К книге можно сказать словарь Abbyy Lingvo Tutor - Huckleberry Finn.xls

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about

əˈbaʊt

о; об; около; приблизительно

‘What about women?’ he asked.
It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.
I heard all about it in town.

a bit

ə ˈbɪt

немного; чуть-чуть

And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit.
When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face.
Tom thought for a bit, and then he said, ‘I know. You take my bags and say they’re yours.

a little

ə ˈlɪtl̩

немного

Time went on and winter came. I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.

a little way

ə ˈlɪtl̩ ˈweɪ

недалеко

I asked the boy where the Phelpses lived and he said it was a big white house a little way down the river.

a lot

ə lɒt

часто

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.

a lot of

ə lɒt ɒv

много, многие

A lot of people think he killed his boy and he’s going to come back one day, and get all Huck Finn’s money.
Suddenly, a lot of dogs ran out.
And we sure had a lot of fun with that plan!

across

əˈkrɒs

через

I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.

adventure

ədˈventʃə

приключение

You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
I told him about my adventures, and Tom loved all that.
‘It’s a real adventure now, all right,’ he said, very excited.

afraid

əˈfreɪd

испуганный; опасающийся

Afraid, I left my canoe and went nearer.

after

ˈɑ:ftə

через, спустя, после, за

Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.
Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.
Jim swam after it and caught it. Then he began to look for me.

after a time

ˈɑ:ftər ə ˈtaɪm

через некоторое время

After a time, I said to myself, ‘I can’t live like this. I must find out who it is.’
After a time he said, ‘You know, Bridgewater, I, too, have a secret.’ And he began to cry.

after some time

ˈɑ:ftə səm ˈtaɪm

спустя какое-то время

After some time, we saw lights on the Illinois side of the river and Jim got very excited.

after that

ˈɑ:ftə ðæt

затем, после

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.
Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.
Jim got the canoe ready and I went off in it to take a look at those lights. But it wasn’t Cairo. After that, we went on down the river.

afternoon

ˌɑ:ftəˈnu:n

послеобеденное время до заката

That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town.
We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.
So Mr Phelps gave him forty dollars and they went down and caught the slave this afternoon.

again

əˈɡen

вновь, снова, опять

But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town.
We slept for most of that day and we began our journey again when it was dark.
‘That slave is locked up again and he’s going to stay there. And if I catch you again –‘

again and again

əˈɡen ənd əˈɡen

снова и снова

I called out his name again and again, but there was no answer.

ago

əˈɡəʊ

тому назад

‘Well, what took you so long? We thought you were coming two days ago.
Jim was old Miss Watson’s slave, but she died two months ago.
It’s Sid. Tom was here a minute ago. Where is he?

all day

ɔ:l deɪ

весь день

They said you were dead, Huck. I had to wait all day to get away.

all over

ɔ:l ˈəʊvə

всюду, полностью, целиком

He looked at me all over for a long time, and then he said, ‘Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!
She was smiling all over her face and she took me by the hands and cried, ‘It’s you, at last, isn’t it?’

all right

ɔ:l raɪt

в порядке, хорошо, нормально, ничего страшного

It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.
It’s all right to take a chicken or something if you’re hungry, but these men were really bad!
I was in the room and he said to me, ‘Jim’s all right, isn’t he?’

all the time

ɔ:l ðə ˈtaɪm

все время, всегда

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself. He watched me all the time.
It wasn’t easy because they wanted to be with us all the time.

almost

ˈɔ:lməʊst

почти

He was almost fifty and he looked old.
Tom’s leg is almost better now, and I haven’t got any more to write about.

alone

əˈləʊn

один, наедине

When we were alone later, Tom and I talked about Jim’s escape.

along

əˈlɒŋ

вдоль

Silently, I moved along the river in my canoe, under the darkness of the trees. And then I stopped.

already

ɔ:lˈredi

уже

‘But Sid, why did you help him to escape, if he was free already?’ she said.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again. I’ve done in once already.

also

ˈɔ:lsəʊ

так же; кроме того

We also wrote secret letters to everybody.

always

ˈɔ:lweɪz

всегда; постоянно

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.
Before long, I came to a little house which was always empty.
I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting.

America

əˈmerɪkə

США, Америка

I’m really a duke. My grandfather was the son of the Duke of Bridgewater, but he left England and came to America.

and so

ənd ˈsəʊ

поэтому

We wanted to know what was happening in town and so I decided to go and find out.
They began to shoot, and so we ran as fast as we could to the canoe.

and then

ənd ðen

а потом, а затем

And then she began to tell me about all her troubles.
And then the old man told us that he was really the first son of the King of France.
We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.

angry

ˈæŋɡri

сердитый

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
When he came back that time, he was drunk and angry.
Suddenly a lot of very angry dogs jumped out at me.

another

əˈnʌðə

другой, еще один

Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft.
So then I had to tell her another story, with a different name, and I said I was running away.
‘All right,’ I said, ‘but there’s another thing. You know old Miss Watson’s slave Jim, who ran away?

answer

ˈɑ:nsə

ответ; отвечать; откликаться

Very softly, I answered, ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’
I called out his name again and again, but there was no answer.
I didn’t want to answer any questions so I kept out of everybody’s way.

any more

ˈeni mɔ:

больше, больше не

Before she died, she wrote that she wanted Jim to be free, and not a slave any more.
Tom’s leg is almost better now, and I haven’t got any more to write about.

anybody

ˈenibɒdi

любой, никто (в отрицательных предложениях)

They’ll give three hundred dollars to anybody who finds him – and they’ll give two hundred dollars for old Finn.
She said she wouldn’t tell anybody, and gave me some food before I left.

anyone

ˈeniwʌn

кто-либо

We didn’t want anyone to see Jim and ask questions about him.

anywhere

ˈeniweə

везде, всюду, нигде (в отрицательных предложениях)

When I came up out of the water, I couldn’t see Jim anywhere.

arm

ɑ:m

рука (от кисти до плеча)

Aunt Sally was really pleased to see her sister, and jumped up to put her arms round her.

as long as

əz ˈlɒŋ æz

до тех пор пока, пока

I told them that my family were all dead, so they said I could stay with them as long as I wanted.

as soon as

əz ˈsu:n æz

как только

Jim and I decided to get away from them as soon as we could.

ask

ɑ:sk

спрашивать

‘Please, sir, take it! Don’t ask me why!’
‘But why are you here on the island?’ I asked.
‘Who did it?’ I asked.

asleep

əˈsli:p

спящий

On the ground, I found a man, asleep.
We travelled at night when it was dark and everybody was asleep.

at all

ət ɔ:l

совсем; нисколько

I didn’t like it at all.

at last

ət lɑ:st

наконец

She was smiling all over her face and she took me by the hands and cried, ‘It’s you, at last, isn’t it?’

at night

ət naɪt

ночью

We travelled at night when it was dark and everybody was asleep.

at once

ət wʌns

сразу; сейчас же

We decided to leave at once.

aunt

ɑ:nt

тетя

There was Pop, Judge Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and his Aunt Polly and his brother Sid, and lots of others.
Well, Aunt Sally was very pleased to see Tom and Sid.
We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway!

axe

æks

топор

Next, I broke down the door with an axe.
Last of all, I put some blood and some of my hair on the axe.
I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.

back

ˈbæk

спина; обратно

He’s dead. Someone shot him in the back.

back garden

bæk ˈɡɑ:dn̩

сад за домом

Then, one morning, there was some new snow on the ground and outside the back garden I could see footprints in the snow.

bad (worse, worst)

bæd (wɜ:s, wɜ:st)

плохо, плохой (хуже, наихудшее)

It was bad to kill and rob on a Sunday.
It’s all right to take a chicken or something if you’re hungry, but these men were really bad!
They took Tom up to bed because his leg was really bad, and Aunt Sally sat with him while he slept.

bag

bæɡ

сумка; чемодан

So I told the Phelpses that I would go into town to get my bags, which were at the boat station.
You take my bags and say they’re yours.
So I went back to the house with the bags, and Tom came along half an hour later.

bank

bæŋk

банк

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.

bar

bɑ:

бар

We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.
An old man in a bar told Mr Phelps that there was a runaway slave on a raft down by the river.

be going to have to

bi ˈɡəʊɪŋ tə həv tu:

придется; нужно сделать что-то, что может обеспокоить вашего собеседника

But I think I’m going to have to run away before the others, because Aunt Sally wants me to live with her.

be good

bi ɡʊd

хорошо себя вести

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

be\am\is\are (was, been) away

bi\æm\ɪz\ɑ: (wəz, bi:n) əˈweɪ

отсутствовать

Once he was away for three days and I thought I was never going to get out again.

be\am\is\are (was, been) out

bi\æm\ɪz\ɑ: (wəz, bi:n) aʊt

не быть дома, отсутствовать, отлучаться

When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut.
Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft. 

be\am\is\are (was\were, been) back

bi\æm\ɪz\ɑ: (wəz\wɜ:, bi:n) ˈbæk

вернуться

‘He won’t be back tonight,’ I thought, so I began to work hard at my hole.
Your Uncle Silas goes to town every day to meet you. He’s there now, but he’ll be back soon.

beautiful

ˈbju:təfl̩

красивый, прекрасный, великолепный

It was a beautiful house and the food was good there, so I stayed.

because

bɪˈkɒz

потому что, оттого что, так как

Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.
It was easy for me to be Tom Sawyer because Tom was my best friend.
I’m really pleased about that because it was very difficult to write a book and I won’t do it again. 

because of

bɪˈkɒz ɒv

из-за

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.

bed

bed

кровать

I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.
They took Tom up to bed because his leg was really bad, and Aunt Sally sat with him while he slept.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

bedroom

ˈbedru:m

спальня

Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

before

bɪˈfɔ:

пока не, до того как, прежде чем, раньше

She said she wouldn’t tell anybody, and gave me some food before I left.
I hurried up the road and before I was halfway to town, there was Tom Sawyer coming along.
But I think I’m going to have to run away before the others, because Aunt Sally wants me to live with her.

before long

bɪˈfɔ: ˈlɒŋ

вскоре; скоро

Before long, I came to a little house which was always empty.

begin (began, begun)

bɪˈɡɪn (bɪˈɡæn, bɪˈɡʌn)

начать

I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.
‘He won’t be back tonight,’ I thought, so I began to work hard at my hole.
Ben wanted to begin on Sunday, but the others said no.

behind

bɪˈhaɪnd

позади, за

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.
We got out the raft as fast as we could, put all our things on it, tied the canoe on behind, and moved off down the river.
I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

belong

bɪˈlɒŋ

принадлежать

I had to tell them something, so I said that Jim belonged to my uncle and was taking me to my family in New Orleans.

below

bɪˈləʊ

внизу; ниже

Below us we could see the river and the town.

big

bɪɡ

большой

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.
Slowly, I swam to the side of the river and got out. I saw that I was near a big old wooden house.
We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway! That was the second big surprise.

bigger

ˈbɪɡə

больше

In a few days, when the hole was bigger, I could take the wood out, escape through the hole, and put the wood back.

blood

blʌd

кровь

We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers.
I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground.
Last of all, I put some blood and some of my hair on the axe.

boat

bəʊt

лодка

Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.
I’ve fallen off a river boat.
I was feeling really happy about this when suddenly I heard a boat on the river.

body

ˈbɒdi

тело

They were looking for my body in the river.

book

bʊk

книга

You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
That’s what they do in the stories in books.
We also wrote secret letters to everybody. Tom said that people always do this in books.

bored

bɔ:d

скучающий

For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored.
I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder.

both

bəʊθ

оба

Jim finished his story and then we both carried all our things into a cave and hid the canoe under some trees.
One of the men was about seventy years old; the other was about thirty, and they both had very old, dirty clothes.
So that was what we did, and they were both happy.

bottom

ˈbɒtəm

нижняя граница

Just after it was dark, I got into the canoe and went up the river to the bottom of the town.

boy

ˌbɔɪ

мальчик

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
A lot of people think he killed his boy and he’s going to come back one day, and get all Huck Finn’s money.
I asked the boy where the Phelpses lived and he said it was a big white house a little way down the river.

break (broke, broken) down

breɪk (brəʊk, ˈbrəʊkən) daʊn

сломать; разрушить; разбить на части

Next, I broke down the door with an axe.

break (broke, broken) up

breɪk (brəʊk, ˈbrəʊkən) ʌp

разбиться; разрушиться

When the steamboat hit the raft, Jim told me, the raft didn’t break up.

breakfast

ˈbrekfəst

завтрак

One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast.

bridge

brɪdʒ

мост

My grandfather was the son of the Duke of Bridgewater, but he left England and came to America.

Bridgewater

ˈbrɪˌdʒwɒtə

Бриджуотер (действительно, были такие герцоги в Англии)

When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.’

bright eyes

braɪt aɪz

ясные глаза; блестящие глаза

She looked at me with her little bright eyes.

bring (brought, brought)

brɪŋ (ˈbrɔ:t, ˈbrɔ:t)

приводить; доставить; притащить; приносить

Immediately, I jumped into the river and brought the canoe to the side.
They brought Jim too, and they locked him up in the hut again.
The widow sent a man to find me and bring me home, but Pop went after him with a gun, and the man ran away.

brother

ˈbrʌðə

брат

There was Pop, Judge Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and his Aunt Polly and his brother Sid, and lots of others.
He and his brother Sid lived with their Aunt Polly up in St Petersburg, and I knew all about them.
He knocked on the door and when his Aunt Sally opened it, he said he was Sid, Tom’s brother.

bullet

ˈbʊlɪt

пуля

We were all very happy, but Tom was the happiest of all, because he had a bullet in his leg.
But old Jim is not going to run away and leave one of his friends with a bullet in his leg!

buy (bought, bought)

ˈbaɪ (ˈbɔ:t, ˈbɔ:t)

покупать

A man came into town and told Miss Watson that he’d buy me for eight hundred dollars.
I haven’t got any money to buy the right clothes and things.

by myself

baɪ maɪˈself

один, сам

I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself.

by now

baɪ naʊ

к этому времени

All my money back in St Petersburg will be in Pop’s pockets by now.

by then

baɪ ðen

к тому времени

By then it was nearly dark, so I hid the canoe under some trees and went to sleep.

call

kɔ:l

называть

Now, we’ll have this gang of robbers,’ he said, ‘and we’ll call it Tom Sawyer’s Gang.
Some people call me Sarah and some people call me Mary, you see.’
We could call him ‘Your Majesty’, too.

call out

kɔ:l aʊt

выкрикнуть; назвать; кричать

‘Tom could be on that boat,’ I thought, ‘and he’s going to walk in here and call out my name before I can stop him.
I called out his name again and again, but there was no answer.

called

kɔ:ld

под названием

You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
A family called the Phelpses have got him now.

can (could)

kən (kʊd)

мочь, уметь, иметь возможность

Well, you can’t go there by yourself now. It’s too dark.
Through the window we could see a bed, two old chairs and some old clothes.
I said they could come with me, and we ran quickly back to the canoe.

canoe

kəˈnu:

каноэ; челнок

To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it.
Jim finished his story and then we both carried all our things into a cave and hid the canoe under some trees.
Jim got the canoe ready and I went off in it to take a look at those lights.

carefully

ˈkeəfəli

внимательно; осторожно

I went out to look at them more carefully.
Carefully, I looked through the trees, and I saw a boat full of people.

carry

ˈkæri

нести; относить; проносить

Soon I could get out through it, and I carried food and drink and Pop’s gun down to the canoe.
I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground.
Jim finished his story and then we both carried all our things into a cave and hid the canoe under some trees.

catch (caught, caught)

kætʃ (ˈkɔ:t, ˈkɔ:t)

поймать

Then Pop got really angry and one day he caught me and took me a long way up the river in a boat.
Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire.
One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast.

cave

keɪv

пещера

Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.
‘Then the cave will be full of women, and people waiting, and we’ll have to watch them all night…’
We just took the old clothes and a few other things, and went back to our cave on the island.

chair

tʃeə

стул

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window.
Through the window we could see a bed, two old chairs and some old clothes.

chicken

ˈtʃɪkɪn

курица

It’s all right to take a chicken or something if you’re hungry, but these men were really bad!

clean

kli:n

чистый; опрятный

Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

close

kləʊz

закрывать

He told her all about the digging and everything, and Aunt Sally’s mouth was opening and closing like a fish.

clothes

kləʊðz

одежда

In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away.
My clothes were very dirty and I was very tired when I got back.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

colour

ˈkʌlə

цвет

His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.

come (came, come)

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm)

прийти; наступить; прибыть; идти (на приближение); приехать; наступить; ехать

I knew that nobody was going to come and look for me again.
A few days later one of the slaves in the house came to me and said, ‘Come with me!’
Time went on and winter came.

come (came, come) after

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ˈɑ:ftə

идти за; идти вслед за; преследовать

But Tom came after me and said that I had to go back, but that I could be in his gang of robbers.
But the men heard us and came after us.
Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed!

come (came, come) along

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) əˈlɒŋ

идти

Just then a boy came along.
So I went back to the house with the bags, and Tom came along half an hour later.

come (came, come) back

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ˈbæk

вернуться

‘No, and he won’t come back, Huck,’ Jim said.
A lot of people think he killed his boy and he’s going to come back one day, and get all Huck Finn’s money.
When he came back that time, he was drunk and angry.

come (came, come) down

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) daʊn

спускаться

All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.

come (came, come) in

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ɪn

войти; прибыть

Then her husband came in and she asked him, ‘Has he come?’
The woman opened the door. ‘Come in,’ she said.

come (came, come) in

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ɪn

войти

The woman opened the door. ‘Come in,’ she said.

come (came, come) on

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ɒn

 да ладно!; живее; быстрей

Come on, give it to me!
Come on, now – what’s your real name?

come (came, come) out

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) aʊt

выходить

Come out from under that bed, Huck Finn.

come (came, come) up

kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ʌp

поднять; выйти

When I came up out of the water, I couldn’t see Jim anywhere.

comfortable

ˈkʌmftəbl̩

удобный; комфортный

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.
I was warm and comfortable and I didn’t want to get up.
It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.

cook

kʊk

готовить

Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire.

corner

ˈkɔ:nə

угол

I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.
There was something lying in the corner and we thought it looked like a man.

crazy

ˈkreɪzi

безумный, сумасбродный, сумасшедший

I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting.
Well, that was a surprise to me and Aunt Sally! She thought Tom was crazy.

crowd

kraʊd

толпа

Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

cry (cried)

kraɪ (kraɪd)

плакать, кричать, вскричать

So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again. I didn’t like it at all.
Jim fell to his knees. ‘Please don’t hurt me!’ he cried.
Tom suddenly sat up in bed. ‘You can’t do that!’ he cried.

cut (cut, cut)

kʌt (kʌt, kʌt)

вырезать; выпиливать

When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut.

dangerous

ˈdeɪndʒərəs

опасный; рискованный

It’s got to be a real escape, like a real adventure in a story-book. So we want something difficult and dangerous.

dark

dɑ:k

темно; ночь; тьма

By then it was nearly dark, so I hid the canoe under some trees and went to sleep.
When it was dark, I got on to a big boat and hid.
It was very dark that night and it wasn’t easy to see where we were going.

darkness

ˈdɑ:knəs

темнота

Silently, I moved along the river in my canoe, under the darkness of the trees.

day

deɪ

день

The next day he was drunk, and he went to Judge Thatcher to get my money.
I lived like that for three days, and then I decided to have a look round the island.
But Tom’s leg got very bad, and the next day the doctor and some other men carried Tom home to the Phelpses’ house.

dead

ded

мертвый

Jim fell to his knees. ‘Please don’t hurt me!’ he cried. ‘I’ve always been good to dead people!’
They said you were dead, Huck. I had to wait all day to get away.
You remember that dead man on the river, when I said “Don’t look at his face”?

dear

dɪə

дорогой, любимый

He wanted his visit to be a surprise for his dear old Aunt Sally, he said.
‘But Polly dear,’ said Aunt Sally, ‘this isn’t Tom. It’s Sid.

decide

dɪˈsaɪd

решить

So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.
We wanted to know what was happening in town and so I decided to go and find out.
She knew that is wasn’t true, so she decided to come and find out what was happening.

deep

di:p

в глубине

Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.

describe

dɪˈskraɪb

описывать

‘Have you seen a slave?’ I asked him, and I described Jim.

die

daɪ

умереть

I can’t read and your mother couldn’t read; no one in our family could read before they died, so who do you think you are?
Jim was old Miss Watson’s slave, but she died two months ago.
Before she died, she wrote that she wanted Jim to be free, and not a slave any more.

different

ˈdɪfrənt

другой

So then I had to tell her another story, with a different name, and I said I was running away.

difficult

ˈdɪfɪkəlt

трудный; сложный

So we want something difficult and dangerous.
I’m really pleased about that because it was very difficult to write a book and I won’t do it again.

dig (dug, dug)

dɪɡ (dʌɡ, dʌɡ)

копать

Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.
He told her all about the digging and everything, and Aunt Sally’s mouth was opening and closing like a fish.

dinner

ˈdɪnə

обед; ужин (вообще это что-то приготовленное дома, а не быстрая перекуска, как ланч)

Bring me my dinner!

dirty

ˈdɜ:ti

грязный

My clothes were very dirty and I was very tired when I got back.
His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
His clothes were old and dirty, too, and two of his toes were coming through his shoe.

do\does (did, done)

dʊ\dʌz (dɪd, dʌn)

делать

I’ll be happier if you do things for me. Bring me my dinner!
We did it, Aunt Sally. Me and Tom here. We helped Jim escape.
There are men and dogs trying to catch us. But we’ve done nothing wrong!

doctor

ˈdɒktə

врач, доктор

Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg.
I went and found a doctor in the town.
But Tom’s leg got very bad, and the next day the doctor and some other men carried Tom home to the Phelpses’ house.

dog

dɒɡ

собака

Suddenly a lot of very angry dogs jumped out at me.
There are men and dogs trying to catch us. But we’ve done nothing wrong!
Suddenly, a lot of dogs ran out. They came from everywhere and they made a terrible noise.

dollar

ˈdɒlə

доллар

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.
But Pop didn’t stop trying and every few days I got two of three dollars from judge to stop Pop from hitting me.
So Mr Phelps gave him forty dollars and they went down and caught the slave this afternoon.

door

dɔ:

дверь

When he opened the door, I cried, ‘Sir, I want you to take all my money. I want to give it to you.’
She was a stranger and that was good because she didn’t know me. So I knocked on the door.
He knocked on the door and when his Aunt Sally opened it, he said he was Sid, Tom’s brother.

doorway

ˈdɔ:weɪ

дверной проём

We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway!

down

ˈdaʊn

вниз

So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.
I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.
My raft was there, and our plan was to escape on that and go on down river.

down south

daʊn saʊθ

на юг

And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit.
Tom talked and talked, and then he said, ‘Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.’

dress

dres

платье

Why don’t you wear the old dress and the hat that we found in the house?

drink

ˈdrɪŋk

спиртной напиток, порция спиртного, питье

He took it, and then he said he was going out to get a drink.
Soon I could get out through it, and I carried food and drink and Pop’s gun down to the canoe.

drunk

drʌŋk

пьяный

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.
The next day he was drunk, and he went to Judge Thatcher to get my money.
When he came back that time, he was drunk and angry.

Duke

dju:k

герцог

I’m really a duke.
When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.

each

i:tʃ

каждый

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.

easy

ˈi:zi

легко; просто

It was very dark that night and it wasn’t easy to see where we were going.
It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.
It was easy for me to be Tom Sawyer because Tom was my best friend.

eight

eɪt

восемь

It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky.
A man came into town and told Miss Watson that he’d buy me for eight hundred dollars.

empty

ˈempti

пустой

Before long, I came to a little house which was always empty.

end

end

конец

We went through the trees to the end of the widow’s garden.
Well, that was the end of the adventure, really. I went and found a doctor in the town.

England

ˈɪŋɡlənd

Англия

I’m really a duke. My grandfather was the son of the Duke of Bridgewater, but he left England and came to America.

escape

ɪˈskeɪp

сбежать

So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.
Well, he’s a prisoner here, and I’m going to help him escape.
My raft was there, and our plan was to escape on that and go on down river.

every

ˈevri

каждый

But Pop didn’t stop trying and every few days I got two of three dollars from judge to stop Pop from hitting me.
They were always getting drunk and making plans to get money out of people in every town.
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

everybody

ˈevrɪˌbɒdi

каждый, всякий, все

I ran down to the river to hide, but everybody in the town was there.
It’s best if everybody is happy when you’re living together on a raft.
I didn’t want to answer any questions so I kept out of everybody’s way.

everything

ˈevrɪθɪŋ

всё

One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet.
When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.
So Tom and I had to explain everything. Aunt Polly said that Aunt Sally wrote and told her that Tom and Sid were there.

excited

ɪkˈsaɪtɪd

взволнованный; оживленный

He looked very excited.
‘It’s a real adventure now, all right,’ he said, very excited.

exciting

ɪkˈsaɪtɪŋ

захватывающий; увлекательный

I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting.
‘We made a really exciting plan and … Oh my! … AUNT POLLY!’

explain

ɪkˈspleɪn

объяснить

So Tom and I had to explain everything.

face

feɪs

лицо

His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
He’s dead. Someone shot him in the back. Don’t look at his face, Huck. It’s terrible!
I didn’t want to see the dead man’s face, so I didn’t look.

fall (fell, fallen)

fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən)

упасть

I’ve fallen off a river boat.
Jim fell to his knees.
When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face.

fall (fell, fallen) off

fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) ɒf

свалиться

I’ve fallen off a river boat.

fall (fell, fallen) open

fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) ˈəʊpən

невольно открыться

When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face.

fall (fell, fallen) through

fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) θru:

провалиться

When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

family

ˈfæməli

семья

If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family.
I told them that my family were all dead, so they said I could stay with them as long as I wanted.
A family called the Phelpses have got him now.

famous

ˈfeɪməs

знаменитый; известный

When we got all that money, Tom and I were famous for a while.

fast

fɑ:st

быстро

We got out the raft as fast as we could, put all our things on it, tied the canoe on behind, and moved off down the river.
Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us.
I got under the bed as fast as I could.

father

ˈfɑ:ðə

отец

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.

feel (felt, felt)

fi:l (felt, felt)

чувствовать

When Tom woke up the next day, he felt better.
It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.
I was feeling really happy about this when suddenly I heard a boat on the river.

few

fju:

несколько

But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back.
But Pop didn’t stop trying and every few days I got two of three dollars from judge to stop Pop from hitting me.
We just took the old clothes and a few other things, and went back to our cave on the island.

fifth

fɪfθ

пятый

On the fifth night we passed St Louis, and we decided to go on down to Cairo in Illinois, sell the raft there and get a boat to Ohio.

fifty

ˈfɪfti

пятьдесят

He was almost fifty and he looked old.
A woman about fifty years old ran out of the house, with some little children behind her.

fight

faɪt

ссориться; драться

We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.

find (found, found)

faɪnd (faʊnd, faʊnd)

найти

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich.
Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft.
Huck escapes and finds a friend

find (found, found) out

faɪnd (faʊnd, faʊnd) aʊt

узнать; выяснить

I must find out who it is.
We wanted to know what was happening in town and so I decided to go and find out.
She knew that is wasn’t true, so she decided to come and find out what was happening.

fine

faɪn

хороший; прекрасный

It was a fine life.
We’ll have a fine time together.

finger

ˈfɪŋɡə

палец руки

We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers.

finish

ˈfɪnɪʃ

закончить

Jim finished his story and then we both carried all our things into a cave and hid the canoe under some trees.
‘It’s a good plan,’ he said when I finished

fire

ˈfaɪə

огонь, костер

Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire.
Suddenly, just in front of me, I saw a fire, and it was still smoking.
Through the trees I could see the light of a fire.

first

ˈfɜ:st

первый, сперва, сначала

And then the old man told us that he was really the first son of the King of France.
I began to make plans to get Jim back. First, I took the raft and went down to a little island.

fish

fɪʃ

рыба

One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast.
Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire.
He told her all about the digging and everything, and Aunt Sally’s mouth was opening and closing like a fish.

five

faɪv

пять

It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.

floor

flɔ:

пол

When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

fly (flew, flown) out

flaɪ (flu:, fləʊn) aʊt

вылетать

I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.

food

ˈfu:d

еда

Soon I could get out through it, and I carried food and drink and Pop’s gun down to the canoe.
She said she wouldn’t tell anybody, and gave me some food before I left.
It was a beautiful house and the food was good there, so I stayed.

foot (feet)

fʊt (fi:t)

нога (ноги)

She was always saying, ‘Don’t put your feet there, Huckleberry,’ and ‘Don’t do that, Huckleberry.’

footprint

ˈfʊtprɪnt

след (ноги)

Then, one morning, there was some new snow on the ground and outside the back garden I could see footprints in the snow.
They were Pop’s footprints!

for a little while

fər ə ˈlɪtl̩ waɪl

ненадолго, немного

It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.

for a long time

fər ə ˈlɒŋ ˈtaɪm

долго

He looked at me all over for a long time, and then he said, ‘Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!

for a time

fər ə ˈtaɪm

некоторое время

Back on the raft we talked for a time and then the young man said, ‘My friends, I think I can tell you my secret now.

for a while

fər ə waɪl

в течение некоторого времени

When we got all that money, Tom and I were famous for a while.

for sure

fə ʃʊə

точно; без сомнения

There was trouble coming for me and Tom, that was for sure.

forget (forgot, forgotten)

fəˈɡet (fəˈɡɒt, fəˈɡɒtn̩)

забыть

Well, you can forget about school.

forty

ˈfɔ:ti

сорок

Now there was a light on, and when I looked through the window, I saw a woman of about forty.
So Mr Phelps gave him forty dollars and they went down and caught the slave this afternoon.

four

fɔ:

четыре

It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.
So the four of us went on down the river, but Jim and I didn’t like those two men.

free

fri:

свободный, освобождать

It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.
The plan to free Jim
Before she died, she wrote that she wanted Jim to be free, and not a slave any more. Jim’s a free man, not a slave!

friend

ˈfrend

друг

But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back.
It was easy for me to be Tom Sawyer because Tom was my best friend.
But old Jim is not going to run away and leave one of his friends with a bullet in his leg! 

from behind

frəm bɪˈhaɪnd

из-за

‘Hello, Jim,’ I cried, and I jumped out from behind the tree.
‘Look!’ she shouted, and then she pulled me out from behind the door.

from everywhere

frəm ˈevrɪweə

отовсюду

Suddenly, a lot of dogs ran out. They came from everywhere and they made a terrible noise.

from under

frəm ˈʌndə

из-под

Come out from under that bed, Huck Finn.

front door

frʌnt dɔ:

парадная дверь

‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

full

fʊl

полный; заполненный

Then the cave will be full of women, and people waiting, and we’ll have to watch them all night…
Carefully, I looked through the trees, and I saw a boat full of people.

fun

fʌn

веселье

And we sure had a lot of fun with that plan!

gang

ɡæŋ

шайка; банда

But Tom came after me and said that I had to go back, but that I could be in his gang of robbers.
‘Now, we’ll have this gang of robbers,’ he said, ‘and we’ll call it Tom Sawyer’s Gang.
And if a boy from the gang tells other people our secrets, we’ll kill him and his family, too.

garden

ˈɡɑ:dn̩

сад

We went through the trees to the end of the widow’s garden.

get (got, got)

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt)

взять; доставать; получать; иметь; очутиться; прийти; попасть; схватить; становиться; добыть; стать

‘You give me that money! I want it. Get it for me tomorrow!’
And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!
It rained for days, and the river got higher and higher.

get (got, got) angry

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈæŋɡri

сердиться; рассердиться

He was always coming to the widow’s house, and she got angry and told him to stay away.

get (got, got) away

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) əˈweɪ

улизнуть; удрать

I had to wait all day to get away.
Jim and I decided to get away from them as soon as we could.
‘Now we can get away from them,’ I thought.

get (got, got) back

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈbæk

возвращать; возвращаться

My clothes were very dirty and I was very tired when I got back.

get (got, got) bored

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) bɔ:d

скучать, заскучать, стало скучно

For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored.
I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder.

get (got, got) drunk

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) drʌŋk

напиваться

But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town.
He got drunk and left town with two strangers.

get (got, got) excited

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ɪkˈsaɪtɪd

взбудораживаться, волноваться

Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

get (got, got) in

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ɪn

попасть; войти; влезть

I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.
They began to shoot, and so we ran as fast as we could to the canoe. We got in it and went over to Spanish Island.

get (got, got) into

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈɪntə

садиться (в лодку)

Just after it was dark, I got into the canoe and went up the river to the bottom of the town.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.

get (got, got) killed

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈkɪld

умереть, быть убитым кем-то или чем-то

‘Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed!’

get (got, got) light

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) laɪt

светать

When it began to get light, we hid. When it was dark again, we travelled on.

get (got, got) money out of

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈmʌni aʊt ɒv

выманивать/вымогать деньги у кого-то

They were always getting drunk and making plans to get money out of people in every town.

get (got, got) on

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ɒn

сесть; влезть; забраться

When it was dark, I got on to a big boat and hid.

get (got, got) out

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) aʊt

вылезти; вынуть; вытаскивать; выбраться

Soon I could get out through it, and I carried food and drink and Pop’s gun down to the canoe.
We got out the raft as fast as we could, put all our things on it, tied the canoe on behind, and moved off down the river.
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

get (got, got) ready

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈredi

подготовить

Jim got the canoe ready and I went off in it to take a look at those lights.

get (got, got) up

ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ʌp

вставать

I was warm and comfortable and I didn’t want to get up.

girl

ɡɜ:l

девочка

People won’t know you then. They’ll think you’re a girl.
‘I must remember that I’m a girl,’ I said to myself.
Come on, now – what’s your real name? Bill? Bob? I know you’re not really a girl.

give (gave, given)

ɡɪv (ɡeɪv, ɡɪvn̩)

отдавать; давать

And he gave me a dollar and I wrote my name on a piece of paper for him.
She said she wouldn’t tell anybody, and gave me some food before I left.
They’ll give three hundred dollars to anybody who finds him – and they’ll give two hundred dollars for old Finn.

go (went, gone)

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn)

идти; ходить

My husband’s gone to get two of his friends and they’re going over there with a gun later tonight.
In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
We’re very nice to them, and they all love us, and they don’t want to go home.

go (went, gone) along

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) əˈlɒŋ

идти; продолжать

For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored.

go (went, gone) away

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) əˈweɪ

уходить

He often went away into town too, and then he always locked me in the hut.
I watched them, but they didn’t see me, and in the end they went away.
‘In there!’ he said and went away.

go (went, gone) back

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈbæk

возвращаться

But Tom came after me and said that I had to go back, but that I could be in his gang of robbers.
So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again.
We just took the old clothes and a few other things, and went back to our cave on the island.

go (went, gone) by

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) baɪ

проходить (о времени)

Two of three days and nights went by and nothing much happened.

go (went, gone) down

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) daʊn

сойти; спуститься

He asked us all to go down on one knee when we spoke to him.
So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.
First, I took the raft and went down to a little island.

go (went, gone) home

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) həʊm

идти домой

We’re very nice to them, and they all love us, and they don’t want to go home.
‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’

go (went, gone) in

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ɪn

войти

Jim went in to see, but he said, ‘He’s dead. Someone shot him in the back.

go (went, gone) into

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈɪntə

войти

So I told the Phelpses that I would go into town to get my bags, which were at the boat station.
Then I put back the wood to hide the hole, took the gun and went into the woods.
Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

go (went, gone) off

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ɒf

уходить; уезжать

That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town.
Then one morning the King went off into a town and told us to wait for him.
Before it was light, I went off down the river in the canoe.

go (went, gone) on

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ɒn

идти дальше; продолжить путь

Go on, take that book and read to me!
Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg.
Time went on and winter came.

go (went, gone) out

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) aʊt

выходить

I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself.
I went out to look at them more carefully.

go (went, gone) over

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈəʊvə

переходить; перебираться; пойти

He was a kind old man, and he said he would go over to the island.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.
We got in it and went over to Spanish Island.

go (went, gone) to bed

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) tə bed

ложиться спать

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window.

go (went, gone) up

ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ʌp

подниматься

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window.
That night when I went up to my room, Pop was sitting there, waiting for me!
When I thought I was near the Phelpses’ place, I stopped, got out of the canoe and went up to the house.

going to

ɡəʊɪŋ tu:

собираться что-то сделать

Then Ben Rogers said, ‘Now, what’s the gang going to do?’
I’m going to see my uncle, on the other side of town.
‘That slave is locked up again and he’s going to stay there. And if I catch you again –‘

gold

ɡəʊld

золото

We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.

good (better, best)

ɡʊd (ˈbetə, best)

изрядный, хороший (лучше, самый лучший)

I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.
It was a beautiful house and the food was good there, so I stayed.
When Tom woke up the next day, he felt better.
Tom’s leg is almost better now, and I haven’t got any more to write about.
It’s best if everybody is happy when you’re living together on a raft.
It was easy for me to be Tom Sawyer because Tom was my best friend.

grandfather

ˈɡrænfɑ:ðə

дед

I’m really a duke. My grandfather was the son of the Duke of Bridgewater, but he left England and came to America.
When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.

ground

ɡraʊnd

земля; грунт

Then, one morning, there was some new snow on the ground and outside the back garden I could see footprints in the snow.
I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground.
On the ground, I found a man, asleep.

gun

ɡʌn

ружье; револьвер; огнестрельное оружие

The widow sent a man to find me and bring me home, but Pop went after him with a gun, and the man ran away.
Soon I could get out through it, and I carried food and drink and Pop’s gun down to the canoe.
Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

hair

ˈheə

волосы

His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
Last of all, I put some blood and some of my hair on the axe.

half

hɑ:f

половина

All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.

half an hour

hɑ:f ən ˈaʊə

полчаса

I’ll come to the house in about half an hour.
So I went back to the house with the bags, and Tom came along half an hour later.

halfway

hɑ:fˈweɪ

на полпути

I hurried up the road and before I was halfway to town, there was Tom Sawyer coming along.

hand

hænd

рука (кисть)

I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.
When I heard this, my hands began to shake.

happen

ˈhæpən

происходить

We wanted to know what was happening in town and so I decided to go and find out.
Two of three days and nights went by and nothing much happened.
Well, there wasn’t time to think about it because it all happened so quickly.

happier

ˈhæpiə

счастливее

Well, of course, we were all very unhappy for our friend the Duke, but he said, ‘I’ll be happier if you do things for me. Bring me my dinner!’

happy

ˈhæpi

счастливый, довольный

Suddenly, he sat up and I saw that it was Jim, Miss Watson’s slave! I was really happy to see him!
So that was what we did, and they were both happy.
We were all very happy, but Tom was the happiest of all, because he had a bullet in his leg.

hard

hɑ:d

трудный; тяжелый; интенсивно

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
‘He won’t be back tonight,’ I thought, so I began to work hard at my hole.
It took us a week, and to was hard work.

Harper

ˈhɑ:pə

Харпер; дословный перевод «арфист», «менестрель»

We went down the hill and found Joe Harper, Ben Rogers and two or three more of the boys.

hat

hæt

шляпа

Why don’t you wear the old dress and the hat that we found in the house?

have\has (had, had)

həv\hæz (həd, hæd)

иметь, получить, организовывать

After a time he said, ‘You know, Bridgewater, I, too, have a secret.’ And he began to cry.
In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
One of the men was about seventy years old; the other was about thirty, and they both had very old, dirty clothes.

have\has (had, had) a fine time

həv\həz (hæd, həd) ə faɪn ˈtaɪm

хорошо провести время

‘Well, we’ll travel down river with you, then,’ said the King. ‘We’ll have a fine time together.’

have\has (had, had) fun

həv\hæz (həd, hæd) fʌn

развлекаться, веселиться

And we sure had a lot of fun with that plan!

have\has (had, had) to

həv\hæz (həd, hæd) tu:

быть должным, быть вынужденным

So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again.
They said you were dead, Huck. I had to wait all day to get away.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

have\has got

həv\hæzˈɡɒt

иметь; владеть

A family called the Phelpses have got him now.

head

ˈhed

голова

When he was outside the window, he put his head back in and shouted, ‘And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!’

hear (heard, heard)

hɪə (hɜ:d, hɜ:d)

слышать

But just after midnight I heard ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ outside.
When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.
But the men heard us and came after us.

help

help

помощь, помогать

My mother’s ill, you see, and she needs help.
Help!’ they cried. ‘There are men and dogs trying to catch us. But we’ve done nothing wrong!’
Be kind to him, because he didn’t run away and he stayed to help me with the boy.

hide (hid, hidden)

haɪd (hɪd, ˈhɪdn̩)

спрятать; спрятаться

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
y then it was nearly dark, so I hid the canoe under some trees and went to sleep.
I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

high

haɪ

высоко

It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky.

higher

ˈhaɪə

выше

It rained for days, and the river got higher and higher.

hill

hɪl

холм; возвышение

Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house.
We went down the hill and found Joe Harper, Ben Rogers and two or three more of the boys.
A minute later, I was running down the hill to Judge Thatcher’s house.

hit (hit, hit)

hɪt (hɪt, hɪt)

бить; наносить удары; ударить

I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.
But Pop didn’t stop trying and every few days I got two of three dollars from judge to stop Pop from hitting me.
Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

hole

həʊl

дыра; отверстие; яма

When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut.
We got Jim out through the hole under the wall, and began to run down to the river.
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

home

həʊm

дом

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’
My husband will be home in about an hour.

hour

ˈaʊə

час

My husband will be home in about an hour.

house

ˈhaʊs

дом

And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son.
All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.
A woman about fifty years old ran out of the house, with some little children behind her.

how

ˈhaʊ

как

That night when I went up to my room, Pop was sitting there, waiting for me! I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.

Huckleberry

ˈhʌklbəri

Гекльберри; дословный перевод «черника»

She was always saying, ‘Don’t put your feet there, Huckleberry,’ and ‘Don’t do that, Huckleberry.’ It was terrible.

hundred

ˈhʌndrəd

сотня

A man came into town and told Miss Watson that he’d buy me for eight hundred dollars.
They’ll give three hundred dollars to anybody who finds him – and they’ll give two hundred dollars for old Finn.

hungry

ˈhʌŋɡri

голодный

It’s all right to take a chicken or something if you’re hungry, but these men were really bad!

hurry back

ˈhʌri ˈbæk

торопиться назад

I hurried back to the island and Jim.

hurry up

ˈhʌri ʌp

торопиться

I hurried up the road and before I was halfway to town, there was Tom Sawyer coming along.

hurt (hurt, hurt)

hɜ:t (hɜ:t,hɜ:t)

причинить вред/боль

If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family.
‘Please don’t hurt me!’ he cried.

husband

ˈhʌzbənd

муж

My husband will be home in about an hour.
My husband’s gone to get two of his friends and they’re going over there with a gun later tonight.
She and her husband were Tom’s Aunt Sally and Uncle Silas.

hut

hʌt

хижина; лачуга

I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself.
We knew that Jim was locked up in a hut outside the house.
We got Jim out of the hut and Aunt Sally and Uncle Silas were really nice to him.

ill

ɪl

больной; нездоровый

My mother’s ill, you see, and she needs help.

Illinois

ˌɪləˈnoɪ

Иллинойс

On the fifth night we passed St Louis, and we decided to go on down to Cairo in Illinois, sell the raft there and get a boat to Ohio.
After some time, we saw lights on the Illinois side of the river and Jim got very excited.

immediately

ɪˈmi:dɪətli

незамедлительно; тотчас же

Immediately, I jumped into the river and brought the canoe to the side.

important

ɪmˈpɔ:tnt

важный

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.

in a few days

ɪn ə fju: deɪz

через несколько дней

In a few days, when the hole was bigger, I could take the wood out, escape through the hole, and put the wood back.

in front of

ɪn frʌnt ɒv

перед; впереди

Suddenly, just in front of me, I saw a fire, and it was still smoking.

in the end

ɪn ði end

в итоге; в конце концов

In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away.
In the end he said, ‘Well, you can sell it to me, then.’
We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.

in the street

ɪn ðə stri:t

на улице

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. It was a fine life.

in the woods

ɪn ðə wʊdz

в лесу

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. It was a fine life.
So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.

in those days

ɪn ðəʊz deɪz

в те времена

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.

in trouble

ɪn ˈtrʌbl̩

в беде

Huck in trouble

inside

ɪnˈsaɪd

внутрь

I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

interested

ˈɪntrəstɪd

аинтересованный

The King and the Duke were very interested in Jim. ‘Is he a slave?’ they wanted to know.

island

ˈaɪlənd

остров

Then I took the canoe and went down the river to Jackson’s Island.
I lived like that for three days, and then I decided to have a look round the island.
I hurried back to the island and Jim.

It’s all right

ɪts ɔ:l raɪt

всё в порядке

It’s all right, Jim. I’m not dead,’ I said. ‘But why are you here on the island?’ I asked.

It’s time

ɪts ˈtaɪm

пора

It’s time to go! But there was no answer. Jim wasn’t there!

journey

ˈdʒɜ:ni

путешествие; поездка

We slept for most of that day and we began our journey again when it was dark.

judge

dʒʌdʒ

судья

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.
The next day he was drunk, and he went to Judge Thatcher to get my money.
There was Pop, Judge Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and his Aunt Polly and his brother Sid, and lots of others.

jump

dʒʌmp

прыгать

Immediately, I jumped into the river and brought the canoe to the side.
When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here.’

jump off

dʒʌmp ɒf

спрыгнуть

Jim and I jumped off the raft into the water.

jump out

dʒʌmp aʊt

выскочить; выпрыгнуть

‘Hello, Jim,’ I cried, and I jumped out from behind the tree.

jump up

dʒʌmp ʌp

подпрыгивать

Aunt Sally was really pleased to see her sister, and jumped up to put her arms round her.

just

dʒəst

лишь, всего лишь, как раз, прямо

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!
Suddenly, just in front of me, I saw a fire, and it was still smoking.

just after

dʒəst ˈɑ:ftə

сразу после

But just after midnight I heard ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ outside.
Just after it was dark, I got into the canoe and went up the river to the bottom of the town.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.

just in time

dʒəst ɪn ˈtaɪm

как раз вовремя

We were just in time because then the rains came.

just look at

dʒəst lʊk æt

полюбуйся

He looked at me all over for a long time, and then he said, ‘Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!

just then

dʒəst ðen

в этот момент, именно тогда

Just then a boy came along. ‘Have you seen a slave?’ I asked him, and I described Jim.
I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

keep (kept, kept)

ki:p (kept, kept)

хранить; держать; задерживать; удерживать

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.
But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back.

keep (kept, kept) out of

ki:p (kept, kept) aʊt ɒv

избегать; оставаться в стороне

I didn’t want to answer any questions so I kept out of everybody’s way.

kill

ˈkɪl

убивать

If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family.
But Ben wasn’t happy. ‘What about women?’ he asked. ‘Do we kill them, too?’
Ben wanted to begin on Sunday, but the others said no. It was bad to kill and rob on a Sunday.

killed

kɪld

убитый

Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed!

kind

kaɪnd

добрый; доброжелательный

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
Well, the people who lived in that house were very kind, and they took me in and gave me some new clothes and a good meal.
He was a kind old man, and he said he would go over to the island.

kind of

kaɪnd ɒv

разновидность чего-то

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.
All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.

kindly

ˈkaɪndli

доброжелательно

The woman looked at me strangely, but then she smiled and said kindly, ‘What did you say your name was?’

King

kɪŋ

король

And then the old man told us that he was really the first son of the King of France.
The King and the Duke were very interested in Jim.

knee

ni:

колено

He asked us all to go down on one knee when we spoke to him.

knees

ni:z

колени

Jim fell to his knees.

knock

nɒk

постучать

So I knocked on the door.
He knocked on the door and when his Aunt Sally opened it, he said he was Sid, Tom’s brother.

know (knew, known)

nəʊ (nju:, nəʊn)

знать

I knew that nobody was going to come and look for me again.
She knew that is wasn’t true, so she decided to come and find out what was happening.
You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

last of all

lɑ:st əv ɔ:l

напоследок

Last of all, I put some blood and some of my hair on the axe.

later

ˈleɪtə

позже, спустя

A minute later, I was running down the hill to Judge Thatcher’s house.
A few days later one of the slaves in the house came to me and said, ‘Come with me!’
Later, Tom, Jim and I had a long talk by ourselves.

laugh

lɑ:f

смеяться; сказать со смехом

‘It’s Tom Sawyer!’ she laughed.

lay down

leɪ daʊn

лечь

I hid the raft under the trees and lay down to sleep.

lazy

ˈleɪzi

ленивый

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

learn (learnt)learn (learnt\learned, learnt\learned)

lɜ:n (lɜ:nt\lɜ:nd, lɜ:nt\lɜ:nd)

узнавать; учиться

Now I learnt that Aunt Polly had a sister, who was Mrs Phelps.
I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again.

leave (left, left)

li:v (left, left)

оставлять; покидать

I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.
She said she wouldn’t tell anybody, and gave me some food before I left.
But old Jim is not going to run away and leave one of his friends with a bullet in his leg!

leg

leɡ

нога (от бедра до ступни)

We were all very happy, but Tom was the happiest of all, because he had a bullet in his leg.
Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg.
Tom’s leg is almost better now, and I haven’t got any more to write about.

let’s

lets

давайте

Tom talked and talked, and then he said, ‘Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.’

letter

ˈletə

письмо

We also wrote secret letters to everybody. Tom said that people always do this in books.

life

laɪf

жизнь

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. It was a fine life.
She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

light

laɪt

свет; лампа; огонь; светлый; светать

Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window.
Through the trees I could see the light of a fire.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.

light on

laɪt ɒn

свет включен

Now there was a light on, and when I looked through the window, I saw a woman of about forty.

like

ˈlaɪk

как, подобный чему-то/кому-то, нравиться

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again. I didn’t like it at all.
But it’s too easy! It’s got to be a real escape, like a real adventure in a story-book.

like that

ˈlaɪk ðæt

так, таким образом

I lived like that for three days, and then I decided to have a look round the island.

like this

ˈlaɪk ðɪs

таким образом

After a time, I said to myself, ‘I can’t live like this. I must find out who it is.’

listen

ˈlɪsn̩

слушать

‘I’m not dead yet,’ I said, ‘but listen …’ I told him about my adventures, and Tom loved all that.
Tom was getting angry about this, but Jim said: ‘You listen to me, Tom Sawyer.
I didn’t  know what to say because Aunt Sally was listening, and before I could stop him, Tom went on: ‘We did it, Aunt Sally.

little (less, least)

ˈlɪtl̩ (les, li:st)

маленький (меньше, самое малое)

All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.
First, I took the raft and went down to a little island.

live

lɪv

жить

And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son.
Well, the people who lived in that house were very kind, and they took me in and gave me some new clothes and a good meal.
I asked the boy where the Phelpses lived and he said it was a big white house a little way down the river.

lock

lɒk

запирать на замок

He often went away into town too, and then he always locked me in the hut.
That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town.

locked up

lɒkt ʌp

взаперти

We knew that Jim was locked up in a hut outside the house.
They brought Jim too, and they locked him up in the hut again.
That slave is locked up again and he’s going to stay there.

long

ˈlɒŋ

длинный; долгий

I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.
His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
Later, Tom, Jim and I had a long talk by ourselves.

long time

ˈlɒŋ ˈtaɪm

длительное время, долгое время

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window. I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.

look

ˈlʊk

выглядеть, смотреть, искать

He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’
I didn’t want to see the dead man’s face, so I didn’t look.
We looked all afternoon and in the end we found him in a bar, and then he and the Duke began to fight about some money.

look at

ˈlʊk ət

смотреть на, взглянуть на

I went out to look at them more carefully. They were Pop’s footprints!
Don’t look at his face, Huck. It’s terrible!
Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg.

look for

lʊk fɔ:

искать

They were looking for my body in the river.
I knew that nobody was going to come and look for me again.
Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft.

look like

lʊk ˈlaɪk

выглядеть, быть похожим

There was something lying in the corner and we thought it looked like a man.

look round

lʊk ˈraʊnd

осмотреться; оглядеться

I lived like that for three days, and then I decided to have a look round the island.
I was looking round, when, suddenly, two men ran through the trees.

lot

lɒt

много

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.

lots

lɒts

большое количество

There was Pop, Judge Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and his Aunt Polly and his brother Sid, and lots of others.

love

lʌv

любить

We’re very nice to them, and they all love us, and they don’t want to go home.
‘I’m not dead yet,’ I said, ‘but listen …’ I told him about my adventures, and Tom loved all that.

luck

lʌk

удача

When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

lucky

ˈlʌki

удачливый

It was lucky that Pop didn’t see me, and I decided to hide the canoe under some trees and use it when I escaped.

ma’am = madam

mæm (ˈmædəm)

мэм, мадам

I didn’t stop to think. ‘Yes, ma’am,’ I said.

make (made, made)

ˈmeɪk (ˈmeɪd, ˈmeɪd)

сделать, создавать, являться причиной чего-либо

But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town.
They made a terrible noise and someone called from the house, ‘Who’s there?’
When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.

make (made, made) a mistake

ˈmeɪk (ˈmeɪd, ˈmeɪd) ə mɪˈsteɪk

ошибаться, совершить ошибку

She didn’t stop talking and I couldn’t tell her that she was making a mistake.

make (made, made) plans

ˈmeɪk (ˈmeɪd, ˈmeɪd) plænz

строить планы

They were always getting drunk and making plans to get money out of people in every town.
‘Right. I’ll help, too. I’ll make a really good plan.’ He looked very excited.
‘We made a really exciting plan and … Oh my! … AUNT POLLY!’

man (men)

mæn (men)

мужчина, человек (мужчины, люди)

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.
Back on the raft we talked for a time and then the young man said, ‘My friends, I think I can tell you my secret now.
Before she died, she wrote that she wanted Jim to be free, and not a slave any more. Jim’s a free man, not a slave!

many

ˈmeni

много

I knew Jim would say that. He was a good, true friend, and you can’t say that about many people.

matter

ˈmætə

значить; быть важным

But it didn’t matter to me.

meal

mi:l

еда; кушанье

Well, the people who lived in that house were very kind, and they took me in and gave me some new clothes and a good meal.

mean (meant, meant)

mi:n (ment, ment)

иметь в виду; хотеть сказать

What do you mean?’ the Duke asked.
‘Where’s Huck Finn, you mean,’ replied Aunt Polly.

meet (met, met)

mi:t (met, met)

встретить

‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’
Your Uncle Silas goes to town every day to meet you.
I’ve got to go and meet him.

metre

ˈmi:tə

метр

It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.

midnight

ˈmɪdnaɪt

полночь

But just after midnight I heard ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ outside.

minute

ˈmɪnɪt

минута

A minute later, I was running down the hill to Judge Thatcher’s house.
Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us. 
It’s Sid. Tom was here a minute ago. Where is he?

mistake

mɪˈsteɪk

ошибка

She didn’t stop talking and I couldn’t tell her that she was making a mistake.

money

ˈmʌni

деньги

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
‘You give me that money! I want it. Get it for me tomorrow!’
A lot of people think he killed his boy and he’s going to come back one day, and get all Huck Finn’s money.

month

mʌnθ

месяц

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.
Jim was old Miss Watson’s slave, but she died two months ago.

more

mɔ:

более, больше

We went down the hill and found Joe Harper, Ben Rogers and two or three more of the boys.
I went out to look at them more carefully. They were Pop’s footprints!
It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.

morning

ˈmɔ:nɪŋ

утро

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
We waited all morning and he didn’t come back, so the Duke and I went into town to look for him.

most of

məʊst ɒv

большая часть из

Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true.
I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.
We slept for most of that day and we began our journey again when it was dark.

most of the time

məʊst əv ðə ˈtaɪm

большая часть времени

Time went on and winter came. I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.

mostly

ˈməʊstli

по большей части

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

mother

ˈmʌðə

мать

I can’t read and your mother couldn’t read; no one in our family could read before they died, so who do you think you are?
My mother’s ill, you see, and she needs help.

mouth

maʊθ

рот

When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face.
He told her all about the digging and everything, and Aunt Sally’s mouth was opening and closing like a fish.

move

mu:v

двигаться

Silently, I moved along the river in my canoe, under the darkness of the trees. And then I stopped.

move around

mu:v əˈraʊnd

переезжать с места на место

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.

move off

mu:v ɒf

отъезжать; уходить

We got out the raft as fast as we could, put all our things on it, tied the canoe on behind, and moved off down the river.

Mr

ˈmɪstə

мистер, господин

Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true.
An old man in a bar told Mr Phelps that there was a runaway slave on a raft down by the river.

murder

ˈmɜ:də

убивать; убийца

I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder.
Everybody said that you were murdered!

must

mʌst

должен

After a time, I said to myself, ‘I can’t live like this. I must find out who it is.’
I must remember that I’m a girl,’ I said to myself.
Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg.

name

ˈneɪm

имя

We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers.
What did you say your name was?
I ran into the woods, crying and shouting Jim’s name. But there was still no answer.

near

nɪə

возле; близ

When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here.
I saw that I was near a big old wooden house.
When I thought I was near the Phelpses’ place, I stopped, got out of the canoe and went up to the house.

nearer

ˈnɪərə

ближе

Afraid, I left my canoe and went nearer.

nearly

ˈnɪəli

почти

By then it was nearly dark, so I hid the canoe under some trees and went to sleep.
When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

need

ni:d

нуждаться, требоваться

My mother’s ill, you see, and she needs help.

never

ˈnevə

никогда

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.
‘No,’ said Tom. ‘Your money’s all there. Your Pop never came back.’

new

nju:

новый

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
Well, the people who lived in that house were very kind, and they took me in and gave me some new clothes and a good meal.
So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again.

New Orleans

nju: ɔ:ˈlɪənz

Новый Орлеан

I had to tell them something, so I said that Jim belonged to my uncle and was taking me to my family in New Orleans.

new snow

nju: snəʊ

свежевыпавший снег

Then, one morning, there was some new snow on the ground and outside the back garden I could see footprints in the snow.

next

nekst

следующий, потом, затем

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us.
When Tom woke up the next day, he felt better.

nice

naɪs

хороший; милый

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
We’re very nice to them, and they all love us, and they don’t want to go home.
She and Uncle Silas were really nice people.

night

ˈnaɪt

ночь

‘Then the cave will be full of women and people waiting, and we’ll have to watch them all night…’
Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft.
Two of three days and nights went by and nothing much happened.

no one

nəʊ wʌn

никто

I can’t read and your mother couldn’t read; no one in our family could read before they died, so who do you think you are?
To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it.

nobody

nəʊbədi

никто

I knew that nobody was going to come and look for me again.

noise

nɔɪz

шум

Suddenly, I heard a noise up the river.
They made a terrible noise and someone called from the house, ‘Who’s there?’
They came from everywhere and they made a terrible noise.

nothing

ˈnʌθɪŋ

ничего

Then Ben Rogers said, ‘Now, what’s the gang going to do?’ ‘Nothing,’ replied Tom. ‘Just rob and kill.
‘Help!’ they cried. ‘There are men and dogs trying to catch us. But we’ve done nothing wrong!’

nothing much

ˈnʌθɪŋ ˈmʌtʃ

почти ничего, ничего необычного

Two of three days and nights went by and nothing much happened.

of course

əv kɔ:s

разумеется; конечно

Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
Well, of course, we were all very unhappy for our friend the Duke, but he said, ‘I’ll be happier if you do things for me.
‘I wanted the adventure, of course!’ said Tom.

often

ˈɒfn̩

часто

I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.
He often went away into town too, and then he always locked me in the hut.

Oh my!

əʊ maɪ

Боже мой!, Вот это да!

‘I wanted the adventure, of course!’ said Tom. ‘We made a really exciting plan and … Oh my! … AUNT POLLY!’

Ohio

əʊˈhaɪəʊ

Огайо

On the fifth night we passed St Louis, and we decided to go on down to Cairo in Illinois, sell the raft there and get a boat to Ohio.
There are no slaves in Ohio.

old

əʊld

старый

In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away.
His clothes were old and dirty, too, and two of his toes were coming through his shoe.
Slowly, I swam to the side of the river and got out. I saw that I was near a big old wooden house.

old man

əʊld mæn

старик

Miss Watson had a slave, an old man called Jim, and he and I were good friends.
And then the old man told us that he was really the first son of the King of France.
He was a kind old man, and he said he would go over to the island.

on foot

ɒn fʊt

пешком

There, I left the canoe and went on foot.

on the other side of

ɒn ði ˈʌðə saɪd ɒv

на другой стороне

I’m going to see my uncle, on the other side of town.

on top of

ɒn tɒp ɒv

наверху

Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house.

once

wʌns

однажды

Once he was away for three days and I thought I was never going to get out again.
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again. I’ve done in once already.

one

wʌn

один

One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet.
A few days later one of the slaves in the house came to me and said, ‘Come with me!’
Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.

one day

wʌn deɪ

однажды

Then Pop got really angry and one day he caught me and took me a long way up the river in a boat.
A lot of people think he killed his boy and he’s going to come back one day, and get all Huck Finn’s money.

one morning

wʌn ˈmɔ:nɪŋ

однажды утром

Then, one morning, there was some new snow on the ground and outside the back garden I could see footprints in the snow.
One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast.
Then, one morning, just after it was light, I found a little canoe, so I got into it and went over to the side of the river.

only

ˈəʊnli

только, лишь, единственный

‘I’ve only got a dollar, and I want that to…’
‘They won’t know it’s only a pig in the river,’ I said to myself. ‘They’ll think it’s me.’
So I went into the woods. ‘This is my island,’ I thought. ‘I’m the only person on it.’

open

ˈəʊpən

открывать, открытый

I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.
The woman opened the door.
He told her all about the digging and everything, and Aunt Sally’s mouth was opening and closing like a fish.

other people

ˈʌðə ˈpi:pl̩

другим

And if a boy from the gang tells other people our secrets, we’ll kill him and his family, too.’

out of

aʊt ɒv

из

When I came up out of the water, I couldn’t see Jim anywhere.

outside

ˌaʊtˈsaɪd

снаружи; на улице

But just after midnight I heard ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ outside.
When he was outside the window, he put his head back in and shouted, ‘And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!’
We knew that Jim was locked up in a hut outside the house.

over

ˈəʊvə

над

Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire.
Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us.

over there

ˈəʊvə ðeə

туда

My husband’s gone to get two of his friends and they’re going over there with a gun later tonight.

owner

ˈəʊnə

владелец

The Phelpses are going to take him back to his owner, and they’ll get three hundred dollars for him!
They wanted to steal Jim and get the three hundred dollars from his owner.

paper

ˈpeɪpə

бумага

And he gave me a dollar and I wrote my name on a piece of paper for him.

pass

pɑ:s

проходить; пройти мимо; миновать

On the fifth night we passed St Louis, and we decided to go on down to Cairo in Illinois, sell the raft there and get a boat to Ohio.

pay (paid, paid)

peɪ (peɪd, peɪd)

платить

But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back.

people

ˈpi:pl̩

люди

We stop people on the road, and we kill them, and take their money and things.
‘Well,’ she replied, ‘some people say old Finn did it himself; other people think it was a slave who ran away that night.
They were always getting drunk and making plans to get money out of people in every town.

perhaps

pəˈhæps

возможно

Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed!
You say I’m a free man now, and perhaps I am.

person

ˈpɜ:sn̩

человек

So I went into the woods. ‘This is my island,’ I thought. ‘I’m the only person on it.’

Phelps

ˈfelps

Фелпс

A family called the Phelpses have got him now.
An old man in a bar told Mr Phelps that there was a runaway slave on a raft down by the river.

piece

pi:s

кусок

And he gave me a dollar and I wrote my name on a piece of paper for him.
When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

pig

pɪɡ

свинья

I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground.
I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.
‘They won’t know it’s only a pig in the river,’ I said to myself. ‘They’ll think it’s me.’

place

ˈpleɪs

место

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
I found a good place under the trees to sleep and to put my things.
When I thought I was near the Phelpses’ place, I stopped, got out of the canoe and went up to the house.

plan

plæn

план

The plan to free Jim
So he told me his plan. I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting.
My raft was there, and our plan was to escape on that and go on down river.

play

pleɪ

играть

Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.

please

pli:z

пожалуйста

Please, sir, take it! Don’t ask me why!’
Jim fell to his knees. ‘Please don’t hurt me!’ he cried. ‘I’ve always been good to dead people!’

pleased

pli:zd

довольный

It wasn’t too bad, and the widow was pleased with me.
I wasn’t very pleased about that.
I’m really pleased about that because it was very difficult to write a book and I won’t do it again.

pocket

ˈpɒkɪt

карман

Well, give me what you’ve got in your pocket now.
All my money back in St Petersburg will be in Pop’s pockets by now.

pop

pɒp

папаша

Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father.
They were Pop’s footprints!
I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder.

prisoner

ˈprɪznə

пленник; узник

Well, he’s a prisoner here, and I’m going to help him escape.

pull

pʊl

тащить

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.
‘This could be useful,’ I said to Jim, so we pulled it back to the island behind the canoe, and tied it up under the trees.

pull along

pʊl əˈlɒŋ

тянуть за собой

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.

pull out

pʊl aʊt

выдернуть; вытащить

‘Look!’ she shouted, and then she pulled me out from behind the door.

push

pʊʃ

подтолкнуть

I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

put (put, put)

ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt)

класть; положить; сунуть

She was always saying, ‘Don’t put your feet there, Huckleberry,’ and ‘Don’t do that, Huckleberry.’
I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground.
When he was outside the window, he put his head back in and shouted, ‘And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!’

put (put, put) back

ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) ˈbæk

поставить на место; положить назад

In a few days, when the hole was bigger, I could take the wood out, escape through the hole, and put the wood back.
Then I put back the wood to hide the hole, took the gun and went into the woods.

put (put, put) on

ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) ɒn

надеть

In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away.
So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again.

put (put, put) out

ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) aʊt

погасить

Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window.

question

ˈkwestʃən

вопрос

We didn’t want anyone to see Jim and ask questions about him.
We all sat there talking and I could answer all their questions about the Sawyer family.
I didn’t want to answer any questions so I kept out of everybody’s way.

quick

kwɪk

быстро

Quick, Jim!’ I cried, waking him up.
Quick, Jim!’ I shouted.
I knew then that I had to tell her … but just then she cried, ‘Here he is! Quick, hide!’ and she pushed me inside the house and behind the front door.

quickly

ˈkwɪkli

быстро

‘George Jackson,’ I answered quickly.
I said they could come with me, and we ran quickly back to the canoe.
Well, there wasn’t time to think about it because it all happened so quickly.

quiet

ˈkwaɪət

спокойный; тихий

One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet.

quietly

ˈkwaɪətli

тихо; спокойно

Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window.
For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored.

raft

rɑ:ft

плот

Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft.
When the steamboat hit the raft, Jim told me, the raft didn’t break up.
I hid the raft under the trees and lay down to sleep.

read (read, read)

ri:d (red, red)

читать

You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
And they say you can read and write now.
I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.

real

rɪəl

настоящий

Come on, now – what’s your real name? Bill? Bob? I know you’re not really a girl.
It’s got to be a real escape, like a real adventure in a story-book.
‘It’s a real adventure now, all right,’ he said, very excited.

really

ˈrɪəli

действительно, на самом деле

I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.
Come on, now – what’s your real name? Bill? Bob? I know you’re not really a girl.
I’m really pleased about that because it was very difficult to write a book and I won’t do it again.

remember

rɪˈmembə

помнить

‘I must remember that I’m a girl,’ I said to myself.
‘You remember that dead man on the river, when I said “Don’t look at his face”?

reply

rɪˈplaɪ

отвечать

‘Nothing,’ replied Tom.
‘Well,’ she replied, ‘some people say old Finn did it himself; other people think it was a slave who ran away that night.
‘Where’s Huck Finn, you mean,’ replied Aunt Polly.

rich

rɪtʃ

богатый

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich.
‘They say you’re rich – how’s that?’

right

raɪt

прямо, ладно, хорошо, подходящий

Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us.
‘Jim?’ Tom said. ‘But he’s –‘ Then he stopped and thought. ‘Right. I’ll help, too. I’ll make a really good plan.’
I haven’t got any money to buy the right clothes and things.

right here

raɪt hɪə

прямо здесь

So I’m staying right here until a doctor comes.

river

ˈrɪvə

река

Below us we could see the river and the town.
I left the axe in a corner of the hut and I took the pig down to the river.
Jim and I jumped off the raft into the water. The boat hit the raft and went up the river.

river boat

ˈrɪvə bəʊt

речная лодка

‘George Jackson,’ I answered quickly. ‘I’ve fallen off a river boat.’

road

rəʊd

дорога

We stop people on the road, and we kill them, and take their money and things.
I hurried up the road and before I was halfway to town, there was Tom Sawyer coming along.

rob

rɒb

грабить

Just rob and kill.
‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’
It was bad to kill and rob on a Sunday.

robber

ˈrɒbə

грабитель; вор

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
But Tom came after me and said that I had to go back, but that I could be in his gang of robbers.

room

ru:m

комната

That night when I went up to my room, Pop was sitting there, waiting for me! I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.
I began to read, but he hit the book and it flew out of my hand, across the room.
I was in the room and he said to me, ‘Jim’s all right, isn’t he?’

run (ran, run)

rʌn (ræn, rʌn)

бежать

I was looking round, when, suddenly, two men ran through the trees.
I ran into the woods, crying and shouting Jim’s name.
I ran and told Tom, and he said that this was really good.

run (ran, run) away

rʌn (ræn, rʌn) əˈweɪ

сбежать

But old Jim is not going to run away and leave one of his friends with a bullet in his leg!
But I think I’m going to have to run away before the others, because Aunt Sally wants me to live with her.
The widow sent a man to find me and bring me home, but Pop went after him with a gun, and the man ran away.

run (ran, run) back

rʌn (ræn, rʌn) ˈbæk

прибежать обратно

I turned and ran back to the river.
I said they could come with me, and we ran quickly back to the canoe.

run (ran, run) down

rʌn (ræn , rʌn) daʊn

сбегать, бежать вниз

A minute later, I was running down the hill to Judge Thatcher’s house.

run (ran, run) out

rʌn (ræn, rʌn) aʊt

выбегать

Suddenly, a lot of dogs ran out.
A woman about fifty years old ran out of the house, with some little children behind her.

runaway

ˈrʌnəweɪ

беглый

He’s runaway slave.
An old man in a bar told Mr Phelps that there was a runaway slave on a raft down by the river.

sack

sæk

мешок

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.

Sawyer

ˈsɔ:jə

Сойер; дословный перевод «лесоруб», «коряга в реке», «пильщик»

You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

say (said, said)

ˈseɪ (ˈsed, ˈsed)

говорить

She was always saying, ‘Don’t put your feet there, Huckleberry,’ and ‘Don’t do that, Huckleberry.
And they say you can read and write now.
And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son.

school

sku:l

школа

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.
And they say you can read and write now. Who said you could go to school?’
And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!

second

ˈsekənd

второй

We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway! That was the second big surprise.

secret

ˈsi:krɪt

укромный, скрытый, тайна, секрет, тайный, секретный

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
And if a boy from the gang tells other people our secrets, we’ll kill him and his family, too.
My friends, I think I can tell you my secret now.

secretly

ˈsi:krɪtli

тайно, скрытно

We talked to Jim secretly and told him about the plan, and he was really pleased.

see (saw, seen)

ˈsi: (ˈsɔ:, ˈsi:n)

увидеть

‘Have you seen a slave?’ I asked him, and I described Jim.
Below us we could see the river and the town.
I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.

sell (sold, sold)

sel (səʊld, səʊld)

продать

In the end he said, ‘Well, you can sell it to me, then.’
Old Miss Watson wanted to sell me.
On the fifth night we passed St Louis, and we decided to go on down to Cairo in Illinois, sell the raft there and get a boat to Ohio.

send (sent, sent)

send (sent, sent)

направить; отдать; послать

The widow sent a man to find me and bring me home, but Pop went after him with a gun, and the man ran away.
One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast.
The judge wanted to send me to live with the widow again, Pop told me.

seventy

ˈsevnti

70

One of the men was about seventy years old; the other was about thirty, and they both had very old, dirty clothes.

shake (shook, shaken)

ʃeɪk (ʃʊk, ˈʃeɪkən)

дрожать

When I heard this, my hands began to shake.

shoe

ʃu:

туфля, ботинок

His clothes were old and dirty, too, and two of his toes were coming through his shoe.

shoot (shot, shot)

ʃu:t (ʃɒt, ʃɒt)

стрелять; застрелить

Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed!
They began to shoot, and so we ran as fast as we could to the canoe.
There I shot a wild pig and took it back to the hut with me.

shout

ʃaʊt

крикнуть

Then he shouted, ‘They say you’re rich – how’s that?’
When he was outside the window, he put his head back in and shouted, ‘And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!’
I ran into the woods, crying and shouting Jim’s name.

side

saɪd

берег; бок; сторона; склон

Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house.
Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.
After some time, we saw lights on the Illinois side of the river and Jim got very excited.

silently

ˈsaɪləntli

молча

Silently, I moved along the river in my canoe, under the darkness of the trees.

sister

ˈsɪstə

сестра

Her sister, Miss Watson, lived there too.
Now I learnt that Aunt Polly had a sister, who was Mrs Phelps.
Aunt Sally was really pleased to see her sister, and jumped up to put her arms round her.

sit (sat, sat)

sɪt (sæt, sæt)

сидеть

That night when I went up to my room, Pop was sitting there, waiting for me!
I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.
I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.

sit (sat, sat) down

sɪt (sæt, sæt) daʊn

сесть

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window.

sit (sat, sat) up

sɪt (sæt, sæt) ʌp

сесть прямо; выпрямиться

Suddenly, he sat up and I saw that it was Jim, Miss Watson’s slave!
Tom suddenly sat up in bed.

sitting-room

ˈsɪtɪŋ ru:m

гостиная

Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

six

sɪks

шесть

But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.

sky

skaɪ

небо

It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky.

slave

sleɪv

раб

Miss Watson had a slave, an old man called Jim, and he and I were good friends.
He’s runaway slave.
Jim was old Miss Watson’s slave, but she died two months ago.

sleep (slept, slept)

sli:p (slept, slept)

спать

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted.
We slept for most of that day and we began our journey again when it was dark.
I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.

slowly

ˈsləʊli

медленно

Slowly, I swam to the side of the river and got out.

smile

smaɪl

улыбаться

The woman looked at me strangely, but then she smiled and said kindly, ‘What did you say your name was?’
‘Oh, do they?’ She smiled again. ‘Come on, now – what’s your real name? Bill? Bob? I know you’re not really a girl.’

smoke

sməʊk

дым; дымить

I’ve seen smoke there.

so

ˈsəʊ

так что, в силу чего, вот поэтому, значит, стало быть, так, ну и

I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in.
So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.
So we want something difficult and dangerous. Now, listen to this …’

softly

ˈsɒftli

тихо

Very softly, I answered, ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’

some

sʌm

несколько, некоторый

For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored.
‘Well,’ she replied, ‘some people say old Finn did it himself; other people think it was a slave who ran away that night.
But Tom’s leg got very bad, and the next day the doctor and some other men carried Tom home to the Phelpses’ house.

somebody

ˈsʌmbədi

кто-то, кто-либо, кто-нибудь

If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family.
‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’
There was somebody on my island! I didn’t wait.

someone

ˈsʌmwʌn

кто-то

He’s dead. Someone shot him in the back. Don’t look at his face, Huck.
They made a terrible noise and someone called from the house, ‘Who’s there?’

something

ˈsʌmθɪŋ

что-то

There was something lying in the corner and we thought it looked like a man.
I had to tell them something, so I said that Jim belonged to my uncle and was taking me to my family in New Orleans.
So we want something difficult and dangerous. Now, listen to this …’

somewhere

ˈsʌmweə

где-то

So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere.

son

sʌn

сын

And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son.
My grandfather was the son of the Duke of Bridgewater, but he left England and came to America.
And then the old man told us that he was really the first son of the King of France.

soon

su:n

вскоре; скоро

Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house.
Oh, they’ll soon catch him.
He’s there now, but he’ll be back soon.

sound

ˈsaʊnd

звучать

It sounded like a good plan to me.

south

saʊθ

юг

And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit.
We wrote that there was a gang of slave-thieves coming up from the south.
Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.

Spanish

ˈspænɪʃ

испанский

We got in it and went over to Spanish Island.

speak (spoke, spoken)

spi:k (spəʊk, ˈspəʊkən)

разговаривать; говорить

But the old man spoke very little and he looked unhappy, too.
He asked us all to go down on one knee when we spoke to him.

stay

steɪ

оставаться

I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself.
It was a beautiful house and the food was good there, so I stayed.
And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit.

stay away

steɪ əˈweɪ

держаться подальше; не приходить

He was always coming to the widow’s house, and she got angry and told him to stay away.

steal (stole, stolen)

sti:l (stəʊl, ˈstəʊlən)

красть; воровать

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.
They wanted to steal Jim and get the three hundred dollars from his owner.

steamboat

ˈsti:mbəʊt

пароход

Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us.
When the steamboat hit the raft, Jim told me, the raft didn’t break up.

stick

stɪk

трость; палка

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

still

stɪl

всё ещё; по-прежнему

One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet.
I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.
But there was still no answer.

stone

stəʊn

камень

Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river.

stop

stɒp

останавливать, останавливаться, прекращать, перестать

We stop people on the road, and we kill them, and take their money and things.
Soon after that we stopped playing robbers because we never robbed people and we never killed them.
She didn’t stop talking and I couldn’t tell her that she was making a mistake.

story

ˈstɔ:ri

рассказ, история

That’s what they do in the stories in books.
Jim finished his story and then we both carried all our things into a cave and hid the canoe under some trees.
So then I had to tell her another story, with a different name, and I said I was running away.

story-book

ˈstɔ:rɪbʊk

сборник рассказов

It’s got to be a real escape, like a real adventure in a story-book.

straight

streɪt

прямо; немедленно; сразу

I turned and went straight back.

strangely

ˈstreɪndʒli

странно

The woman looked at me strangely, but then she smiled and said kindly, ‘What did you say your name was?’

stranger

ˈstreɪndʒə

незнакомец

She was a stranger and that was good because she didn’t know me.
He got drunk and left town with two strangers.

strong

strɒŋ

крепкий

It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.

suddenly

sʌdn̩li

вдруг; неожиданно

Suddenly, just in front of me, I saw a fire, and it was still smoking.
I was looking round, when, suddenly, two men ran through the trees.
Tom suddenly sat up in bed.

sun

sʌn

солнце

It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky.

Sunday

ˈsʌndeɪ

воскресенье

Ben wanted to begin on Sunday, but the others said no.
It was bad to kill and rob on a Sunday.

sure

ʃʊə

непременно; точно

And we sure had a lot of fun with that plan!
There was trouble coming for me and Tom, that was for sure.

surprise

səˈpraɪz

неожиданность, сюрприз

He wanted his visit to be a surprise for his dear old Aunt Sally, he said.
Well, that was a surprise to me and Aunt Sally! She thought Tom was crazy.
We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway! That was the second big surprise

surprised

səˈpraɪzd

изумленный, удивленный

He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’
‘Why, who’s that?’ Mr Phelps cried, surprised.

swim (swam, swum)

swɪm (swæm, swʌm)

плыть 

When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here.
Slowly, I swam to the side of the river and got out.
Jim swam after it and caught it.

take (took, taken)

teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən)

брать; взять; отнимать; забирать; доставать; занимать; отводить; брать с собой; сопровождать

We stop people on the road, and we kill them, and take their money and things.
Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.
First, I took the raft and went down to a little island.

take (took, taken) a look

teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ə lʊk

взглянуть

We got the canoe out and went to take a look.
Jim got the canoe ready and I went off in it to take a look at those lights.

take (took, taken) back

teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ˈbæk

отводить; относить

He said he hadn’t got time to take the slave back himself.
The Phelpses are going to take him back to his owner, and they’ll get three hundred dollars for him!
There I shot a wild pig and took it back to the hut with me.

take (took, taken) by the hand

teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) baɪ ðə hænd

взять за руку

She was smiling all over her face and she took me by the hands and cried, ‘It’s you, at last, isn’t it?’

take (took, taken) in

teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ɪn

предоставить приют

Well, the people who lived in that house were very kind, and they took me in and gave me some new clothes and a good meal.

talk

ˈtɔ:k

говорить, разговаривать, разговор, беседа

I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed.
When we were alone later, Tom and I talked about Jim’s escape.
Tom talked and talked, and then he said, ‘Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.’

tell (told, told)

tel (təʊld, təʊld)

рассказать; сказать

When we got there, Tom told us his plan.
‘I’m not dead yet,’ I said, ‘but listen …’ I told him about my adventures, and Tom loved all that.
I had to tell them something, so I said that Jim belonged to my uncle and was taking me to my family in New Orleans.

terrible

ˈterəbl̩

ужасно; ужасный

His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
They made a terrible noise and someone called from the house, ‘Who’s there?’
Then Aunt Polly said to Tom, ‘You always were a terrible boy, Tom Sawyer, and I want to know –‘

Thatcher

ˈθætʃə

Тэтчер; дословный перевод «кровельщик» (устаревшее слово)

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.

the other

ði ˈʌðə

остальные

In those days I never had a home or went to school like Tom and all the other boys in St Petersburg.

the others

ði ˈʌðəz

остальные

If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family.
Ben wanted to begin on Sunday, but the others said no. It was bad to kill and rob on a Sunday.
But I think I’m going to have to run away before the others, because Aunt Sally wants me to live with her.

then

ðen

потом, затем

Then one morning the King went off into a town and told us to wait for him.
Then her husband came in and she asked him, ‘Has he come?’

they say

ˈðeɪ ˈseɪ

говорят

And they say you can read and write now. Who said you could go to school?
Then he shouted, ‘They say you’re rich – how’s that?’

thief (thieves)

θi:f (θi:vz)

вор (воры)

We wrote that there was a gang of slave-thieves coming up from the south.

thing

ˈθɪŋ

вещь; дело

We stop people on the road, and we kill them, and take their money and things.
All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.
Well, of course, we were all very unhappy for our friend the Duke, but he said, ‘I’ll be happier if you do things for me. Bring me my dinner!’

think (thought, thought)

ˈθɪŋk (ˈθɔ:t, ˈθɔ:t)

думать

We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers.
‘He’s dead!’ I thought.
My friends, I think I can tell you my secret now.

thousand

ˈθaʊzn̩d

тысяча

We got six thousand dollars each – all gold.

three

θri:

три

We went down the hill and found Joe Harper, Ben Rogers and two or three more of the boys.
They’ll give three hundred dollars to anybody who finds him – and they’ll give two hundred dollars for old Finn.
Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.

through

θru:

сквозь; через

Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window.
We went through the trees to the end of the widow’s garden.
When I heard that, I nearly fell through the floor, but it was a big piece of luck.

tidy

ˈtaɪdi

аккуратный; чистый

Well, just look at those clean, tidy clothes!

tie

taɪ ʌp

привязать

We got out the raft as fast as we could, put all our things on it, tied the canoe on behind, and moved off down the river.

tie up

taɪ ʌp

привязать

‘This could be useful,’ I said to Jim, so we pulled it back to the island behind the canoe, and tied it up under the trees.

time

ˈtaɪm

время, раз

Time went on and winter came.
When he came back that time, he was drunk and angry.
He said he hadn’t got time to take the slave back himself.

tired

ˈtaɪəd

уставший

My clothes were very dirty and I was very tired when I got back.

to my surprise

tə maɪ səˈpraɪz

к моему удивлению

To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it.

toe

təʊ

палец ноги

His clothes were old and dirty, too, and two of his toes were coming through his shoe.

together

təˈɡeðə

вместе

Together, we went down to some trees by the river.
It’s best if everybody is happy when you’re living together on a raft.
‘Well, we’ll travel down river with you, then,’ said the King. ‘We’ll have a fine time together.’

tomorrow

təˈmɒrəʊ

завтра

‘You give me that money! I want it. Get it for me tomorrow!’

tonight

təˈnaɪt

сегодня вечером\ночью

‘He won’t be back tonight,’ I thought, so I began to work hard at my hole.
My husband’s gone to get two of his friends and they’re going over there with a gun later tonight.

too

tu:

тоже, также, слишком

But Ben wasn’t happy. ‘What about women?’ he asked. ‘Do we kill them, too?’
Well, you can’t go there by yourself now. It’s too dark. My husband will be home in about an hour. Wait for him and he’ll walk with you.
He asked us all to go down on one knee when we spoke to him. We could call him ‘Your Majesty’, too.

too much

tu: ˈmʌtʃ

слишком много

Mostly it was a lazy, comfortable kind of life, but after about two months Pop began to hit me too much with his stick.

top

tɒp

вершина

Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house.

town

taʊn

город

Judge Thatcher, who was an important man in our town, kept my money in the bank for me.
That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town.
They were always getting drunk and making plans to get money out of people in every town.

travel

ˈtrævl̩

путешествовать; двигаться

When it was dark again, we travelled on.
We travelled at night when it was dark and everybody was asleep.
‘Well, we’ll travel down river with you, then,’ said the King.

travel south

ˈtrævl̩ saʊθ

идти к югу

Huck and Jim travel south

tree

tri:

дерево

Carefully, I looked through the trees, and I saw a boat full of people.
‘Hello, Jim,’ I cried, and I jumped out from behind the tree.
I hid the raft under the trees and lay down to sleep.

trouble

ˈtrʌbl̩

проблема; беспокойство; неприятность

But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town.
And then she began to tell me about all her troubles.
There was trouble coming for me and Tom, that was for sure.

true

tru:

верный; настоящий; подлинный, правдивый

Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true.
‘It isn’t true!’
I knew Jim would say that. He was a good, true friend, and you can’t say that about many people.

try

traɪ

пытаться

But Pop didn’t stop trying and every few days I got two of three dollars from judge to stop Pop from hitting me.
There are men and dogs trying to catch us.

turn

tɜ:n

поворачивать

I turned and went straight back.
‘Now we can get away from them,’ I thought. I turned and ran back to the river. ‘Quick, Jim!’ I shouted.

turn round

tɜ:n ˈraʊnd

обернуться, повернуться на 180 градусов

We turned round, and there was Tom’s Aunt Polly in the doorway!

Twain

tweɪn

Твен; дословный перевод «разделенный пополам», «двойка»

Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true.

two

tu:

два

One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet.
They’ll give three hundred dollars to anybody who finds him – and they’ll give two hundred dollars for old Finn.
Jim was old Miss Watson’s slave, but she died two months ago.

uncle

ˈʌŋkl̩

дядя

I’m going to see my uncle, on the other side of town.
Your Uncle Silas goes to town every day to meet you.
She and Uncle Silas were really nice people.

under

ˈʌndər

под

It was lucky that Pop didn’t see me, and I decided to hide the canoe under some trees and use it when I escaped.
Silently, I moved along the river in my canoe, under the darkness of the trees.
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

unhappy

ʌnˈhæpi

несчастный

I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy.
Of course, the next morning Miss Watson was angry with me because of my dirty clothes, but the widow just looked unhappy.
So we did things for him, and he liked it. But the old man spoke very little and he looked unhappy, too.

until

ʌnˈtɪl

до тех пор пока

I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder.
So I’m staying right here until a doctor comes.

up

ʌp

вверх

The boat hit the raft and went up the river.

use

ˈju:z

использовать; воспользоваться

It was lucky that Pop didn’t see me, and I decided to hide the canoe under some trees and use it when I escaped.

useful

ˈju:sfəl

пригодный; полезный

‘This could be useful,’ I said to Jim, so we pulled it back to the island behind the canoe, and tied it up under the trees.

very

ˈveri

очень

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
Suddenly a lot of very angry dogs jumped out at me.
Well, the Phelpses and their friends got very excited, and on the night of the escape I went into the sitting-room, and there was a crowd of men in there – all with guns!

wait

weɪt

ждать

In the trees, Tom Sawyer was waiting for me.
They said you were dead, Huck. I had to wait all day to get away.
We waited all morning and he didn’t come back, so the Duke and I went into town to look for him.

wake (woke, waken) up

weɪk (wəʊk, ˈweɪkən) ʌp

будить; проснуться

It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky.
When Tom woke up the next day, he felt better.

walk

wɔ:k

идти, идти пешком

My husband will be home in about an hour. Wait for him and he’ll walk with you.
‘Tom could be on that boat,’ I thought, ‘and he’s going to walk in here and call out my name before I can stop him.

wall

wɔ:l

стена

When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut.
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.
We got Jim out through the hole under the wall, and began to run down to the river.

want

ˈwɒnt

хотеть, быть нужным, требоваться

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. It was a fine life.
So we want something difficult and dangerous.
But I think I’m going to have to run away before the others, because Aunt Sally wants me to live with her.

warm

wɔ:m

теплый; согреваться

I was warm and comfortable and I didn’t want to get up.

watch

wɒtʃ

наблюдать, следить, караулить

Then the cave will be full of women and people waiting, and we’ll have to watch them all night…
I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself. He watched me all the time.
I watched them, but they didn’t see me, and in the end they went away.

water

ˈwɔ:tə

вода

To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it.
When I came up out of the water, I couldn’t see Jim anywhere.
Jim and I jumped off the raft into the water. The boat hit the raft and went up the river.

way

ˈweɪ

путь, дорога

Then Pop got really angry and one day he caught me and took me a long way up the river in a boat.
I didn’t want to answer any questions so I kept out of everybody’s way.

wear

weə

носить (одежду); быть одетым (во что-то)

She was very nice and kind, but it was a hard life because I had to wear new clothes and be good all the time.
Why don’t you wear the old dress and the hat that we found in the house?
I’ll have to sleep in a bed and wear clean clothes and learn to be good, and I can’t do that again

week

wi:k

неделя

‘We’ll all go home now,’ Tom said, ‘and we’ll meet next week, and we’ll kill somebody and rob somebody.’
It took us a week, and to was hard work. We talked to Jim secretly and told him about the plan, and he was really pleased.

well

wel

что ж, ну, ладно, так вот

In the end he said, ‘Well, you can sell it to me, then.’
Well, we’ll travel down river with you, then,’ said the King.
Well, that was your Pop. You can get your money when you want.’

what

ˈwɒt

что, какое

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted.
What do you mean?’ the Duke asked. ‘What’s your secret?’
She knew that is wasn’t true, so she decided to come and find out what was happening.

what about …?

ˈwɒt əˈbaʊt

а как же… ?, а как быть с… ?, что насчет …?

But Ben wasn’t happy. ‘What about women?’ he asked. ‘Do we kill them, too?’
‘And what about the slave?’ I asked.

what’s the matter?

wɒts ðə ˈmætə

что случилось?

He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’

What’s your name?

wɒts jə ˈneɪm

Как тебя зовут?

What’s your name?’ she asked. - ‘Sarah Williams,’ I replied.

when

wen

когда

I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. It was a fine life.
When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here.
When Jim and I heard that, we weren’t so happy.

where

weə

куда, где

It was very dark that night and it wasn’t easy to see where we were going.
‘But Polly dear,’ said Aunt Sally, ‘this isn’t Tom. It’s Sid. Tom was here a minute ago. Where is he?’

which

wɪtʃ

который

Then Tom took us down the river by boat to his secret place, which was a cave deep in the side of a hill.
There, I left the canoe and went on foot. Before long, I came to a little house which was always empty.
So I told the Phelpses that I would go into town to get my bags, which were at the boat station.

while

waɪl

промежуток времени; пока

When we got all that money, Tom and I were famous for a while.
It’s all right living in a house for a little while, but you feel more free and easy and comfortable on a raft.
They took Tom up to bed because his leg was really bad, and Aunt Sally sat with him while he slept.

white

waɪt

белый, бледный

His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour.
I asked the boy where the Phelpses lived and he said it was a big white house a little way down the river.
When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face.

who

ˈhu:

кто

And they say you can read and write now. Who said you could go to school?
‘Well,’ she replied, ‘some people say old Finn did it himself; other people think it was a slave who ran away that night.
‘Why, who’s that?’ Mr Phelps cried, surprised.

why

ˈwaɪ

почему, ба!

He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’
‘Please, sir, take it! Don’t ask me why!’
Why, who’s that?’ Mr Phelps cried, surprised. ‘It’s Tom Sawyer!’ she laughed.

Why, yes

waɪ, jes

ну да, конечно

‘Have you seen a slave?’ I asked him, and I described Jim. - ‘Why, yes,’ the boy replied. ‘He’s runaway slave. I heard all about it in town.

widow

ˈwɪdəʊ

вдова

And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son.
So, I went back, and the widow cried and I had to put on those new clothes again.
We went through the trees to the end of the widow’s garden.

wild country

waɪld ˈkʌntri

необитаемая местность

Let’s all three of us away one night, and go and have adventures in the wild country down south.

wild pig

waɪld pɪɡ

кабан; дикая свинья

There I shot a wild pig and took it back to the hut with me.

window

ˈwɪndəʊ

окно

When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window.
When he was outside the window, he put his head back in and shouted, ‘And stop going to that school, or you know what you’ll get!’
Every night we got out through our bedroom window and dug a hole right under the wall of the hut.

winter

ˈwɪntə

зима

Time went on and winter came. I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.

woman (women)

ˈwʊmən (ˈwɪmɪn)

женщина (женщины)

But Ben wasn’t happy. ‘What about women?’ he asked. ‘Do we kill them, too?’
Now there was a light on, and when I looked through the window, I saw a woman of about forty.
A woman about fifty years old ran out of the house, with some little children behind her.

wonderful

ˈwʌndəfəl

замечательный; чудесный

We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers.
She thought it was wonderful.

wood

wʊd

дерево; древесина

In a few days, when the hole was bigger, I could take the wood out, escape through the hole, and put the wood back.
Then I put back the wood to hide the hole, took the gun and went into the woods.
It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres.

wooden

ˈwʊdn̩

деревянный

When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut.
All kinds of things came down the river and one night there was a little wooden house, lying half on its side.
I saw that I was near a big old wooden house.

woods

wʊdz

лес; роща

In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods.
Then I put back the wood to hide the hole, took the gun and went into the woods.
I ran into the woods, crying and shouting Jim’s name.

work

ˈwɜ:k

работа

It took us a week, and to was hard work. We talked to Jim secretly and told him about the plan, and he was really pleased.

work (worked/wrought, worked/wrought)

ˈwɜ:k (wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t, wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t)

работать

‘He won’t be back tonight,’ I thought, so I began to work hard at my hole.

write (wrote, written)

ˈraɪt (rəʊt, ˈrɪtn̩)

писать

Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true.
Before she died, she wrote that she wanted Jim to be free, and not a slave any more.
I went to school most of the time and I was learning to read and write a little.

wrong

rɒŋ

дурной

‘Help!’ they cried. ‘There are men and dogs trying to catch us. But we’ve done nothing wrong!’

years old

ˈjiəz əʊld

лет

One of the men was about seventy years old; the other was about thirty, and they both had very old, dirty clothes.
A woman about fifty years old ran out of the house, with some little children behind her.

yet

jet

еще

‘I’m not dead yet,’ I said, ‘but listen …’ I told him about my adventures, and Tom loved all that.

young

jʌŋ

молодой

Back on the raft we talked for a time and then the young man said, ‘My friends, I think I can tell you my secret now.

younger brother

ˈjʌŋɡə ˈbrʌðə

младший брат

When the old Duke died, my grandfather’s younger brother stole everything and made himself the Duke of Bridgewater.

Your Majesty

jə ˈmædʒəsti

ваше величество

We could call him ‘Your Majesty’, too.

Yours Truly

jɔ:z ˈtru:li

искренне ваш; с уважением; автор этих строк

The End
         Yours Truly
                  Huck Finn

 

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