К книге можно сказать словарь Abbyy Lingvo Tutor - Huckleberry Finn.xls
Слово | Транскрипция | Перевод | Примеры |
about | əˈbaʊt | о; об; около; приблизительно | ‘What about women?’ he asked. |
a bit | ə ˈbɪt | немного; чуть-чуть | And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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 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. |
afternoon | ˌɑ:ftəˈnu:n | послеобеденное время до заката | That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town. |
again | əˈɡen | вновь, снова, опять | But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town. |
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. |
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! |
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. |
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. |
almost | ˈɔ:lməʊst | почти | He was almost fifty and he looked old. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
and then | ənd ðen | а потом, а затем | And then she began to tell me about all her troubles. |
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. |
another | əˈnʌðə | другой, еще один | Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft. |
answer | ˈɑ:nsə | ответ; отвечать; откликаться | Very softly, I answered, ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ |
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. |
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. |
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!’ |
asleep | əˈsli:p | спящий | On the ground, I found a man, 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. |
axe | æks | топор | Next, I broke down the door with an axe. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
behind | bɪˈhaɪnd | позади, за | Then I put some big stones in a sack and pulled it along behind me to the river. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
bored | bɔ:d | скучающий | For some days everything went along quietly, but we were getting bored. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
brother | ˈbrʌðə | брат | There was Pop, Judge Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and his Aunt Polly and his brother Sid, and lots of others. |
bullet | ˈbʊlɪt | пуля | We were all very happy, but Tom was the happiest of all, because he had 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. |
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. |
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. |
called | kɔ:ld | под названием | You don’t know about me if you haven’t read a book called The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. |
can (could) | kən (kʊd) | мочь, уметь, иметь возможность | Well, you can’t go there by yourself now. It’s too dark. |
canoe | kəˈnu: | каноэ; челнок | To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it. |
carefully | ˈkeəfəli | внимательно; осторожно | I went out to look at them more carefully. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
chair | tʃeə | стул | When I went up to bed that night, I sat down in a chair by the window. |
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! |
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. |
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. |
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. |
come (came, come) along | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) əˈlɒŋ | идти | Just then a boy came along. |
come (came, come) back | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ˈbæk | вернуться | ‘No, and he won’t come back, Huck,’ Jim said. |
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?’ |
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 (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. |
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. |
crazy | ˈkreɪzi | безумный, сумасбродный, сумасшедший | I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
dead | ded | мертвый | Jim fell to his knees. ‘Please don’t hurt me!’ he cried. ‘I’ve always been good to dead people!’ |
dear | dɪə | дорогой, любимый | He wanted his visit to be a surprise for his dear old Aunt Sally, he said. |
decide | dɪˈsaɪd | решить | So I decided to escape and go down the river and live in the woods somewhere. |
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? |
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. |
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. |
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. |
do\does (did, done) | dʊ\dʌz (dɪd, dʌn) | делать | I’ll be happier if you do things for me. Bring me my dinner! |
doctor | ˈdɒktə | врач, доктор | Tom wanted the adventure go on, but Jim and I said that a doctor must look at Tom’s leg. |
dog | dɒɡ | собака | Suddenly a lot of very angry dogs jumped out at me. |
dollar | ˈdɒlə | доллар | But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. We got six thousand dollars each – all gold. |
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.’ |
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. |
down south | daʊn saʊθ | на юг | And Tom was coming down south by boat to stay with them for a bit. |
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. |
drunk | drʌŋk | пьяный | Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father. |
Duke | dju:k | герцог | I’m really a duke. |
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. |
eight | eɪt | восемь | It was after eight o’clock when I woke up the next day and the sun was high in the sky. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
everybody | ˈevrɪˌbɒdi | каждый, всякий, все | I ran down to the river to hide, but everybody in the town was there. |
everything | ˈevrɪθɪŋ | всё | One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet. |
excited | ɪkˈsaɪtɪd | взволнованный; оживленный | He looked very excited. |
exciting | ɪkˈsaɪtɪŋ | захватывающий; увлекательный | I knew it would be a good one because Tom’s plans are always crazy and exciting. |
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. |
fall (fell, fallen) | fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) | упасть | I’ve fallen off a river boat. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
few | fju: | несколько | But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back. |
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. |
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. |
find (found, found) out | faɪnd (faʊnd, faʊnd) aʊt | узнать; выяснить | I must find out who it is. |
fine | faɪn | хороший; прекрасный | It was a fine life. |
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. |
fire | ˈfaɪə | огонь, костер | Then I caught a fish and cooked it over 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. |
fish | fɪʃ | рыба | One morning Pop sent me down to the river to catch some fish for breakfast. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
four | fɔ: | четыре | It was made of good, strong wood, and was about four metres by five metres. |
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. |
friend | ˈfrend | друг | But we can keep a few of the people, and then their friends can pay money to get them back. |
from behind | frəm bɪˈhaɪnd | из-за | ‘Hello, Jim,’ I cried, and I jumped out from behind the tree. |
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… |
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. |
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!’ |
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. |
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. |
get (got, got) drunk | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) drʌŋk | напиваться | But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
go (went, gone) off | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ɒf | уходить; уезжать | That afternoon, Pop locked me in and went off to town. |
go (went, gone) on | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ɒn | идти дальше; продолжить путь | Go on, take that book and read to me! |
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. |
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. |
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. |
going to | ɡəʊɪŋ tu: | собираться что-то сделать | Then Ben Rogers said, ‘Now, what’s the gang going to do?’ |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
hair | ˈheə | волосы | His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour. |
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. |
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. |
happen | ˈhæpən | происходить | We wanted to know what was happening in town and so I decided to go and find out. |
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! |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
help | help | помощь, помогать | My mother’s ill, you see, and she needs help. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
hole | həʊl | дыра; отверстие; яма | When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden 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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
husband | ˈhʌzbənd | муж | My husband will be home in about an hour. |
hut | hʌt | хижина; лачуга | I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself. |
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. |
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 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. |
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. |
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. |
jump | dʒʌmp | прыгать | Immediately, I jumped into the river and brought the canoe to the side. |
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. |
just after | dʒəst ˈɑ:ftə | сразу после | But just after midnight I heard ‘mee-yow! mee-yow!’ outside. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
know (knew, known) | nəʊ (nju:, nəʊn) | знать | I knew that nobody was going to come and look for me again. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
light | laɪt | свет; лампа; огонь; светлый; светать | Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
live | lɪv | жить | And the Widow Douglas took me to live in her house and said I could be her son. |
lock | lɒk | запирать на замок | He often went away into town too, and then he always locked me in the hut. |
locked up | lɒkt ʌp | взаперти | We knew that Jim was locked up in a hut outside the house. |
long | ˈlɒŋ | длинный; долгий | I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy. |
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?’ |
look at | ˈlʊk ət | смотреть на, взглянуть на | I went out to look at them more carefully. They were Pop’s footprints! |
look for | lʊk fɔ: | искать | They were looking for my body in the river. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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.’ |
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. |
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. |
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. |
more | mɔ: | более, больше | We went down the hill and found Joe Harper, Ben Rogers and two or three more of the boys. |
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. |
most of | məʊst ɒv | большая часть из | Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true. |
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? |
mouth | maʊθ | рот | When he saw me, his mouth fell open and he looked a bit white in the face. |
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. |
murder | ˈmɜ:də | убивать; убийца | I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder. |
must | mʌst | должен | After a time, I said to myself, ‘I can’t live like this. I must find out who it is.’ |
name | ˈneɪm | имя | We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers. |
near | nɪə | возле; близ | When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
night | ˈnaɪt | ночь | ‘Then the cave will be full of women and people waiting, and we’ll have to watch them all night…’ |
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? |
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. |
nothing | ˈnʌθɪŋ | ничего | Then Ben Rogers said, ‘Now, what’s the gang going to do?’ ‘Nothing,’ replied Tom. ‘Just rob and kill. |
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. |
often | ˈɒfn̩ | часто | I often sat talking to Jim, but I still didn’t like living in a house and sleeping in a bed. |
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. |
old | əʊld | старый | In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away. |
old man | əʊld mæn | старик | Miss Watson had a slave, an old man called Jim, and he and I were good friends. |
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. |
one | wʌn | один | One or two lights were still on, but everything was quiet. |
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. |
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. |
only | ˈəʊnli | только, лишь, единственный | ‘I’ve only got a dollar, and I want that to…’ |
open | ˈəʊpən | открывать, открытый | I saw that the window was open, so that was how he got in. |
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. |
over | ˈəʊvə | над | Then I caught a fish and cooked it over a fire. |
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! |
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. |
perhaps | pəˈhæps | возможно | Perhaps they’ll come after us, and shoot, and we’ll all get killed! |
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. |
piece | pi:s | кусок | And he gave me a dollar and I wrote my name on a piece of paper for him. |
pig | pɪɡ | свинья | I carried the pig into the hut and put some of its blood on the ground. |
place | ˈpleɪs | место | In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods. |
plan | plæn | план | The plan to free Jim |
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!’ |
pleased | pli:zd | довольный | It wasn’t too bad, and the widow was pleased with me. |
ˈpɒkɪt | карман | Well, give me what you’ve got in your pocket now. | |
pop | pɒp | папаша | Pop was always drunk, and he moved around a lot, so he wasn’t a very good father. |
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. |
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.’ |
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. |
put (put, put) on | ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) ɒn | надеть | In the end, I put on my old clothes and ran away. |
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. |
quick | kwɪk | быстро | ‘Quick, Jim!’ I cried, waking him up. |
quickly | ˈkwɪkli | быстро | ‘George Jackson,’ I answered 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. |
raft | rɑ:ft | плот | Another night, when we were out looking for things on the river, we found a raft. |
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. |
real | rɪəl | настоящий | Come on, now – what’s your real name? Bill? Bob? I know you’re not really a girl. |
really | ˈrɪəli | действительно, на самом деле | I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy. |
remember | rɪˈmembə | помнить | ‘I must remember that I’m a girl,’ I said to myself. |
reply | rɪˈplaɪ | отвечать | ‘Nothing,’ replied Tom. |
rich | rɪtʃ | богатый | But Tom Sawyer and I found it, and after that we were rich. |
right | raɪt | прямо, ладно, хорошо, подходящий | Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us. |
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. |
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. |
rob | rɒb | грабить | Just rob and kill. |
robber | ˈrɒbə | грабитель; вор | In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods. |
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. |
run (ran, run) | rʌn (ræn, rʌn) | бежать | I was looking round, when, suddenly, two men ran through the trees. |
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! |
run (ran, run) back | rʌn (ræn, rʌn) ˈbæk | прибежать обратно | I turned and ran back to the river. |
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. |
runaway | ˈrʌnəweɪ | беглый | He’s runaway slave. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
sell (sold, sold) | sel (səʊld, səʊld) | продать | In the end he said, ‘Well, you can sell it to me, then.’ |
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. |
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! |
shout | ʃaʊt | крикнуть | Then he shouted, ‘They say you’re rich – how’s that?’ |
side | saɪd | берег; бок; сторона; склон | Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house. |
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. |
sit (sat, sat) | sɪt (sæt, sæt) | сидеть | That night when I went up to my room, Pop was sitting there, waiting for me! |
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! |
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. |
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. |
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?’ |
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. |
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. |
somebody | ˈsʌmbədi | кто-то, кто-либо, кто-нибудь | If somebody hurts one of us, the others will kill him and his family. |
someone | ˈsʌmwʌn | кто-то | He’s dead. Someone shot him in the back. Don’t look at his face, Huck. |
something | ˈsʌmθɪŋ | что-то | There was something lying in the corner and we thought it looked like a man. |
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. |
soon | su:n | вскоре; скоро | Soon we were on top of a hill on the other side of the house. |
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. |
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. |
stay | steɪ | оставаться | I had to stay with him in a hut in the woods and I couldn’t go out by myself. |
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. |
steamboat | ˈsti:mbəʊt | пароход | Suddenly, a big steamboat came at us very fast, and the next minute it was right over us. |
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. |
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. |
story | ˈstɔ:ri | рассказ, история | That’s what they do in the stories in books. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
sure | ʃʊə | непременно; точно | And we sure had a lot of fun with that plan! |
surprise | səˈpraɪz | неожиданность, сюрприз | He wanted his visit to be a surprise for his dear old Aunt Sally, he said. |
surprised | səˈpraɪzd | изумленный, удивленный | He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’ |
swim (swam, swum) | swɪm (swæm, swʌm) | плыть | When we came near this island, I jumped into the water and swam here. |
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. |
take (took, taken) a look | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ə lʊk | взглянуть | We got the canoe out and went to take a look. |
take (took, taken) back | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ˈbæk | отводить; относить | He said he hadn’t got time to take the slave back himself. |
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. |
tell (told, told) | tel (təʊld, təʊld) | рассказать; сказать | When we got there, Tom told us his plan. |
terrible | ˈterəbl̩ | ужасно; ужасный | His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour. |
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. |
then | ðen | потом, затем | Then one morning the King went off into a town and told us to wait for him. |
they say | ˈðeɪ ˈseɪ | говорят | And they say you can read and write now. Who said you could go to school? |
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. |
think (thought, thought) | ˈθɪŋk (ˈθɔ:t, ˈθɔ:t) | думать | We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers. |
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. |
through | θru: | сквозь; через | Quietly, I put out the light and got out through the window. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
too | tu: | тоже, также, слишком | But Ben wasn’t happy. ‘What about women?’ he asked. ‘Do we kill them, 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. |
travel | ˈtrævl̩ | путешествовать; двигаться | When it was dark again, we travelled on. |
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. |
trouble | ˈtrʌbl̩ | проблема; беспокойство; неприятность | But when Pop had money, he got drunk again and made trouble in town. |
true | tru: | верный; настоящий; подлинный, правдивый | Mr Mark Twain wrote the book and most of it is true. |
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. |
turn | tɜ:n | поворачивать | I turned and went straight back. |
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. |
uncle | ˈʌŋkl̩ | дядя | I’m going to see my uncle, on the other side of town. |
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. |
unhappy | ʌnˈhæpi | несчастный | I sat there a good long time, and I was really unhappy. |
until | ʌnˈtɪl | до тех пор пока | I was getting bored with all this until she said something about Pop and my murder. |
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. |
wait | weɪt | ждать | In the trees, Tom Sawyer was waiting for me. |
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. |
walk | wɔ:k | идти, идти пешком | My husband will be home in about an hour. Wait for him and he’ll walk with you. |
wall | wɔ:l | стена | When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut. |
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. |
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… |
water | ˈwɔ:tə | вода | To my surprise, there was a canoe in the water and there was no one in it. |
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. |
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. |
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.’ |
well | wel | что ж, ну, ладно, так вот | In the end he said, ‘Well, you can sell it to me, then.’ |
what | ˈwɒt | что, какое | I slept in the streets or in the woods, and I could do what I wanted, when I wanted. |
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?’ |
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. |
where | weə | куда, где | It was very dark that night and it wasn’t easy to see where we were going. |
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. |
while | waɪl | промежуток времени; пока | When we got all that money, Tom and I were famous for a while. |
white | waɪt | белый, бледный | His hair was long and dirty and his face was a terrible white colour. |
who | ˈhu: | кто | And they say you can read and write now. Who said you could go to school? |
why | ˈwaɪ | почему, ба! | He looked surprised. ‘Why, what’s the matter?’ |
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. |
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. |
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?’ |
wonderful | ˈwʌndəfəl | замечательный; чудесный | We all thought this was wonderful, and we wrote our names in blood from fingers. |
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. |
wooden | ˈwʊdn̩ | деревянный | When Pop was out, I began to cut a hole in the wooden wall of the hut. |
woods | wʊdz | лес; роща | In that book robbers stole some money and hid it in a very secret place in the woods. |
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. |
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. |
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 |
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