[SINGING
"HAPPY BIRTHDAY"]
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Thank you.
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Thanks, everyone, thank you.
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"To a super dad,
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husband and earthling."
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earthling = a human.
This word is used in science fiction stories by creatures from other planets.
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That was mine.
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Well, thanks. Thanks, everyone.
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I'm very, very touched.
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touched = feeling happy or
emotional, for example because someone has been very kind or because a
situation is sad:
He was touched by her care and concern.
|
- Thank you, dear.
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KATE: Oh, happy birthday, darling.
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BRIAN: Happy birthday, Daddy.
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- Thank you, son.
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- Many more, Dad.
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- Thanks. Thanks, sweetheart.
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Thank you, ALF. Thank...
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Whoa, not bad.
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Still waters run deep
there, William.
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Still waters run deep = used
for saying that people who are shy or who do not say much often have very
strong feelings or interesting ideas
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- Blow out the candles.
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- Okay. One, two, three.
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[LAUGHING]
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- Joke
candles? Joke...?
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joke candles = (prank/trick
candles) are novelty candles often
used at children's birthday parties. These candles relight themselves, so it
is almost impossible to blow them out.
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- Yeah.
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What is this, the fifth year now?
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And I fall
for it every single time.
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fall for smth = to
believe that a trick or a joke is true:
How could you fall for such an obvious trick?
|
Hey, back off
there, Willie-Bob.
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back off = to move
backwards in order to get further away from something:
Everyone back off and let the doctor through.
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Let me give
it a shot.
|
give it a shot = to
attempt to do something: I've never
danced salsa before but I'll give it a shot.
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KATE: ALF!
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- What?
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BRIAN: Speech.
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LYNN: Speech, speech.
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Okay, okay.
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I was born the son
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of a poor asteroid polisher.
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I'm supposed
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to be making the speech.
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I think I know my life
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better than you do.
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But enough about me.
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Thank you.
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Well, I don't think I've got too much
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to complain about, that's for sure.
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I have my health,
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I have a wonderful wife...
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...I have two great kids...
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...and an alien.
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Okay, great speech.
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Let's open the presents.
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Okay, be right back. Come on, Brian.
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I hope you got me jewelry.
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ALF, it's Willie's birthday.
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He's the one who gets the presents.
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The guy who has the birthday
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also gets the presents?
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Talk about your wacky
planet.
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wacky = funny, or silly
|
Okay, Dad, close your eyes.
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Okay, open.
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KATE:
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Happy birthday, darling.
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Oh, Kate,
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it's the Cambridge Atlas of Astronomy.
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- Yeah.
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- Thank you, sweetheart.
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- Let me see this.
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KATE: You're welcome.
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WILLIE: I've been eyeing that
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eye = to look at someone or
something carefully:
A group of local boys eyed them suspiciously.
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in the bookstore for weeks.
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I was gonna wait
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until it came out in paperback, but...
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paperback = a book
with a cover made of thick paper. Paperback editions are usually cheaper than
hardbacks.
|
- What are you doing?
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- I'm correcting the more glaring errors.
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glaring = a glaring mistake is
very obvious
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Look at this.
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They left out
the 10th planet, Dave.
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leave out = to not
include someone or something:
She feels left out because the other children don’t play with her.
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Give me that.
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You know, I think you make things up.
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make things up = invent,
imagine things
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You told me there was a race
|
race = a group of people who
are similar because they have the same skin colour or other physical features
|
of cucumber people on Mars.
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Not a race, a family.
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A small family. They're mean.
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mean = cruel, or unkind:
Our teachers were just mean.
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Here.
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Happy birthday.
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- Well, thanks. What is it?
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- I don't know.
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Something I found in the basement,
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behind the chemical toilet.
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- Oh, how thoughtful.
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- Well, I can't exactly go out and shop.
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No, I mean, it is charming. It's won...
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It's very thoughtful, ALF, thank you.
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Look at these. These are pictures.
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These are our high-school,
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our college pictures.
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- Oh, my gosh, I don't believe this.
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- There's old letters in there.
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Mom, who is this gorgeous guy
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with his arm around you?
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Oh, that's Animal Hohnerheim.
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Animal?
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Your mother dated a lot
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of gorgeous guys before she met me.
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Not that I wasn't gorgeous myself.
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Who is this guy
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that looks like Harrison Ford?
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Oh, that's Nolan Westwood.
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Who's this guy
|
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in the stupid-Iooking clothes?
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That's a football uniform, ALF.
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I know this guy. He's an old-timer.
|
old-timer = someone
who has a lot of knowledge and experience because they have been doing
something for a long time
|
What's his name?
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- Joe...?
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- Namath.
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|
You dated Joe Namath?
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|
The pantyhose
guy? Wow.
|
pantyhose = women’s
tights (a piece of women’s clothing that tightly covers the feet and legs up
to the waist)
|
Mom, you really went out
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with some hunks.
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hunk = a strong and sexually
attractive man
|
But I married the best hunk
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of them all.
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Oh, my gosh, here's a menu.
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Oh, look, it's an old menu...
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...from that little restaurant
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that Kate and I discovered.
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Let's order.
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The restaurant's been closed
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for 20 years.
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- Then why are we ordering?
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WILLIE: We're not ordering.
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Oh, honey,
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look what we wrote on the back.
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- It's our list.
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- What list?
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Well, your father and I
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each made a list...
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...of things that we wanted
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to accomplish
in our lives.
|
accomplish = to
succeed in doing something, especially something that you have been trying to
do for a period of time:
We didn’t accomplish much at work this week.
|
- You know, goals, dreams.
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- Can I see it?
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Look what Mom wrote:
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"To ski the Eagle's Nest
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at Squaw Valley.
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To have a poem published
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in a major literary magazine.
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To run with the bulls at Pamplona"?
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Pamplona is the capital
of northern Spain's Navarre province. It’s best known for the Running of the
Bulls (Fiesta de San Fermín). During this legendary multi-day festival in
July, bulls are led through the city streets by daredevil runners.
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She did all that too.
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Wow, Kate,
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you little overachiever,
you.
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overachiever = one who
achieves success over and above the standard or expected level especially at
an early age
|
Yeah, way to
go, Mom.
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Way to go! = used for
telling someone that they have done something well, or that you are proud of
their achievement:
Way to go, Mary! Keep up the good work.
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Oh, well, you know how I am with lists.
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I love crossing
things off.
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cross smth off = to draw a
line through something on a list to show that you have dealt with it:
The children say their names, and you cross them off.
|
- Where's your list, Dad?
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- Oh, it's in there.
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I think I wrote it
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under the Catch
of the Day.
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catch = an amount of fish
that have been caught
Catch of the Day is probably
the part of the restaurant menu which offers fish dishes
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Let me see that. I may want sea bass.
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sea bass is a common
fish name
|
We're not ordering.
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All right, all right.
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Let me read this. Wait a minute.
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"Willie Tanner, Goals and Ambitions.
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Number one:
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To build a better mousetrap."
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mousetrap = a small
object used for catching and killing mice
|
That must have been a piece of cake.
|
a piece of cake = something
that is very easy:
The interview was a piece of cake.
|
Not exactly.
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I'm still working on that one.
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"Number two: Complete that skydive."
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skydiving is a sport
of jumping out of a plane and falling for as long as possible before opening
your parachute. Someone who does this is a skydiver.
|
"Complete that skydive"?
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|
How do you skydive just a little bit?
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Do you jump halfway?
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No, you...
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You get ready to jump...
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...have
second thoughts,
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have second thoughts = to begin
to doubt a decision that you have already made:
I think she’s having second thoughts about leaving London.
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you go back to your seat, you sit down.
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Oh, you chicken
out.
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chicken out = to not do
something you were going to do because you are too frightened:
I was going to tell her how much it really cost, but I chickened out.
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- You decide not to jump.
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- You come to
your senses.
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come to your senses = a) regain
consciousness; b) start to think and behave reasonably
|
- You have second thoughts.
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- You decide not to be stupid.
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All right, all right.
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- You chicken out.
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|
- You chicken out.
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|
Now, how about
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some of that wet cake?
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Yeah.
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- Yo, Willie.
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- Yo.
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- What are you working on?
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- My mousetrap.
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Uh-huh.
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|
You might have a little trouble
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slipping that baby
behind a refrigerator.
|
baby (here) = a project or
piece of work that you care about a lot, especially because it was your idea:
Steve has always seen the book as his baby.
slip = to slide something
into a place or position
|
Say, don't you have some sleeping to do?
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No, I always wake up around 3,
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3:30...
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...have a couple of potatoes,
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and wait for my paper.
|
paper = newspaper
|
- What a life.
|
|
- So far no complaints.
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|
- Want a cold spud?
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spud = a potato
|
- No. No, thanks.
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I ate the rest of the cake.
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I should tell you that now.
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- That's okay.
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- And the candles.
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Listen...
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...ALF, I'd really like
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to finish this thing.
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Why bother?
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Well, because I like
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to finish something I start.
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You never finished that skydive.
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|
You ever set goals for yourself
|
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that you weren't able to accomplish?
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|
- No.
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- None?
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|
Melmacians don't set goals, Willie.
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|
We live from moment to moment.
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- From snack to snack.
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- Yes.
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We take time to stop and smell the potatoes.
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We take time to stop and smell the potatoes.
There is a well-known quote by Walter Hagen: “You’re
only here for a short visit. Don’t hurry, don’t worry. And be sure to smell
the flowers along the way. ” (1956 The Walter Hagen Story)
ALF alters the quote a bit.
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You ever jump out of a
moving plane?
|
You ever jump = Did you
ever jump…?
|
- Hey, you wanna be alone, just tell me.
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- No, no, I mean, did you ever skydive?
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|
- I fell to Earth at Mach 16.
|
Mach = a unit for measuring
the speed of an object such as an aircraft in comparison with the speed of
sound. For example, Mach 5 is five times the speed of sound.
|
- What was that like?
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Imagine Mach 8 and double it.
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|
- Weren't you scared?
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- Not once I started plummeting.
|
plummet = to fall straight down
very quickly from a high position
|
Hey, Willie, don't worry about it.
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You don't have to prove anything.
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You're a good provider.
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You've got a couple of great kids
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and an alien.
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You don't run around...
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...and your life is incredibly predictable and safe.
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|
[THUDS]
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There's my paper. Ciao.
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|
- Kate?
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- Yeah?
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You ever hear from Nolan?
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- Nolan who?
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|
- Nolan Westwood.
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No, why?
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I don't know, I just wondered
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|
if you'd heard from him since...
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...you know, since college.
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|
Well, actually,
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I heard that he went to New Guinea...
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|
...and never came back.
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Oh, that's too bad.
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|
Some tribe made him their king.
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|
- Why do you ask?
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|
- Oh, nothing. I was just...
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|
I was just curious.
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|
Does he have any real power, or is he just a figurehead?
|
figurehead = a leader
who has no real power or influence, especially a leader of a political party
|
Well... ...he's
on the stamps.
|
he's on the stamps means that
his portrait is printed on the country’s postal stamps
|
What about Joe?
|
|
- Joe who?
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|
- You know, the football guy.
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|
- Theismann?
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|
- No, Joe Namath.
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|
Did you go
out with Joe Theismann too?
|
go out with = to have a
romantic or sexual relationship with someone and spend a lot of time with
them
|
No, honey, just Namath.
|
|
Why are you bringing
all this up?
|
bring smth up = to start
discussing a subject
|
Kate, do you think of me
|
|
as incredibly predictable and safe?
|
|
Yes.
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|
That's why I'm here with you right now.
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|
Now go to sleep.
|
|
You have a busy day tomorrow.
|
|
Yeah, I gotta take the wagon
|
wagon = a type of car
|
and get the
radiator flushed.
|
get the radiator flushed means
clearing the radiator of a car
|
After that
|
|
I'm gonna stop at the hardware...
|
hardware shop is a shop
that sells metal goods and things for your home or garden such as pans,
knives, tools, and chemical products
|
...see if the lawn
sprinkler's come in yet.
|
lawn sprinkler = a piece
of equipment used for automatically sprinkling water on plants or grass in a
garden
|
I'm having lunch with Cousin Vern...
|
|
...who will talk to me about his new edger.
|
edger = a garden tool used to
cleanly separate a lawn from a walkway or other paved surface, such as a
concrete sidewalk or asphalt path.
|
After that...
|
|
...I've decided I'm gonna go skydiving.
|
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KATE: Mm.
|
|
- Good night, dear.
|
|
- Night.
|
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[ELGAR'S
"POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE"
|
|
PLAYS OVER SPEAKERS]
|
|
[CRACKING]
|
|
Excuse me. Where am...? Where am I?
|
|
You're at your graduation.
|
graduation = a
ceremony at which you are given a university degree or other qualification
|
- Well, what am I graduating from?
|
|
- This is a dream, Tanner.
|
|
Its purpose is to point out
|
|
how inadequate you are...
|
|
...compared to everybody else.
|
|
That sounds like fun.
|
|
Would you mind
|
|
standing off to the side?
|
|
[MUSIC STOPS]
|
|
Nolan Westwood,
|
|
come on out and accept your diploma.
|
|
[CROWD
APPLAUDING]
|
|
Congratulations, Nolan,
|
|
on being a successful unicyclist...
|
unicyclist = a person
who rides a unicycle (a vehicle like a bicycle with a single wheel)
|
...world traveler
|
|
and New Guinean king.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Here are some stamps and coins.
|
|
- He's on the money too?
|
|
- Tanner, quiet.
|
|
- I'm sorry.
|
|
- Listen, I've gotta go.
|
|
They're having a little ceremony
|
|
for me back home.
|
|
I'm being bumped
up from king to god.
|
bump up = to move someone to a
better position or job; promote
|
- Congratulations, Nolan.
|
|
- Thanks, bub.
|
bub = an aggressive or rude
way of addressing a boy or man
|
You've really...
|
|
You've really done quite well.
|
|
You're telling me.
|
|
I've led a life of travel and adventure.
|
|
I'm rich, I'm famous.
|
|
I have a species of bird named after me.
|
|
I'll have my mortgage
paid off
|
mortgage = a legal
agreement in which you borrow money from a bank in order to buy a house. You
pay back your mortgage by making monthly payments.
|
in eight years.
|
|
Unless we refinance,
of course.
|
refinance = to
replace one loan with another one on which you pay less interest
|
Kate and I are still kicking that around.
|
kick smth around = to
discuss an idea or suggestion in an informal way:
We kicked around a few ideas.
|
Yeah, say hi to her for me, will you?
|
|
What a cutie.
|
|
Your mortgage will be paid off.
|
|
Next up, Lyle "Animal" Hohnerheim...
|
|
...jetsetter,
yachtsman,
|
jetsetter = a person
who travels frequently; often, it is used to describe someone in high society
with a glamorous life. An example of a jet setter is an heiress who flies off
to Paris to shop.
|
international financier.
|
|
Come on out here, Animal,
|
|
and get your diploma...
|
|
...you rich guy, you.
|
|
[CROWD
APPLAUDING]
|
|
Thank you, Dean Houseman.
|
|
- Wow, have you done well.
|
|
- Yeah, I'm quite a guy.
|
|
You've won the Indianapolis
500,
|
Indianapolis 500 is an automobile race held annually at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
|
you're listed in the Fortune 500...
|
Fortune 500 is an
annual list of the five hundred most profitable US industrial corporations
|
...and in the National League, you've batted 500.
|
bat = to hit the ball with
a bat in a game such as baseball or cricket
|
Listen, I gotta run.
|
|
We're having 500 people over for dinner tonight.
|
|
Animal.
|
|
No, we've already got somebody
|
|
to park the cars.
|
|
No, no, no. I just wanted to say hello.
|
|
I'm Willie Tanner.
|
|
- Tanner?
|
|
- I married Kate Halligan.
|
|
Kate Halligan.
|
|
Say hello to her for me, will you?
|
|
You know, she is one in 500.
|
|
And now... ...our next recipient needs no
introduction.
|
|
Ladies and gentlemen, Joe Namath.
|
|
[CROWD
APPLAUDING]
|
|
Hey, Joe, go on out for a long one, huh?
|
|
- Just kidding. Here you go, Joe.
|
|
- Thanks. Say, what's going on here?
|
|
Willie's having a dream.
|
|
- Willie!
|
|
- Hello, Joe.
|
|
I'm sorry to drag you into this.
|
|
Oh, hey, that's cool.
|
|
I've been doing a lot of dreams lately.
|
|
Next week
|
|
I'm doing a Howard
Cosell nightmare.
|
Howard Cosell was an American
sports journalist
|
Oh, gee,
Joe,
|
gee = used to express a
reaction such as surprise or admiration
|
you've done awfully
well.
|
awfully = really
|
Say, would you autograph this for my son, Brian?
|
|
Oh, absolutely.
|
|
- There you go.
|
|
- Thanks, Joe.
|
|
"To Brian: Tell your mom hello."
|
|
You know what?
|
|
I always think about what Kate said
|
|
when I proposed to her.
|
|
Yeah. And that's how I got
|
|
the bad knees,
by the way: Kneeling.
|
bad knees = the word “bad”
is used speaking about a part of your body that is causing you pain or is not
working well:
a bad back/leg/stomach
You shouldn’t try these exercises if you have a bad heart.
|
She said, "Broadway..."
|
|
She always called me Broadway.
|
|
She said, "Thanks, but no thanks.
|
|
I'm looking for someone that's predictable and
safe."
|
|
So long, Willie.
|
So long! = used for
saying goodbye to someone who you know well
|
I'm going skydiving tomorrow.
|
|
"I'm going skydiving tomorrow."
|
|
You had your chance.
|
|
And now it gives me great pleasure
|
|
to introduce our Man of the Century...
|
|
...someone whose accomplishments
|
|
put the rest of us to shame.
|
|
A person of whom it can truly be said:
|
|
He changed the way
|
|
we look at the world.
|
|
Ladies and gentlemen,
|
|
I give you Gordon "ALF" Shumway.
|
|
[CROWD
APPLAUDING]
|
|
- ALF.
|
|
- Hey, ALF, great to see you.
|
|
- Way to go.
|
Way to go! = used for
telling someone that they have done something well, or that you are proud of
their achievement:
Way to go, Mary! Keep up the good work.
|
- What a guy.
|
|
He's the best.
|
|
- Say, ALF, can I have your autograph?
|
|
- Sure, Joe.
|
|
Wait till my friends see this.
|
|
- There you go.
|
|
- Thanks.
|
|
- ALF?
|
|
- Willie.
|
|
- ALF?
|
|
- Willie.
|
|
You're the Man of the Century?
|
|
Yeah, what a surprise.
|
|
I was happy just to be nominated.
|
|
What a kick.
|
kick = a feeling of
excitement or pleasure
|
- Well, congratulations.
|
|
- Thanks.
|
|
Hey, Willie, you never know.
|
|
Next century, it could be you.
|
|
I don't think so.
|
|
Hey, come on. Don't be so negative.
|
|
All you have to do is take this parachute
|
|
and jump, Willie.
|
|
[CHANTING]
|
|
Jump. Jump.
|
|
Jump, jump, jump.
|
|
- Jump, jump, jump.
|
|
- Jump, jump.
|
|
- Jump, Willie, jump.
|
|
- Yeah, now, hit, roll, huh?
|
|
Hit, roll.
|
|
How was that?
|
|
I thought the roll was supposed to come
|
|
right after the hit.
|
|
You mean there was a pause
|
|
between the two?
|
|
There was enough time
|
|
to send out for pizza.
|
|
Now, that's a thought.
|
|
- Can I try it?
|
|
- Yeah, sure.
|
|
Come on. Hit, roll, huh? Hit, roll.
|
|
Hit, roll. Yes, yes, yes.
|
|
There's nothing to this
skydiving stuff.
|
there's nothing to = something
that you say in order to tell someone that something is very easy to do:
'I heard rollerblading was really difficult.' 'Nah, there's nothing to
it.'
|
It's boring.
|
|
- Let's take a break here.
|
|
- Yeah, good idea.
|
|
You know, ALF,
|
|
I had the strangest dream last night...
|
|
...and you were in it.
|
|
- No kidding.
|
|
- Yeah. It was really weird.
|
weird = strange
|
There was you...
|
|
...and then these three guys
|
|
that Kate used to go out with.
|
|
- What's weird about that?
|
|
- Well, what were you doing in it?
|
|
Now that you've brought
it up...
|
bring smth up = to start
discussing a subject
|
...I think Kate's been
|
|
coming on to me lately.
|
come on to smb = to behave
towards someone in a way that shows you would like to have a sexual
relationship with them
|
I really think you're mistaking friendliness
|
|
for something else.
|
|
Then I guess I shouldn't have sent her flowers.
|
|
- You sent my wife flowers?
|
|
- Okay, break's over.
|
|
[BLOWS
WHISTLE]
|
|
Let's get on
with this, come on.
|
get on with smth = to go on,
progress
|
Enough of this idle
chitchat.
|
idle = not doing anything,
when there are things that you should do:
Don’t worry. I have not been idle while you were away.
chitchat = friendly
conversation about things that are not very important
|
Hit, roll.
|
|
Hit, roll.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
- How about it?
|
|
- Not bad.
|
|
If that had been a real jump...
|
|
...you'd have just driven your femur into your spleen.
|
femur = the bone in the top
part of your leg, above your knee. A less technical name for this is the
thigh bone
spleen = the organ in your
body that removes dead red cells from your blood and produces white cells
|
Oh, Willie, the flowers are beautiful.
|
|
Honey, what's the occasion?
|
|
It's just because he loves you, that's all.
|
|
Oh, honey, I love you too.
|
|
What's going on here?
|
|
Oh, I was just practicing my hit-and-roll.
|
|
- That's skydiving lingo.
|
lingo = the words that are
mainly used by people who do a particular activity or job
the usual bureaucratic lingo
|
- Sky...?
|
|
So that is what you said last night.
|
|
Yeah, I decided
|
|
I'm gonna take
the plunge.
|
take the plunge = to
finally do something important, difficult, or dangerous after thinking about
it
He took the plunge and asked her to marry him.
|
- And don't try talking him out of this.
|
talk smb out of doing smth = to persuade someone not to do something
|
- ALF, do you mind?
|
|
- You're serious about this, aren't you?
|
|
- Yep.
|
Yep! = an informal way of
saying “yes”
|
Why are you doing this?
|
|
I'm doing this because I feel I have to do this.
|
|
Because of something you wrote on a menu 25 years
ago?
|
|
- I thought it was 20.
|
|
- ALF.
|
|
Twenty-five years ago...
|
|
...five people went up in a plane
|
|
and four people jumped.
|
|
You didn't jump because you didn't wanna jump.
|
|
I didn't jump because I was afraid to jump.
|
|
You're not afraid now?
|
|
I am afraid...
|
|
...but I feel that this is something I have to do.
|
|
If jumping out of an airplane
|
|
at 5000 feet is that important to you...
|
|
...you should do it.
|
|
We'll be there watching.
|
|
Five thousand feet?
|
|
I thought they said it was 4000.
|
|
I think it's 10,000.
|
|
We're nearing
the drop zone.
|
near = to come closer to a
particular place drop zone = an
area in which skydivers land
|
[CHEERING]
|
|
- Are we pumped?
|
pumped = very excited or
enthusiastic about something
|
- We're pumped!
|
|
Oh, we're pumped, all right.
|
|
We're pumped as can be.
|
|
- Pumped as a tire,
in fact.
|
tire (American English)/tyre (British English) = a thick rubber cover that fits round the wheel of
a bicycle, car, or other vehicle
|
- Good, that's what I like to hear.
|
|
- Mr. Tanner.
|
|
- Yeah?
|
|
I noticed here you didn't check off the life-insurance
box.
|
check off = to put
the symbol ✓ next to something on a list to show that you have dealt with it (“tick off” means the same)
life-insurance box = a space
on a printed form, in which you write:
Tick the boxes that apply to you.
|
- Oh, I'm sorry.
|
|
- That'll be two bucks.
|
bucks = dollars
|
I don't know,
|
|
would it be all right if I paid you later?
|
|
Good one. Oh, what a sport.
|
sport = someone who always
behaves in a reasonable way and is always willing to help
Andy was a real sport and agreed to play for the
other team.
|
We are now directly over the drop zone.
|
|
Skydivers, prepare for flight...
|
|
...and watch
out for that first step.
|
watch out for = to be
careful of something:
Watch out for snakes!
|
Ha, ha, ha.
|
|
Good one.
|
|
Are you doing this for fun, or do you have a list
too?
|
|
- Excuse me?
|
|
- Oh, never mind.
|
|
It's my first time.
|
|
- Nervous, huh?
|
|
- Yeah, a little.
|
|
Nothing to worry about.
|
|
Just like jumping off a cliff.
|
|
- Collins!
|
|
- Yo.
|
Yo! = used for getting
someone’s attention, or for greeting someone
|
- Polmanski!
|
|
- Yo.
|
|
- Barna!
|
|
- Yo.
|
|
Hey, listen, if anything happens to me,
|
|
tell them no life-support
systems.
|
life-support system = a set of
machines that keep someone alive when they are very ill
|
- Gotcha.
|
Gotcha! = used for showing that
you understand what someone is telling you:
‘You know what I’m saying?’ ‘Yeah, gotcha.’
|
- Yeah!
|
|
- Tanner!
|
|
- Present,
yes.
|
present = in a particular place
|
- You're supposed to say, "Yo."
|
|
- Oh, right. Yo.
|
|
Listen, here's what I've decided.
|
|
I can't do this. I won't do it.
|
|
I mean, I don't need to do it,
|
|
so I'm not going to do it.
|
|
That's what I wanted to tell you.
|
|
As I was sitting back there,
|
|
I was listening to everybody say, "Yo,"...
|
|
...and I thought to myself,
|
|
"Do I really want to plummet?"
|
|
And I had to admit, no,
|
|
I don't feel like plummeting.
|
|
So I'm not gonna do it.
|
|
I'm gonna go back over there
|
|
and I'm gonna sit down.
|
|
That's where I'll be,
|
|
right over there, okay?
|
|
What?
|
|
Oh, nothing.
|
|
What the hell.
|
|
[SCREAMING]
|
|
[MEOWS]
|
|
LYNN: ALF! ALF!
|
|
- In here!
|
|
- What are you doing?
|
|
- Building a better cat trap.
|
trap = a piece of equipment
used for catching animals
|
- How'd the jump go?
|
|
- Great. He did it.
|
|
- Yeah.
|
|
- Nice going, Willie.
|
|
- Hey, let's hear it for the Tan Man.
|
|
- That's right.
|
|
Thank you, thank you.
|
|
Thank you very much. Thank you.
|
|
It was nothing.
|
|
It was like jumping off a cliff.
|
|
- Are you gonna do it again?
|
|
- Not in your lifetime.
|
|
Well, I'm gonna jump
|
|
as soon as Lash gets his pilot's license.
|
|
I think we'll all jump
|
|
when Lash gets his pilot's license.
|
|
ALF, you would've been really,
|
|
really, proud of him.
|
|
I was proud of him before he jumped.
|
|
You said he'd end up a red smear
|
smear = a dirty mark made by
rubbing something
|
on the landscape.
|
|
I said he might end
up a red smear
|
end up = to be in a particular
place or state after doing something or because of doing it
|
on the landscape.
|
|
Well, honey, tell me,
|
|
what's next for the conquering hero?
|
|
Oh, well, I don't know.
|
|
I was thinking about that
|
|
on the way down.
|
|
I'd still like
|
|
to discover that new galaxy.
|
|
I don't know, maybe play pro football
|
|
for a couple of years...
|
|
...take the whole gang,
|
|
move to New Guinea.
|
|
Of course, first...
|
|
...I have to get the radiator flushed.
|
|
[LAUGHING]
|
|
[THUDS]
|
|
What?
|
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 9 (uncut version)
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