- Foam?
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- Yeah.
|
|
My Great-Uncle Shumway once said:
|
|
"I'm heading out West.
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There's foam in them thar hills."
|
Mark Twain’s character Mulberry Sellers said the
phrase “There’s gold in them thar hills” and “there’s millions in it.”
|
Well, foam is almost worthless here.
|
|
- What about gravel?
|
gravel = small pieces of stone
used for making paths and roads
|
- Gravel's cheap too.
|
|
Huh.
|
|
- Wax?
|
|
- Yep.
|
|
Boy.
|
|
ALF, I got some more lint
|
lint = very small pieces of
hair, dust, or cloth that stick together or to the surface of something else
|
for you to save.
|
|
Dump it.
|
dump = throw away
|
Kathy, I told you I'd call you
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the minute they got home.
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Fine, if it'll make you feel better,
|
|
go stand by the curb.
Bye.
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curb (American English) kerb (British English) = the edge of a pavement that is nearest to the road
|
Hey, even silver has value.
|
|
[CAR
APPROACHING]
|
|
That's them. See you later, ALF.
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|
Oh, no. It's a tow
truck.
|
tow truck = a truck
used for pulling away another vehicle that has stopped working
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I didn't order any toes.
|
ALF says this because the word “tow” sounds like
“toe”
|
The car broke
down again.
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break down = if a
machine or vehicle breaks down, it stops working
|
So, what's the connection to toes?
|
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- Mom, Dad, what happened to the car?
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- It's the engine.
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- And the differential.
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- And the brakes.
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ALF, you go in the kitchen,
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the tow truck driver's coming in.
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- He's helping us bring in the groceries.
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- Then who's bringing in the toes?
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Just go.
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- Well, there go my concert plans.
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WILLIE: I'm sorry, Lynn.
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We're as upset about this as you are.
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|
Seems like my friends are always driving me.
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When it's my turn to drive,
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something always happens.
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|
I'd like to be more sympathetic...
|
sympathetic = kind to
someone who has a problem and willing to understand how they feel
|
...but ice cream
|
|
is melting on my shoe.
|
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Sorry. I'll call Kathy and cancel.
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|
[LYNN SIGHS]
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Sorry about my tow truck breaking down.
|
|
What do you suppose
|
|
the odds were on
that one?
|
the odds = the
chances of something happening
|
- Uh, just set those down anywhere.
|
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- That's okay.
|
|
- I'll carry them right into the kitchen.
|
|
- Uh, no!
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|
Uh...
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|
We like to unload our own groceries.
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It's kind of a family thing.
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I know what you mean.
|
|
We're the same way.
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Well, how much do I owe you then, Bert?
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Well, the tow was 49.
|
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But then I owe you
|
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63.50 for the new battery.
|
|
- Ooh.
|
|
- Of course, your wife sat on my glasses.
|
|
So, uh, let's see, uh...
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|
Carry the four...
|
carry is a term used in
elementary arithmetic:
"6 and 6 is 12, put down the 2 and carry the 1;
1 and 2 is 3, and 3 is 6."
|
- Call it 50
bucks.
|
|
- But who owes who?
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|
[LAUGHS]
|
|
That's a good one. Cash will be fine.
|
|
Here you go.
|
|
I hate taking this money from you.
|
|
You're gonna have to shell out plenty to get that car fixed.
|
shell out = to spend
a lot of money on something
|
How much do you think it'll be?
|
|
Well, you're looking at a couple
|
|
of grand
to repair the engine...
|
grand = a thousand dollars
|
...and another deuce
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deuce = two dollars
|
for the differential.
|
|
Plus your tires
are shot.
|
tire (American English) tyre (British English) = a thick rubber cover that fits round the wheel of
a bicycle, car, or other vehicle
“the tires
are shot” means they are worn and it is not safe to use them
|
That's gotta run you, uh...
|
|
Carry the four...
|
|
I think we get the picture.
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|
And also, you may want to consider
|
|
a new set of brake
pads.
|
brake pad = the part
of a brake that presses against a disc inside the wheel of a vehicle in order
to stop the vehicle from moving
|
We should have never towed you
|
|
with the emergency
on.
|
emergency brake in a car is
a handbrake = the piece of equipment in a car that you pull with your hand to
keep the car still after it has stopped
|
My mistake.
|
|
You're too kind.
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|
BERT: I'm sorry,
|
|
I got a grease
spot on the carpet.
|
grease = a thick substance
similar to oil, used on machine parts for making them work smoothly
|
Oh, no, no. I'm sure
|
|
that this will take care of it.
|
|
- My fault. A little cleaning.
|
|
Thanks again. See you, Bert.
|
|
You can come out now, ALF.
|
|
Well, I've canceled
|
|
my concert plans.
|
|
But before I go into my room
|
|
and listen to the
Pretenders on tape...
|
the Pretenders
are an English-American rock band formed in
Hereford, England, in March 1978.
|
...instead of seeing them in person,
|
|
I'd like to say...
|
|
...that I wish we had a second car.
|
|
Have a nice evening.
|
|
Why don't you buy her one, Willie?
|
|
- What?
|
|
- A car.
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|
Spring for it.
|
spring for smth = to pay for
someone else’s share of something:
I’ll spring for dinner tonight
|
We can't afford to spring for a car.
|
|
Now is the time.
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|
Four-point-eight financing
|
|
on every Chevy
in stock.
|
Chevy = Chevrolet
|
On approval of credit, of course.
|
|
I believe our credit was used up
|
|
in the repair to the roof of our garage.
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|
Which had been damaged,
|
|
I believe, by an errant spaceship.
|
errant = travelling in the
wrong direction
|
Thanks for not naming names.
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|
Willie, what if
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|
we kicked in
a little money...
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kick in = to give something,
especially money
|
...to add to what Lynn has saved
|
|
and let her buy a used car?
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|
Well, I don't know.
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|
We'd have to talk about it, that's all.
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|
You have ice cream on your shoes.
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|
- Who has my Pretenders tape?
|
|
- Oh, it's in my Walkman.
|
Walkman is a Sony brand
tradename originally used for portable audio cassette/tape players in the
late 1970s.
|
I use it to do my aerobics.
|
|
Lynn, how much money do you
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|
have in your savings account?
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|
About $ 150.
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|
What if we kicked in 150 with that?
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|
What kind of car would that buy?
|
|
A stolen one.
|
|
You guys would go
in halves with me on a car?
|
go halves = to share
the cost of something with someone so that you each pay 50%:
If we’re going halves, we can afford to buy something really nice
|
We could do that, as long as we were sure...
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|
...it would amount to enough
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|
to buy a safe one.
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|
Well, I could get a part-time job
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|
to earn more.
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|
There's an opening
|
opening = a job that needs a
person to do it:
We have several openings in the sales division.
|
at Mr. Jim's Chicken and Oysters.
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|
We had a Mr. Jim's on Melmac.
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|
But instead of chicken and oysters,
|
|
it was dogs and...
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|
Don't say it, ALF! Don't!
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|
Why? It's not the same Mr. Jim.
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|
The one I knew is in prison.
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|
He got caught
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|
substituting hamburger
for collie.
|
substitute = to remove
one thing and put something else in its place
|
You said it.
|
|
Said what?
|
|
Well, so what do you think, Dad?
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|
I think that's one of the most
|
|
repugnant things I
can imagine.
|
repugnant = extremely
unpleasant or offensive
|
No, no, I mean, can I get a job?
|
|
Honey, do you think that you can
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|
handle a job and go to school?
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|
You're not exactly
|
|
getting straight A's.
|
A is a mark that a teacher
gives to a student’s work to show that it is excellent
|
All the more reason to start a career.
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|
Nobody asked you.
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|
Well, if I had to wait for an invitation,
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|
I'd never speak.
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|
I'll put away the groceries.
|
|
How many more questions
|
|
are there on this stupid test?
|
|
Five more on chicken
|
|
and three more on oysters.
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|
Oh, and there's a two-part essay on citizenship.
|
|
I'm so tired.
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|
Is it really worth all this trouble
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|
just to get a jalopy
to drive around in?
|
jalopy = an old car that is in
bad condition
|
Yes, ALF.
|
|
I want a car more than anything.
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|
Then, you better get cracking here
|
get cracking = to start
doing something or going somewhere immediately:
We’ll have to get cracking if we want to get there before dark.
|
if you want to be wearing...
|
|
...Mr. Jim's feather and shell insignia.
|
insignia = a mark or
sign that shows someone’s rank or status, or what organization they belong to
|
- All right, what's the next question?
|
|
- All right.
|
|
"Question 126:
|
|
While preparing the Cluck 'n' Shuck Combo...
|
|
...the chicken should be...
|
|
...A, breaded...
|
bread = coat food with
breadcrumbs before cooking:
bread the chicken and fry it in oil.
|
...B, baked...
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...C, washed."
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|
I'll go with
C, washed.
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go with = choose
|
[IMITATES
BUZZER]
|
|
Wrong.
|
|
The answer is A, breaded.
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|
- You're not supposed to wash them?
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|
- According to Mr. Jim...
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|
...chickens wash themselves.
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|
Don't wash chickens.
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|
Don't wash chickens.
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|
- Okay.
|
|
- All right. Question 127:
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|
"An oyster should be thrown out when...
|
|
...A, it turns brown...
|
|
...B, it turns black...
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|
...C, it turns over."
|
|
That's right. Take
your time.
|
Take your time. = Don’t be
in a hurry.
|
Think before you answer.
|
|
Lynn?
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|
Lynn?
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|
Yo, Lynn?
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|
I'm gonna guess brown.
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|
- Lynn, I thought you might like...
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|
ALF: Shh.
|
|
- She's asleep.
|
|
- Oh.
|
|
- Poor thing.
|
|
- You're killing her, Kate.
|
|
She can't work and go to school
|
|
at the same time.
|
|
You're robbing her of her youth...
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|
...just because
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|
you won't spring for a car.
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|
[SNIFFING]
|
|
Is that cocoa?
|
|
I can't believe
|
|
you're saying that to me.
|
|
Why not? It smells like cocoa.
|
|
Right, it's cocoa.
|
|
Let's get back to this car thing.
|
|
Now, we made a deal with Lynn.
|
|
We'll contribute half,
|
|
she's to earn the other half.
|
|
But it is cocoa.
|
|
- Yes, it is.
|
|
- I knew it.
|
|
Do you want the cocoa, ALF?
|
|
- Are there marshmallows
in it?
|
marshmallow = a soft
pink or white sweet with a thick round shape
|
- No.
|
|
- Pass.
|
|
- Fine.
|
|
But some hot coffee would be nice.
|
|
I guess she didn't hear me.
|
|
Here you are, sir.
|
|
The Pullet and Gullet Platter.
|
pullet = a chicken that is
less than a year old
gullet = the tube in your body
that carries food from your throat to your stomach
platter = a meal with a
particular type of food, served on a large plate in a restaurant:
a seafood platter
|
- Chicken on
the half shell for the lady.
|
on the half shell = of raw
shellfish, served in the bottom shell, chilled and with condiments
|
- Thank you.
|
|
And oyster
dog
|
|
and a Mr. Jim's game
card for you.
|
game card = (scratch
card) a small card with a substance on its surface that you scratch off to
find out whether you have won a prize
|
- What do I do?
|
|
- You scratch
off three oysters...
|
scratch off = remove surface
by scratching
|
...and win a pack of cigarettes.
|
|
Uh, which is the chicken
|
|
and which is the oyster, then?
|
|
- This tastes like fish.
|
|
- Then that's the chicken.
|
|
You did everything right, Lynn.
|
|
It looks fine.
|
|
And you served it beautifully.
|
|
I just don't think
|
|
I'm really all that hungry right now.
|
|
You don't have to be nice, Dad.
|
|
That was the worst thing I ever ate.
|
|
I just serve it, buster.
|
buster = an impolite word used
when talking to a man whose name you do not know, especially someone you are
annoyed with:
Get lost, buster!
|
We're supposed to say that.
|
|
I'm gonna go change.
|
change = change the clothes
|
I won! I won!
|
|
Menthol Lights.
|
|
I'll take that.
|
|
You know, Willie,
|
|
Lynn hasn't said anything to me.
|
|
But she's been so good
|
|
about this whole thing.
|
|
Maybe we should let her buy a car.
|
|
She could pay us back little by little.
|
|
Gosh, Kate. I thought we decided.
|
|
I think it's important
|
|
that she sees
this thing through.
|
sees this thing through = to
recognize that something is not true and not be tricked by it
|
Mm, something smells good.
|
|
You can have mine.
|
|
Later.
|
|
- Where's Lynn?
|
|
KATE: Um, she's changing. Why?
|
|
You'll find out in a minute.
|
|
- Lynn?
|
|
LYNN: Yeah?
|
|
Got something for you.
|
|
Meet me in the garage.
|
|
Bye.
|
|
What has he done?
|
|
Maybe nothing.
|
|
Maybe.
|
|
What's going on? ALF?
|
|
ALF:
|
|
Out here.
|
|
I've got a surprise for you.
|
|
LYNN:
|
|
What is it?
|
|
ALF:
|
|
I'll give you a hint.
|
|
[CAR HORN
HONKING]
|
|
[LYNN GASPS]
|
|
It's a car.
|
|
Hmm. You didn't need a hint.
|
|
ALF stole a car.
|
|
I didn't steal it. I bought it.
|
|
For Lynn.
|
|
I don't believe it.
|
|
It would've been here last week,
|
|
but I held
out for red.
|
hold out for smth = to not
accept an offer because you want a better one:
They’ve been holding out for an even higher price.
ALF waited for a week to get a red car delivered for
him.
|
I don't believe it.
|
|
It's true. Everybody wants red.
|
|
ALF, how did you buy this car?
|
|
I got it through my broker.
|
|
Broker? What broker?
|
|
The one I hired to sell the gold
|
|
from my spaceship.
|
|
Wait, wait, wait.
|
|
Let's just take this one step at a time.
|
|
You bought a car?
|
|
Yes. The papers are in that envelope.
|
|
You have gold?
|
|
Had gold.
|
|
All the plumbing
on my ship was gold.
|
plumbing = the
system of pipes, water tanks, and other equipment used for supplying and
storing water in a building
|
Except for the bidet.
|
bidet /ˈbiːdeɪ/ = a large
bowl in a bathroom that you sit on to wash your bottom
|
That was platinum.
|
|
Uh-huh.
|
|
ALF, this is the most wonderful present
|
|
anyone has ever given me.
|
|
Aw, you're just saying that.
|
|
No! No, I mean it.
|
|
It's incredible.
|
|
"Schecter, Cosay & Klein.
|
|
Investment Brokers.
|
|
Dear ALF, congratulations.
|
|
Or should I say, congratulazione.
|
|
I've sold the balance of your gold
|
|
and will invest the proceeds...
|
proceeds = money
that a person or organization makes from selling or winning something, or
from organizing an event or activity:
The proceeds will go to the school for refugee children.
|
...in that mango farm in Oxnard.
|
Oxnard /ˈɒksnɑːrd/ is a city in the United States, located along
the coast of Southern California
|
All the best. Joel."
|
|
Look at this interior.
|
|
The dashboard is burled mahogany...
|
burled wood
mahogany = a hard
brown-red wood, used for making furniture
|
...grown in the Ferrari family's private arboretum.
|
arboretum = a place
where trees are grown so that they can be studied
|
And check out
these wheels.
|
check out = to
examine someone or something in order to be certain that everything is
correct, true, or satisfactory
|
Chrome. From Rome.
|
|
Oh, feel this leather.
|
|
Virgin ox. Albino virgin.
|
|
Oh, my gosh.
|
|
Willie, look, a cellular phone.
|
|
Programmed for speed
dialing.
|
speed dial = a
function on some telephones which allows numbers to be entered into a memory
and dialed with the push of a single button
|
Come on, Willie,
|
|
park your carcass on that
virgin ox.
|
park your carcass = sit down
|
LYNN: Yeah, come on, Dad.
|
|
BRIAN: Yeah, Dad. Park it.
|
|
Yeah? No, no. I'm not...
|
|
I'm not getting in that car. I can't.
|
|
ALF...
|
|
...we're not keeping the car.
|
|
LYNN: What?
|
|
Why not, Dad?
|
|
Yeah, Willie, how come?
|
|
Because it's wrong.
|
|
Because it's wrong.
|
|
Why don't we just needlepoint that into a sampler?
|
ALF says this because Willie keeps telling the same
phrase. A needlepoint (needlework) sampler is a piece of embroidery produced
as a demonstration or test of skill in needlework. It often includes the
alphabet, figures, motifs, decorative borders.
|
Look, we are not keeping a car
|
|
that cost 60,000...
|
|
- Ninety.
|
|
WILLIE: Ninety thou...
|
|
Ninety-thousand dollars.
|
|
What's bugging
you, Willie?
|
bugging = worry
|
Is it that your daughter
|
|
drives a better car than you do?
|
|
That has nothing to do with it.
|
|
We're returning this car. Call Joel.
|
|
I can't.
|
|
He's in Palm Springs till Thursday.
|
|
Dad, please.
|
|
I'll let you drive my car anytime you want.
|
|
You wanna see how the Gucci airbag works?
|
airbag = a bag in a car that
immediately fills with air if the car crashes, to protect the driver and
passengers
|
It's obvious we cannot
|
|
have a rational conversation...
|
|
...in the presence of a Ferrari.
|
|
All right, we'll go to the kitchen.
|
|
No, we'll go into the kitchen.
|
|
You stay here.
|
|
Come on, Lynn.
|
|
- Don't touch that airbag.
|
|
- Fine.
|
|
I'll just preset the radio.
|
|
[CHUCKLES]
|
|
Joel.
|
|
I know what you're thinking.
|
|
I'm the ogre.
|
ogre = a cruel and
frightening person
|
- I'm the wet
blanket.
|
wet blanket = someone
who spoils other people’s fun by being negative and complaining
|
- Willie, no one is thinking that.
|
|
- I am.
|
|
- Me too.
|
|
I see.
|
|
Dad, you're not being fair.
|
|
The car was a gift.
|
|
No, no, no.
|
|
A gift is a tie
tack,
|
tie tack m= a piece
of jewellery that a man wears to keep his tie in place
|
a pen and pencil set.
|
|
Maybe a bowl.
|
bowl = a vase
|
We have all of those.
|
|
We need a car.
|
|
I think we're losing sight of what we agreed on
here.
|
|
That things are appreciated more
|
|
when they're earned...
|
|
...not when they're just handed to us.
|
|
There's no way
|
|
I could appreciate this more.
|
|
I'm sorry, Lynn. I'm sorry.
|
|
I just don't think a 16-year-old girl
|
|
should have a $90,000 Ferrari.
|
|
Unless she is a professional tennis player.
|
|
I'm not above
taking tennis lessons.
|
above = if you are above a
particular type of behaviour, you are such a morally good person that you would
not behave in that way:
Jack was
cheating? I thought he was above that sort of thing.
|
I don't think that's what he meant.
|
|
I'm afraid the car is going back.
|
|
This is insane. We're actually gonna
|
|
give back a free Ferrari.
|
|
Yes, we are. First
thing tomorrow.
|
first thing (in the
morning) = at the very beginning of the day:
I rang them first thing this morning.
|
But Joel's in Palm Springs.
|
|
I'll talk to Schecter, I'll talk to Klein, it
doesn't matter.
|
|
Lynn, I'm sorry.
|
|
I'm sorry about this, but this is the way I feel.
|
|
And I think in time,
|
|
you'll come to respect my decision.
|
|
It may not be today.
|
|
Obviously, it won't be today.
|
|
It won't be tomorrow, either.
|
|
[ENGINE REVS]
|
|
- Willie?
|
|
- Oh, no, no.
|
|
This is not happening.
|
|
[TIRES SCREECHING]
|
|
Oh, my God!
|
|
ALF laid
rubber!
|
laid rubber = to spin
one's car tires when accelerating, leaving black marks on the street
|
He's gone.
|
|
There's an alien out there on the road
|
|
somewhere in a red Ferrari.
|
|
Maybe no one will notice.
|
|
What do we do, Dad?
|
|
We can't call the police.
|
|
- We can't call the auto club.
|
|
- We can't even call Joel.
|
|
He couldn't have gotten very far.
|
|
Kate, that car goes 180 miles an hour.
|
|
He could be in Mexico by now.
|
|
We've got no choice.
|
|
We've got to call the police.
|
|
[PHONE
RINGING]
|
|
- Hello?
|
|
- All right. I'm gonna go out.
|
|
I'm gonna go next door to try to borrow Trevor's
car.
|
|
- Dad, it's for you.
|
|
- Not now.
|
|
Tell whoever it is I'll call them back later.
|
|
He's gonna have to call you back later, ALF.
|
|
ALF! ALF!
|
|
Willie, my man, I gotta tell you...
|
|
...this thing flies like the wind.
|
|
Where are you? What happened?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
All I did was turn the engine on.
|
|
Before I knew it,
|
|
I was on the freeway.
|
freeway = a wide fast road in a
US city that you do not pay to use
|
- What freeway?
|
|
- The one headed for 0xnard.
|
|
Hey, while I'm there,
|
|
I think I'll check out that mango farm.
|
|
Forget the mango farm!
|
|
That's easy for you to say.
|
|
You're not a limited partner.
|
|
Nice move, buddy!
|
|
Yeah? You're another one!
|
|
Willie, where is he?
|
|
He's on his way to Oxnard. Oxnard.
|
|
ALF. ALF, pull
off the road,
|
pull off = stop by
the side of the road
|
pull the car off the road.
|
|
I can't. I'm in
the fast lane.
|
in the fast lane = in the
the outer lane on a road, used by vehicles travelling fastest
|
Although you'd never know it
|
|
by the way these clowns are driving.
|
|
Come on, lady. This ain't a parade!
|
|
ALF, don't yell at the other drivers.
|
|
- They'll see you.
|
|
- No way.
|
|
I'm driving too fast.
|
|
Hey, ever hear of a turn signal?
|
|
Just look, ALF, listen to me.
|
|
Look at the road signs...
|
|
...try to find out...
|
|
Look at exactly where you are.
|
|
Well, I just passed a Motel 6.
|
|
Hey, they're having a beekeepers convention.
|
beekeeper = a person
who keeps bees
convention = a meeting
that a lot of people belonging to a particular profession or organization go
to in order to discuss things
|
Ouch. Ow, ow, ow!
|
|
- Gotta go.
|
|
- Tell me.
|
|
- Tell me where you are.
|
|
- 0kay. 0kay. I'm right near the...
|
|
[STATIC CRACKLING]
|
|
ALF? ALF?
|
|
- Disconnected.
|
|
- Oh, no!
|
|
Look, I can't give you any more information.
|
|
I just need to know which one of your motels...
|
|
...is having a beekeeper's convention.
|
|
They all are?
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
- Well?
|
|
LYNN: Nothing.
|
|
We went to the police to see if there'd been a
report.
|
|
But, you know, aside from a pig
|
|
falling off of a U-Haul trailer...
|
U-Haul is an American moving
equipment and storage rental company
|
...and an inordinate
number of bee stings...
|
inordinate = much more
than you would usually expect: used for emphasizing how large something is or
how much of something there is
|
...it's really been quite a quiet night.
|
|
[BRAKES
SQUEALING,
|
|
THEN CAR CRASHES]
|
|
ALF!
|
|
ALF! ALF, are you okay?
|
|
Don't worry, I'm fine.
|
|
But this phone is a piece of junk.
|
|
I'm gonna call Joel just as soon
|
|
as he gets back from the Springs.
|
|
Forget the phone, forget Joel.
|
|
You've just crashed into our garage.
|
|
For the second time,
|
|
I might point
out!
|
point out = to tell
someone something
|
I'm sorry, Willie, I really am.
|
|
I think I might need glasses.
|
|
Glasses?
|
|
I think you might need a lawyer.
|
|
Now, Willie, calm down.
|
|
May I just say to you...
|
|
...I think it's
|
|
very irresponsible of you...
|
|
...to take the car out
|
|
on the road like this...
|
|
...to endanger your life
|
|
and the lives of others...
|
|
...and to make us worry.
|
|
And this sort of thing
|
|
seems to be repeating itself...
|
|
...over and over again.
|
|
There have been some fun times.
|
|
Tell him, Kate.
|
|
There have been some fun times,
|
|
ALF, a lot of fun times.
|
|
But this isn't one of them.
|
|
Look at what you've done.
|
|
All right, all right, calm down.
|
|
Don't worry about it, Willie.
|
|
I'll pay for it.
|
|
And how do you propose to do that?
|
|
Well, I'll call Joel tomorrow,
|
|
I'll sell the car...
|
|
...and we'll use the money
|
|
to fix the garage.
|
|
You'll do that? You'll call Joel?
|
|
Well, actually,
|
|
it'll be Joel's assistant...
|
|
...because as I have mentioned,
|
|
Joel is in the Springs.
|
|
- That sounds fair, doesn't it, Willie?
|
|
- I suppose so.
|
|
I suppose it does, ALF.
|
|
I'm glad you weren't hurt.
|
|
Thanks.
|
|
Of course I'll want a complete physical
|
|
before I sign anything.
|
|
Just kidding, just kidding.
|
|
[PHONE
RINGING]
|
|
Uh, that'll be Mrs. Ochmonek
|
|
about the hedge.
|
hedge = a line of bushes or
small trees growing close together around a garden or field
|
- The hedge?
|
|
- I'll get it.
|
|
MAN:
|
|
Mr. Tanner!
|
|
Uh, that'll be the people across the street.
|
|
Does your insurance cover front porches?
|
|
I'll be right back. Don't leave town.
|
|
ALF, I don't think I can ever repay you
|
|
for what you've done.
|
|
[SIREN
WAILING]
|
|
- What have you done?
|
|
- Well...
|
|
...I ran over a few front lawns...
|
|
...clipped a couple of jade trees.
|
jade tree or Crassula ovata, commonly known as jade plant, friendship
tree, lucky plant, or money tree, is a succulent plant with small pink or
white flowers
|
The rest is a blur.
|
The rest is a blur. = not very clear in your mind:
I remember a big house, but the rest of it is just a blur.
|
I'd better go see if I can help out.
|
|
[HELICOPTER
WHIRRING]
|
|
I think I'll turn in early tonight.
|
|
ALF:
|
|
Socket wrench.
|
|
Gasket.
|
|
Gum.
|
|
Say, I know you don't like me to ask...
|
|
...but what's going on here?
|
|
I'm getting the old crate in shape,
|
|
William.
|
|
- You're fixing my car?
|
|
- Hey, we have to save where we can.
|
|
Did I tell you the mango grove went under?
|
|
- You mean it went out of business?
|
|
- Nope, it went under.
|
|
What is a fault line, anyway?
|
|
Under the ground?
|
|
- Is that what Joel told you?
|
|
- I trust him.
|
|
I'm gonna ask him for the details
|
|
when he gets back from Paraguay.
|
|
Anyway, there you go.
|
|
- You're a one-car family again.
|
|
- Well, thanks.
|
|
- Ow!
|
|
- No!
|
|
[LAUGHS]
|
|
Just kidding, see?
|
|
Why do you do that to me?
|
|
Because it's funny, man.
|
|
WILLIE:
|
|
Mm-hm.
|
|
Say, where did you ever learn about fixing cars,
anyway?
|
|
I used to watch Route
66.
|
Route 66
is an American television drama
|
You pick
things up.
|
pick up = to learn a new skill
or start a habit without intending to:
She picked up a few German phrases while staying in Berlin.
|
WILLIE:
|
|
That's amazing.
|
|
I'll tell you what's more amazing.
|
|
That George
Maharis never got another series.
|
George Maharis = is an American
actor who portrayed Buz Murdock in the first three seasons of the TV series
Route 66
|
Anyway, the car's purring like a kitten.
|
|
Which reminds me, I'm hungry.
|
|
ALF, I don't know what to say.
|
|
I don't know how to thank you for this.
|
|
No problem.
|
|
I think I'll just...
|
|
I'll think I'll just back up and take it out for a
spin.
|
|
[TIRES
SCREECHING]
|
|
WILLIE:
|
|
Whoa! No!
|
|
Crowbar.
|
crowbar = a metal bar with a
curved end, used for forcing open heavy objects such as doors
|
Transcripts of TV series in English. Learn English watching the episodes! Difficult words, idioms, phrasal verbs are explained. If you have any questions, feel free to ask me.
ALF. Season 1, episode 10 (uncut version)
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