К книжке можно скачать словарь Abbyy Lingvo Tutor - The Piano.xls
Слово | Транскрипция | Перевод | Примеры |
a little | ə ˈlɪtl̩ | немного | On my way upstairs I thought about the famous pianist. I was a little afraid. My mouth was dry and my hands were shaking. |
a little time | ə ˈlɪtl̩ ˈtaɪm | немного времени | ‘We have a little time before my concert. I’ll tell you my story. It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
a long time | ə ˈlɒŋ ˈtaɪm | длительное время, долго | They looked at the rubbish, then they looked at each other. ‘This is going to take a long time,’ said Tony. |
a long time ago | ə ˈlɒŋ ˈtaɪm əˈɡəʊ | много лет тому назад; давным-давно | We were young once, weren’t we, Linda? But of course that was a long time ago. |
a long way | ə ˈlɒŋ ˈweɪ | далеко | From a long way away he heard the sound of a piano. Every few minutes a man came in and called someone’s name. |
a lot | ə lɒt | много | But the farmer was kind to him and taught him a lot. Mr Wood had no sons. He had one daughter. |
a lot of | ə lɒt ɒv | много | He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
about | əˈbaʊt | о, об, насчет | He told me about an old school behind a high wall in a dirty street. |
above | əˈbʌv | над | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
across | əˈkrɒs | через | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. ‘Come on, Tony,’ said his mother. |
afraid | əˈfreɪd | боящийся; испуганный | On my way upstairs I thought about the famous pianist. I was a little afraid. |
after | ˈɑ:ftə | после, спустя | A few days after his thirteenth birthday, Tony left school too. |
afternoon | ˌɑ:ftəˈnu:n | послеобеденное время до заката | One hot summer afternoon she decided to take her son to a farm outside the town. |
again | əˈɡen | вновь, снова | Mr Wood came to the door and spoke to Tony’s mother. ‘Hello, Betty. It’s nice to see you again. |
again and again | əˈɡen ənd əˈɡen | снова и снова | Tony played the same line of music again and again. It was not easy. |
against | əˈɡenst | к | Then they moved the piano. It was very heavy, but they were young and strong. They pushed it into the classroom and stood it against a wall. |
aged | eɪdʒd | в возрасте, достигший возраста | The programme was big and beautiful and expensive. Tony looked for his name. He found it. ‘Anthony Evans, aged 15. Piano.’ |
ago | əˈɡəʊ | тому назад | ‘Yes. This is Anthony – but we call him Tony at home. He left school two weeks ago. He’s a good boy, and he’s very strong. |
all | ɔ:l | весь, всю, все, всё | It took all evening. Every Monday Mrs Evans washed all the family’s clothes in the tin bath. |
all over | ɔ:l ˈəʊvə | повсюду; всюду | One day, Anthony Evans will be famous all over the world. |
all over the world | ɔ:l ˈəʊvə ðə wɜ:ld | по всему миру | Anthony Evans is a musician. One day, Anthony Evans will be famous all over the world. And from today I’m going to call you Anthony.’ |
along | əˈlɒŋ | вдоль, по | Then the bus left the town and drove along a country road. The bus stopped in every village. |
always | ˈɔ:lweɪz | всегда; постоянно | But when the monkey came back, the tin cup was always empty. |
angrily | anɡrəli | сердито; рассерженно; яростно; раздраженно | He shook his newspaper angrily. |
angry | ˈæŋɡri | раздраженный; разгневанный; возмущенный | ‘No, he can’t!’ said Mr Wood. Suddenly his face was red and angry. |
another | əˈnʌðə | другой, еще один | Then twelve o’clock came. Mrs Lark said ‘goodbye’ and locked up the piano for another week. |
answer | ˈɑ:nsə | ответ; отвечать | ‘What shall we do with the rubbish, Mr Wood?’ asked Pip. ‘Get rid of it, of course!’ answered the farmer. |
any more | ˈeni mɔ: | больше, больше не | I was not afraid any more. I sat down and opened my notebook. |
anybody | ˈenibɒdi | кто-нибудь | He was afraid to turn on a light in the school. He did not want anybody to see him. |
anything | ˈeniθɪŋ | что-либо, ничего | ‘He won’t say anything! He’s on holiday,’ said Tony. |
apple | ˈæpl̩ | яблоко | Then he had three small cakes and an apple. |
arm | ɑ:m | рука (от кисти до плеча) | It travelled along his arms. His fingers danced over the keys. He did not look at his hands. |
arrive | əˈraɪv | прибыть; достичь; приходить | I arrived outside the dressing-room. |
ask | ɑ:sk | просить; спрашивать; задавать (вопрос) | The farmer looked at Tony. ‘How old are you, boy?’ he asked. |
at first | ət ˈfɜ:st | вначале; сначала | At first I tried to write everything down in my notebook. |
at home | ət həʊm | дома | ‘Yes. This is Anthony – but we call him Tony at home. He left school two weeks ago. He’s a good boy, and he’s very strong. |
at last | ət lɑ:st | наконец | At last the bus stopped. |
at night | ət naɪt | ночью, вечером | At night, while he slept, his mind was still full of music. Small black notes danced in front of his eyes. |
at once | ət wʌns | сейчас же; тотчас же; немедленно; сразу | ‘I know!’ he said suddenly. ‘I left it at school. I’ll go there at once. It isn’t far away.’ |
at the end | ət ði end | в конце чего-либо | They lived in a very small house at the end of a long, grey street. |
away | əˈweɪ | прочь, вдали, на расстоянии | The musician shook his head and pushed his little piano away. |
baby | ˈbeɪbi | младенец | Tony was happy. At the end of every day his back was tired and his legs hurt, but he slept like a baby. |
back | ˈbæk | спина; задняя часть; назад; обратно | At the end of every day his back was tired and his legs hurt, but he slept like a baby. |
bad (worse, worst) | bæd (wɜ:s, wɜ:st) | плохо (еще хуже, самый худший) | The shops were bad, but the factory was worse. |
bath | bɑ:θ | ванна | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
bathroom | ˈbɑ:θru:m | ванная комната | The toilet was outside, in the yard. There was no bathroom. |
be\am\is\are (was\were, been) | bi\æm\ɪz\ɑ: (wəz\wɜ:, bi:n) | быть | She was not a very good pianist, but she liked children and she enjoyed her work. She knew a lot of songs too. |
be\am\is\are (was\were, been) away | bi\æm\ɪz\ɑ: (wəz\wɜ:, bi:n) əˈweɪ | отсутствовать | ‘You were away a long time,’ said Pip. ‘Did you have a drink, or a holiday?’ They all laughed. |
beautiful | ˈbju:təfl̩ | красивый; прекрасный | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. |
because | bɪˈkɒz | по причине, потому что, оттого что, так как | I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter. I wanted to talk to the famous pianist before his concert. |
bed | bed | кровать | They helped him up to bed, and he slept until nine o’clock the next morning. |
before | bɪˈfɔ: | перед; прежде чем; прежде; раньше | ‘I’ve never had breakfast in bed before,’ he told her. |
begin (began, begun) | bɪˈɡɪn (bɪˈɡæn, bɪˈɡʌn) | начать | ‘My name’s Sally Hill,’ I began. ‘I…’ |
behind | bɪˈhaɪnd | позади; за | They heard a noise behind them. |
bicycle | ˈbaɪsɪkl̩ | велосипед | Every evening after supper he borrowed Linda’s bicycle. |
big | bɪɡ | большой, крупный | On the wall there was a big picture of Sir Anthony at the piano. |
bigger | ˈbɪɡə | больше | He touched the piano. It was much bigger than the old piano in the classroom. |
biggest | ˈbɪɡɪst | самый большой | They took some sandwiches and a bottle of cold tea, and they began to cut the long grass in Mr Wood’s biggest field. |
bird | bɜ:d | птица | Every Tuesday her fat little fingers flew like birds up and down the keys of the piano. |
birthday | ˈbɜ:θdeɪ | день рождения | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
black | blæk | черный | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
blue | blu: | голубой, синий | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. He was very old, but his eyes were blue and bright. |
book | bʊk | книга | Tony learned to read music. Linda brought him a book of easy songs. She showed him the music. |
borrow | ˈbɒrəʊ | брать на время; одалживать | Do you want to borrow it? |
both | bəʊθ | оба | Pip was seventeen and John was sixteen, but they were both still at school. |
bottle | ˈbɒtl̩ | бутылка | They took some sandwiches and a bottle of cold tea, and they began to cut the long grass in Mr Wood’s biggest field. |
box | bɒks | коробка, ящик | He went to the back of the building. He saw something behind a lot of old boxes. It was very big. |
boy | ˌbɔɪ | мальчик | I saw a little boy called Tony Evans, playing football with an old tin… |
breakfast | ˈbrekfəst | завтрак | Linda brought him breakfast in bed. He felt very strange and uncomfortable. ‘I’ve never had breakfast in bed before,’ he told her. |
bridge | brɪdʒ | мост | Tony could see a river and an old bridge. |
bright | braɪt | блестящий; сияющий; ясный | He was very old, but his eyes were blue and bright. |
brightly-coloured | ˈbraɪtli ˈkʌləd | яркий; ярко окрашенный | He saw brightly-coloured birds, flowers and leaves. |
bring (brought, brought) | brɪŋ (ˈbrɔ:t, ˈbrɔ:t) | приносить | Mother has sent you some cakes and milk. She asked me to bring them. |
broken | ˈbrəʊkən | разбитый; сломанный | There was broken glass on top of the wall. |
brother | ˈbrʌðə | брат | He sent his old clothes home for his brothers. He sent his family money, too. |
brown | braʊn | коричневый | She bought him a new brown suit and a new white shirt. |
brown eyes | braʊn aɪz | карие глаза | She smiled at me with friendly brown eyes. |
brown hair | braʊn heə | каштановые волосы | She was a tall, thin girl with long, soft brown hair. |
Buckingham Palace | ˈbʌkɪŋəm ˈpælɪs | Букингемский дворец | Five years ago, the Queen invited us to Buckingham Palace. |
building | ˈbɪldɪŋ | здание; помещение | They walked with him to an old wooden building near the farmhouse. |
burn (burnt, burnt) | bɜ:n (bɜ:nt, bɜ:nt) | гореть; пылать | His feet hurt. They burned like fire. |
bus | bʌs | автобус | Tony and his mother got on a bus in the middle of the town. |
businessman (businessmen) | ˈbɪznəsmæn (ˈbɪznəsmen) | бизнесмен, предприниматель, коммерсант | He wanted them to go to college and learn to be businessmen. But the boys spent all their holidays on Mr Wood’s farm. |
busy | ˈbɪzi | занятый; работающий; насыщенный; беспокойный | I’m a busy man. |
busy man | ˈbɪzi mæn | занятой человек; деловой человек | I’m a busy man. |
buy (bought, bought) | baɪ (ˈbɔ:t, ˈbɔ:t) | покупать | Buy something nice with the money. |
cake | keɪk | кекс | Mother has sent you some cakes and milk. |
call | kɔ:l | звать; называть | ‘Nobody calls me Anthony,’ he said. |
called | kɔ:ld | именуемый, называемый, под именем | As he spoke, pictures came into my mind. I saw a little boy called Tony Evans, playing football with an old tin… |
called | kɔ:ld | именуемый; называемый; под именем | I saw a little boy called Tony Evans, playing football with an old tin… |
can (could) | kən (kʊd) | мочь, уметь, иметь возможность, быть в состоянии | ‘I can play the piano,’ he thought. ‘Nobody taught me, but my mind tells my fingers what to do, and I can make music.’ |
car | kɑ: | машина | ‘Now,’ said Mr Wood. ‘My new car will arrive here next week. I want this building for a garage. |
careful | ˈkeəfʊl | внимательный; аккуратный; осторожный | Then she said, very quietly, ‘Good luck, Tony – and be careful!’ |
carefully | ˈkeəfəli | внимательно | He looked carefully at the little black notes on their thin black lines. |
cat | kæt | кошка | Chickens were looking for food. A fat white cat sat on a wall and watched them with sleepy eyes. |
chair | tʃeə | стул | He found an old, broken chair and sat down at the piano. His fingers touched the keys. He closed his eyes. |
change | tʃeɪndʒ | изменяться; менять | But that visit changed his life. |
Charlie Chaplin | ˈtʃɑ:li ˈtʃæplən | Чарли Чаплин | ‘I’m walking like Charlie Chaplin,’ he thought. ‘Everybody will laugh at me.’ |
chicken | ˈtʃɪkɪn | курица | Chickens were looking for food. |
child (children) | tʃaɪld (ˈtʃɪldrən) | ребенок (дети) | In those days, poor children usually left school when they were thirteen. |
classroom | ˈklæsru:m | класс; классная комната | I’m going to put my piano in the classroom. |
clean | kli:n | убирать; чистить; полировать; чистый; опрятный; протирать; мыть | But the Evans were clean and they had enough to eat. |
clean out | kli:n ˈaʊt | очищать; вычищать | They cleaned out the building. |
clever | ˈklevə | умный | They thought that was a very clever answer. |
clock | ˈklɒk | часы | ‘What’s happening to me?’ he thought. Pip looked at the clock. ‘It’s late,’ he said. |
close | kləʊz | закрывать | He found an old, broken chair and sat down at the piano. His fingers touched the keys. He closed his eyes. |
closed | kləʊzd | закрытый | He did not look at the keys. His eyes were closed. He was in another world. |
clothes | kləʊðz | одежда | Every Monday Mrs Evans washed all the family’s clothes in the tin bath. |
cold | kəʊld | холодный | At seven o’clock Tony washed in cold water and put on his clean shirt. Then he went to the kitchen with Pip and John. |
college | ˈkɒlɪdʒ | колледж | He wanted them to go to college and learn to be businessmen. But the boys spent all their holidays on Mr Wood’s farm. |
come (came, come) | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) | наступить; приходить; подходить; прийти; происходить; вести свое происхождение | Did you come from a musical family? |
come (came, come) along | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) əˈlɒŋ | поспешите; поторапливайся; идемте | Come along – we haven’t got all night! |
come (came, come) back | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ˈbæk | возвращаться; вернуться | ‘Please come back at half past nine,’ she said to Pip. |
come (came, come) from | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) frɒm | родом из | ‘Tell me about yourself, please, Sir Anthony. Did you come from a musical family? |
come (came, come) in | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ɪn | войти; поступать; войдите | Come in and sit down. |
come (came, come) into mind | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) ˈɪntə maɪnd | прийти на ум | As he spoke, pictures came into my mind. |
come (came, come) out | kʌm (keɪm, kʌm) aʊt | выходить; появиться | The people came out of their houses to listen to his music. |
come on | kʌm ɒn | живее, быстрей, поторопись | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. ‘Come on, Tony,’ said his mother. |
competition | ˌkɒmpəˈtɪʃn̩ | конкурс; соревнование | ‘There’s a music competition in the town on June 12th,’ said Mr Gordon one evening. |
concert | kənˈsɜ:t | концерт | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
conversation | ˌkɒnvəˈseɪʃn̩ | разговор; беседа | Tony knew nothing about their conversation. |
cook | kʊk | повар | Mrs Wood was a very good cook. The cakes were still warm… They all ate and drank. |
corner | ˈkɔ:nə | угол | He turned to a tall woman, who was standing in the corner. |
cost | kɒst | стоить | Pianos cost a lot of money. |
country | ˈkʌntri | cельская местность; деревня; сельский; деревенский | ‘Do you like the country?’ |
country road | ˈkʌntri rəʊd | проселочная дорога | Then the bus left the town and drove along a country road. |
cow | kaʊ | корова | He looked at the cows in the fields. |
cup | kʌp | чашка | The people came out of their houses to listen to his music. Then the monkey went round with a little tin cup. |
cupboard | ˈkʌbəd | буфет; шкаф | ‘Is it a cupboard?’ asked Pip. |
cut (cut, cut) | kʌt (kʌt, kʌt) | косить | One hot summer afternoon Tony, John and Pip were cutting the long grass. |
cycle | ˈsaɪkl̩ | ездить на велосипеде | He cycled to the school, and he played the piano. |
dance | dɑ:ns | танцевать, кружиться, скользить, двигаться | Half-forgotten music danced through his mind. His fingers began to move. |
dark | dɑ:k | мрачный; темный; темно | They shone like stars in the dark, dirty building. |
dark brown | dɑ:k braʊn | темно-коричневый; шоколадный | The piano was made of beautiful, dark brown wood. |
daughter | ˈdɔ:tə | дочь | Mr Wood had no sons. He had one daughter. |
day | deɪ | день | But Tuesday mornings were different, because Tuesday was music day. |
daytime | ˈdeɪtaɪm | день, дневное время | Perhaps Tony can go to the College of Music in the daytime and work in a restaurant in the evenings…’ |
dear | dɪə | дорогой | The famous pianist smiled. ‘No, no, my dear. I am the first musician in my family. |
dearly | ˈdɪəli | горячо; нежно | Mr Wood loved Linda dearly, but he wanted a son very much. |
decide | dɪˈsaɪd | решить | One hot summer afternoon she decided to take her son to a farm outside the town. |
desk | desk | парта | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
different | ˈdɪfrənt | другой; не похожий на обычный | But Tuesday mornings were different, because Tuesday was music day. |
difficult | ˈdɪfɪkəlt | сложный; трудный | I’ve got the music at school, but I can’t play it. It’s too difficult for me. |
dirty | ˈdɜ:ti | грязный | He told me about an old school behind a high wall in a dirty street. |
do\does (did, done) | dʊ\dʌz (dɪd, dʌn) | делать | ‘What shall we do with the rubbish, Mr Wood?’ asked Pip. |
do\does (did, done) wrong | dʊ\dʌz (dɪd, dʌn) rɒŋ | совершать правонарушение, причинять ущерб | ‘Don’t tell the police,’ he said. ‘Please. I haven’t stolen anything. I haven’t done anything wrong.’ |
door | dɔ: | дверь | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
doorman | ˈdɔ:mæn | вахтер; швейцар | I showed my ticket to the doorman and went into the theatre. |
down | ˈdaʊn | вниз | Tony looked down at his dirty old shoes. ‘I can’t play the piano,’ he said. |
dress | dres | платье | Mrs Wood was mending a hole in Linda’s school dress. |
dressing-room | ˈdresɪŋrʊm | гримерная; грим-уборная | Then I walked upstairs to the dressing-room. |
drink | ˈdrɪŋk | питье, напиток, глоток | At eleven o’clock Tony went for a drink, but the bottle was empty. |
drink (drank, drunk) | drɪŋk (dræŋk, drʌŋk) | пить; питье; глоток | He took a long drink and filled his bottle. |
drive (drove, driven) | draɪv (drəʊv, ˈdrɪvn̩) | ехать; отвозить; вести; управлять | The boys drove Linda to Catherine’s house. |
drive (drove, drunk) through | draɪv (drəʊv, ˈdrɪvn̩) θru: | проезжать | At first they drove through streets of small, grey houses. |
dry | draɪ | сухой | My mouth was dry and my hands were shaking. |
during | ˈdjʊərɪŋ | в течение; на протяжении; во время | One night during the summer holidays Mr Gordon wanted a book. |
each other | i:tʃ ˈʌðə | друг друга | They looked at the rubbish, then they looked at each other. |
easy | ˈi:zi | легкий; простой | Linda brought him a book of easy songs. |
eat (ate, eaten) | i:t (et, ˈi:tn̩) | есть | But the Evans were clean and they had enough to eat. |
eight | eɪt | восемь | ‘What time are we going?’ asked Pip. ‘Eight o’clock,’ answered Tony. |
eightieth | ˈeɪtɪəθ | восьмидесятый | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
eleven | ɪˈlevn̩ | 11 | The sun shone down angrily. The boys were hot and thirsty. At eleven o’clock Tony went for a drink, but the bottle was empty. |
empty | ˈempti | пустой | But when the monkey came back, the tin cup was always empty. |
end | end | конец | Chapter 8 – The end of the story |
enjoy | ɪnˈdʒoɪ | получать удовольствие; хорошо проводить время; наслаждаться | Mr Grey did not enjoy his job. |
enough | ɪˈnʌf | достаточно | But the Evans were clean and they had enough to eat. |
evening | ˈi:vn̩ɪŋ | вечер, вечерний | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
every | ˈevri | каждый | It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
everybody | ˈevrɪˌbɒdi | все, каждый | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
everyone | ˈevrɪwʌn | все, все до единого | Tony went back into the kitchen. ‘It’s July,’ he thought. ‘Everyone is on holiday. |
everything | ˈevrɪθɪŋ | всё | It was an exciting story and he told it well. At first I tried to write everything down in my notebook. |
everywhere | ˈevrɪweə | всюду, везде | One night during the summer holidays Mr Gordon wanted a book. He looked everywhere. |
excited | ɪkˈsaɪtɪd | взволнованный; возбужденный; оживленный | She was usually a quiet woman, but her eyes were bright and excited. |
exciting | ɪkˈsaɪtɪŋ | захватывающий; увлекательный | It was an exciting story and he told it well. |
expensive | ɪkˈspensɪv | дорогой | The programme was big and beautiful and expensive. |
explain | ɪkˈspleɪn | объяснить | I don’t want any money – I’ll be very happy to teach this wonderful boy. I feel – oh, how can I explain to you?... This is a very exciting time for me. |
eyes | aɪz | глаза | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. He was very old, but his eyes were blue and bright. |
face | feɪs | лицо | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
factory | ˈfæktəri | фабрика; завод | Tony did not want to work in a shop or a factory. |
fall (fell, fallen) | fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) | падать; упасть | Then the pen fell from my hand and I just listened. |
fall (fell, fallen) asleep | fɔ:l (fel, ˈfɔ:lən) əˈsli:p | уснуть; засыпать | Often he fell asleep at the kitchen table. |
family | ˈfæməli | семья | ‘Tell me about yourself, please, Sir Anthony. Did you come from a musical family? |
famous | ˈfeɪməs | знаменитый; известный | I wanted to talk to the famous pianist before his concert. |
far away | fɑ:r əˈweɪ | далеко | ‘I know!’ he said suddenly. ‘I left it at school. I’ll go there at once. It isn’t far away.’ |
farm | fɑ:m | ферма, фермерская | You see, I left school when I was thirteen. Everybody called me Tony in those days. I worked on a farm…’ |
farmer | ˈfɑ:mə | фермер; крестьянин; земледелец | He looked into the farmer’s smiling red face. |
farmhouse | ˈfɑ:mhaʊs | жилой дом на ферме; сельский жилой дом | Tony and his mother arrived at the farmhouse and walked through the farmyard. |
farming | ˈfɑ:mɪŋ | фермерство; работа на земле | Then his mother thought, ‘What about farming?’ |
farmyard | ˈfɑ:mjɑ:d | двор фермы; участок, где расположены фермерские постройки; скотный двор | Tony and his mother arrived at the farmhouse and walked through the farmyard. |
fast | fɑ:st | быстро | But Tony was not slow. He learned very fast. |
fat | fæt | толстый; упитанный | A fat white cat sat on a wall and watched them with sleepy eyes. |
father | ˈfɑ:ðə | отец | Then I met your father and we moved to the town. But I enjoyed farm work, and I think you’ll like it too… |
feel (felt, felt) | fi:l (felt, felt) | искать ощупью; шарить; трогать; чувствовать; ощущать | He wanted to feel the black and white keys under his fingers again. |
feel (felt, felt) cold | fi:l (felt, felt) kəʊld | мерзнуть; зябнуть | His hands felt cold. |
few | fju: | несколько | A few days after his thirteenth birthday, Tony left school too. |
field | fi:ld | поле | Tony saw green fields and small, quiet villages. |
fifteen | ˌfɪfˈti:n | 15 | The programme was big and beautiful and expensive. Tony looked for his name. He found it. ‘Anthony Evans, aged 15. Piano.’ |
fill | fɪl | наполнять | He took a long drink and filled his bottle. |
find (found, found) | faɪnd (faʊnd, faʊnd) | находить | Most of Tony’s friends found jobs in shops or factories in the town. |
finger | ˈfɪŋɡə | палец руки | His fingers touched the keys. |
finish | ˈfɪnɪʃ | заканчивать | ‘I’ve finished,’ said Tony shortly. He closed the piano. |
fire | ˈfaɪə | огонь | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
first | ˈfɜ:st | первый | The famous pianist smiled. ‘No, no, my dear. I am the first musician in my family. |
five | faɪv | пять | He looked at the little black notes and the five thin black lines on the pages of the book. |
flower | ˈflaʊə | цветок | The smell of the flowers came in through the open windows of the bus. |
fly (flew, flown) | flaɪ (flu:, fləʊn) | лететь | Every Tuesday her fat little fingers flew like birds up and down the keys of the piano. |
follow | ˈfɒləʊ | идти за; следовать | He followed the man up some stairs. |
food | fu:d | еда | Chickens were looking for food. |
foot (feet) | fʊt (fi:t) | нога; ступня; (ноги, ступни) | The shoes were too small and they hurt Anthony’s feet. |
for a long time | fər ə ˈlɒŋ ˈtaɪm | долго | Anthony sat in the waiting room for a long time. |
for the first time | fə ðə ˈfɜ:st ˈtaɪm | в первый раз, впервые | And I was fourteen years old before I touched a piano for the first time.’ He saw the surprise on my face. |
forget (forgot, forgotten) | fəˈɡet (fəˈɡɒt, fəˈɡɒtn̩) | забывать | Forget about your feet, boy – you’ve won the competition! |
forty | ˈfɔ:ti | 40 | ‘Tony is very special,’ said Mr Gordon. ‘I have been a teacher for forty years, but I have never met a boy like Tony. |
four | fɔ: | четыре | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
fourteen | ˌfɔ:ˈti:n | 14 | And I was fourteen years old before I touched a piano for the first time.’ He saw the surprise on my face. |
friend | ˈfrend | друг | But the Evans were clean and they had enough to eat. Tony did not feel poor, because all his friends were poor too. |
friendly | ˈfrendli | дружески; дружелюбно | She smiled at me with friendly brown eyes. |
from today | frəm təˈdeɪ | с сегодняшнего дня | Anthony Evans is a musician. One day, Anthony Evans will be famous all over the world. And from today I’m going to call you Anthony.’ |
fruit-tree | ˈfru:ttri: | фруктовое дерево | There were flowers and vegetables and a few fruit trees. |
full | ˈfʊl | полный, наполненный | At night, while he slept, his mind was still full of music. Small black notes danced in front of his eyes. |
garage | ˈɡærɑ:ʒ | гараж | I want this building for a garage. |
garden | ˈɡɑ:dn̩ | сад | Every house had a garden. |
get (got, got) | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) | очутиться, попасть | ‘No, no, of course not,’ said the teacher. ‘But who are you? What are you doing in my classroom? And how did this piano get here?’ |
get (got, got) into | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈɪntə | садиться; войти | The old man got into the car and they all drove to the competition. |
get (got, got) married | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ˈmærɪd | жениться | ‘You look wonderful, Mr Gordon!’ laughed Mrs Wood. ‘Are you getting married?’ |
get (got, got) on | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ɒn | садиться в; делать успехи; успевать; продвигаться | ‘How’s the boy getting on?’ the farmer asked Mr Gordon one day. |
get (got, got) out | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) aʊt | выходить; вынимать | Get the rubbish out of the building. |
get (got, got) rid of | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) rɪd ɒv | избавиться | We can’t get rid of this,’ he said. |
get (got, got) up | ˈɡet (ˈɡɒt, ˈɡɒt) ʌp | вставать | He got up and went to the door. |
girl | ɡɜ:l | девушка, девочка | She was a tall, thin girl with long, soft brown hair. |
girlfriend | ˈɡɜ:lfrend | девушка | ‘I think Tony has a girlfriend,’ said Mrs Wood to Linda. Linda just smiled. |
give (gave, given) | ɡɪv (ɡeɪv, ɡɪvn̩) | давать, подавать, дарить | ‘Give us a penny!’ sang the musician. But when the monkey came back, the tin cup was always empty. |
give (gave, given) a look | ɡɪv (ɡeɪv, ɡɪvn̩) ə lʊk | посмотреть, взглянуть | Then I’ll come back again, and I’ll ask you to marry me.” She gave me a long, loving look. Then she laughed. |
glass | ɡlɑ:s | стекло | There was broken glass on top of the wall. |
go (went, gone) | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) | идти; пойти; ходить; направляться; действовать | Then he must go to the College of Music in London. |
go (went, gone) away | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) əˈweɪ | уходить | Now go away. I’m tired. I’ve had a busy day and I want to read my newspaper.’ |
go (went, gone) back | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈbæk | возвращаться | When do you go back to school? |
go (went, gone) home | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) həʊm | идти домой | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
go (went, gone) into | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈɪntə | войти; прийти | I showed my ticket to the doorman and went into the theatre. |
go (went, gone) out | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) aʊt | выходить | He went out and closed the door behind him. |
go (went, gone) round | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) ˈraʊnd | обходить всех по очереди | Then the monkey went round with a little tin cup. |
go (went, gone) to bed | ɡəʊ (ˈwent, ɡɒn) tə bed | ложиться спать | ‘And I’m tired. I’m going to go to bed. We can think about your piano tomorrow.’ |
go before | ɡəʊ bɪˈfɔ: | предшествовать | ‘Two weeks to go before the competition,’ said Mr Gordon one evening. ‘Look, this is the programme.’ |
going to | ɡəʊɪŋ tu: | собираться что-то сделать | ‘This is going to take a long time,’ said Tony. |
gold | ɡəʊld | золотой | There was a big gold star on the door. |
good (better, best) | ɡʊd (ˈbetə, best) | хороший; (лучше, лучше всего) | Farming is the best job in the world! |
Good luck | ɡʊd lʌk | удачи; в добрый час | Then she said, very quietly, ‘Good luck, Tony – and be careful!’ |
grass | ɡrɑ:s | трава | He watched them moving very slowly though the long, green grass. |
green | ɡri:n | зеленый | Tony saw green fields and small, quiet villages. Every house had a garden. |
grey | ɡreɪ | серый; седой | The teacher’s name was Mr Grey. He was grey, like his name: he was old and grey and tired. |
hair | ˈheə | волосы | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
half | hɑ:f | половина | The boys drove Linda to Catherine’s house. ‘Please come back at half past nine,’ she said to Pip. |
half past nine | hɑ:f pɑ:st naɪn | полдесятого | The boys drove Linda to Catherine’s house. ‘Please come back at half past nine,’ she said to Pip. |
half-forgotten | hɑ:f fəˈɡɒtn̩ | наполовину забытая | Half-forgotten music danced through his mind. |
hand | hænd | рука (кисть) | On my way upstairs I thought about the famous pianist. I was a little afraid. My mouth was dry and my hands were shaking. |
happen | ˈhæpən | происходить; случаться | He wanted to hear the music in his mind… ‘What’s happening to me?’ he thought. |
happiest | ˈhæpiɪst | самый счастливый | ‘He’s going to win the competition,’ Mr Gordon said to himself. ‘And this is the happiest day of my life.’ |
happiness | ˈhæpinəs | счастье | You gave us a lot of happiness, Mrs Lark. Thank you. |
happy | ˈhæpi | счастливый, довольный, веселый, благополучный | Sometimes Tony visited his family. He enjoyed those visits, but he was always happy to leave again. |
hard | hɑ:d | усердно; тяжело; усиленно | Tony was a good, strong boy and he worked very hard for Mr Wood. |
have\has (had, had) | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) | иметь, владеть, получать, есть | I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter. |
have\has (had, had) a bath | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) ə bɑ:θ | купаться, принять ванну | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
have\has (had, had) a drink | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) ə drɪŋk | напиться, попить, пить | ‘You were away a long time,’ said Pip. ‘Did you have a drink, or a holiday?’ They all laughed. |
have\has (had, had) breakfast | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) ˈbrekfəst | завтракать | Linda brought him breakfast in bed. He felt very strange and uncomfortable. ‘I’ve never had breakfast in bed before,’ he told her. |
have\has (had, had) supper | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) ˈsʌpə | ужинать | Then she went to have supper with Mr Wood and Linda. |
have\has (had, had) to | həv\hæz (həd, hæd) tu: | быть должным | Soon he will need a really good teacher. Then we’ll have to think about money. |
have\has got | həv\hæz ˈɡɒt | иметь | Please give him a job, Mr Wood. We need the money. We’ve got six children, you know.’ |
head | ˈhed | голова | The musician shook his head and pushed his little piano away. |
hear (heard, heard) | hɪə (hɜ:d, hɜ:d) | слышать | Tony did not often hear music. |
heavy | ˈhevi | тяжелый | Then they moved the piano. It was very heavy, but they were young and strong. |
hello | həˈləʊ | здравствуй | Mr Wood came to the door and spoke to Tony’s mother. ‘Hello, Betty. It’s nice to see you again. |
help | help | помогать | ‘Listen – can you help me?’ he said to Pip and John. ‘Mr Wood doesn’t want that old piano. |
high | haɪ | высокий; имеющий определенную высоту | The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
hill | hɪl | холм | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. |
hole | həʊl | дыра | Mrs Wood was mending a hole in Linda’s school dress. |
holiday | ˈhɒlədeɪ | каникулы | It was summer and the children were on holiday. |
home | həʊm | дом | He sent his old clothes home for his brothers. He sent his family money, too. |
homework | ˈhəʊmwɜ:k | уроки; домашние задания | Linda herself was doing her homework at the table in the corner. |
hot | hɒt | горячий; жаркий; разгоряченный | One hot summer afternoon she decided to take her son to a farm outside the town. |
hour | ˈaʊə | час | You will have your lesson, and you will practice on the piano for two hours. |
house | ˈhaʊs | дом | The people came out of their houses to listen to his music. |
how | ˈhaʊ | как | ‘How can I tell them?’ he thought. ‘How can I tell them how I feel about it?’ He looked at his hands. |
How are you? | ˈhaʊ ə ju | как дела?, как поживаете? | Thank you for your letter. How are you?’ They talked together like old friends. |
how many | ˈhaʊ məni | сколько | ‘How many concerts have I given? Two thousand? Three thousand? For me, every concert is new and exciting. |
How old are you? | ˈhaʊ əʊld ə ju | Сколько тебе лет? | The farmer looked at Tony. ‘How old are you, boy?’ he asked. ‘Thirteen, sir.’ |
hundred | ˈhʌndrəd | сотня | Hundreds of people were waiting outside the ticket office. |
hungry | ˈhʌŋɡri | голодный | Tony ate his meat and potatoes and drank two cups of strong, sweet tea. Then he had three small cakes and an apple. He was always hungry. |
hurt (hurt, hurt) | hɜ:t (hɜ:t, hɜ:t) | причинить боль; болеть | At the end of every day his back was tired and his legs hurt, but he slept like a baby. |
ill | ɪl | больной; нездоровый | When people came out of the factory in the evening their faces looked white and ill. |
important | ɪmˈpɔ:tnt | важный; знаменательный; особенный | This is the most important night in your life! |
in front of | ɪn frʌnt ɒv | перед чем-либо | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
in surprise | ɪn səˈpraɪz | удивленно | John came and moved some of the boxes. ‘It isn’t a cupboard,’ he said in surprise. ‘It’s an old piano.’ |
in the evening | ɪn ði ˈi:vn̩ɪŋ | вечером | When people came out of the factory in the evening their faces looked white and ill. |
in the middle of | ɪn ðə ˈmɪdl̩ ɒv | в центре | Tony and his mother got on a bus in the middle of the town. |
in the morning | ɪn ðə ˈmɔ:nɪŋ | утром | The leaves fell from the trees. Winter came. It was dark when Tony got up in the mornings. |
in those days | ɪn ðəʊz deɪz | в те времена | You see, I left school when I was thirteen. Everybody called me Tony in those days. I worked on a farm…’ |
invite | ɪnˈvaɪt | пригласить | Five years ago, the Queen invited us to Buckingham Palace. |
Italian | ɪˈtæljən | итальянский | Sometimes an Italian street musician came to town. |
job | dʒɒb | работа | I wrote to Mr Wood last week and asked him to give you a job on the farm. |
July | dʒu:ˈlaɪ | Июль | Tony went back into the kitchen. ‘It’s July,’ he thought. ‘Everyone is on holiday. |
June | dʒu:n | Июнь | ‘There’s a music competition in the town on June 12th,’ said Mr Gordon one evening. |
just | dʒəst | лишь, просто | Then the pen fell from my hand and I just listened. I was lost in Sir Anthony’s wonderful story. |
just like | dʒəst ˈlaɪk | точно так же как, прямо как, совсем как | He looked just like his picture on the wall of the theatre. |
keep (kept, kept) | ki:p (kept, kept) | держать, хранить, оставлять | Get the rubbish out of the building. Then clean it really well. I want to keep the car in it.’ |
keep (kept, kept) busy | ki:p (kept, kept) ˈbɪzi | загружать работой | The farmer liked to keep them busy. |
key | ki: | клавиша; ключ | He found an old, broken chair and sat down at the piano. His fingers touched the keys. |
kilometre | kɪˈlɒmɪtə | километр | They got out of the bus and walked two kilometres in the hot sun. There were white and yellow flowers at the side of the road. |
kind | kaɪnd | добрый | But the farmer was kind to him and taught him a lot. |
kindness | ˈkaɪndnəs | доброта | But suddenly Anthony felt their love and their kindness. |
kitchen | ˈkɪtʃɪn | кухня; кухонный | Tony ate his meals in the kitchen and he slept in a little room at the top of the farmhouse. |
knock | nɒk | стучать; постучать; стук | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. |
know (knew, known) | nəʊ (nju:, nəʊn) | знать | There were white and yellow flowers at the side of the road. Tony did not know their names. |
Lady | ˈleɪdi | леди | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
large | lɑ:dʒ | крупный; большой | Their father had a large shoe shop in the town. |
Lark | lɑ:k | фамилия; дословный перевод: жаворонок; шутка; веселье | Every Tuesday morning an old lady called Mrs Lark came to the school. |
last | lɑ:st | прошлый | I wrote to Mr Wood last week and asked him to give you a job on the farm. |
late | leɪt | поздно; поздний | Pip looked at the clock. ‘It’s late,’ he said. |
later | ˈleɪtə | позже | Mr Wood had a quiet talk with him later. |
laugh | lɑ:f | смеяться; сказать со смехом | ‘I’m walking like Charlie Chaplin,’ he thought. ‘Everybody will laugh at me.’ |
leaf (leaves) | li:f (li:vz) | лист (листья) | He saw brightly-coloured birds, flowers and leaves. |
learn (learnt\learned, learnt\learned) | lɜ:n (lɜ:nt\lɜ:nd, lɜ:nt\lɜ:nd) | учиться | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart?’ |
leave (left, left) | li:v (left, left) | оставлять; покидать; уходить | Sometimes Tony visited his family. He enjoyed those visits, but he was always happy to leave again. |
left | left | левый | He looked carefully at the little black notes on their thin black lines. ‘The left hand goes like this.’ |
leg | leɡ | нога (от бедра до ступни) | Tony was happy. At the end of every day his back was tired and his legs hurt, but he slept like a baby. |
lento | ˈlentəʊ | медленно | ‘Look!’ she said. ‘That’s Italian. Lento-slow.’ |
lesson | ˈlesn̩ | урок; занятие | I have piano lessons at school, but I can’t play like you. |
letter | ˈletə | письмо | Hello, Betty. It’s nice to see you again. Thank you for your letter. How are you? |
life | laɪf | жизнь | But that visit changed his life. Mr Wood had a quiet talk with him later. |
light | laɪt | свет | He was afraid to turn on a light in the school. |
like | ˈlaɪk | как; подобный чему-то/кому-то; похожий; нравиться; любить; хотеть | He looked just like his picture on the wall of the theatre. |
like this | ˈlaɪk ðɪs | таким образом, вот так | He looked carefully at the little black notes on their thin black lines. ‘The left hand goes like this.’ |
line | ˈlaɪn | линия, строка | He looked at the little black notes and the five thin black lines on the pages of the book. |
listen | ˈlɪsn̩ | слушать | Then the pen fell from my hand and I just listened. I was lost in Sir Anthony’s wonderful story. |
Liszt | ˈlɪst | Лист | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. |
little (less, least) | ˈlɪtl̩ (les, li:st) | маленький, небольшой (меньше, самое малое) | He had a little piano on wheels, and a poor thin monkey which sat on top of it. |
live | lɪv | жить | They lived in a very small house at the end of a long, grey street. The toilet was outside, in the yard. |
lock | lɒk | закрыть на замок | I forgot to lock the door. |
lock up | lɒk ʌp | закрывать | Mrs Lark said ‘goodbye’ and locked up the piano for another week. |
London | ˈlʌndən | Лондон | He must have music lessons at once. Then he must go to the College of Music in London. He needs to work with other musical boys and girls. |
long | ˈlɒŋ | длинный; долгий; долго | Everything about him was grey: grey suit, grey shirt, grey hair and a long, thin, grey face. |
look | ˈlʊk | выглядеть, смотреть, глядеть | He looked just like his picture on the wall of the theatre. |
look around | lʊk əˈraʊnd | оглядеться; осмотреться | Then he decided to look around the little school. |
look at | ˈlʊk ət | смотреть на | There were no flowers or trees in his street. He looked at the cows in the fields. |
look for | lʊk fɔ: | искать | He began to look for a job. |
look into | lʊk ˈɪntə | заглядывать | ‘But…’ began Tony. He looked into her kind brown eyes and he told her his story. He told her about his old school. |
look like | lʊk ˈlaɪk | выглядеть как, быть похожим | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
lorry | ˈlɒri | грузовик | We’ll put the piano on the lorry, and we’ll take it to the school. |
lose (lost, lost) | lu:z (lɒst, lɒst) | терять, затеряться | Then the pen fell from my hand and I just listened. I was lost in Sir Anthony’s wonderful story. |
lost | lɒst | погруженный; потерянный | I was lost in Sir Anthony’s wonderful story. |
loud | laʊd | громкий | He touched the keys. They made a loud, unmusical noise. |
loudly | ˈlaʊdli | громко | She spoke loudly because Catherine’s mother was listening. |
love | lʌv | любить, любить | Mr Wood loved Linda dearly, but he wanted a son very much. He was like a father to Tony. |
loving | ˈlʌvɪŋ | нежный, полный любви | Then I’ll come back again, and I’ll ask you to marry me.” She gave me a long, loving look. Then she laughed. |
lucky | ˈlʌki | удачливый; везучий | Tell the readers of your newspaper that I am a very lucky man. |
make (made, made) | ˈmeɪk (ˈmeɪd, ˈmeɪd) | делать; создать; заставлять; являться причиной чего-либо; вынуждать | Nobody taught me, but my mind tells my fingers what to do, and I can make music. |
man (men) | mæn (men) | мужчина; человек; (мужчины, люди) | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. |
married | ˈmærɪd | женатый; замужем | We’ve been married for sixty years. |
marry | ˈmæri | выходить замуж | But one day I shall be rich and famous. Then I’ll come back again, and I’ll ask you to marry me. |
meal | mi:l | еда; пища | Tony ate his meals in the kitchen and he slept in a little room at the top of the farmhouse. |
meat | mi:t | мясо | Tony ate his meat and potatoes and drank two cups of strong, sweet tea. |
meet (met, met) | mi:t (met, met) | встречаться; познакомиться | Then I met your father and we moved to the town. |
meeting | ˈmi:tɪŋ | собрание; встреча | Mrs Wood was at a meeting in the village. |
mend | mend | штопать | Mrs Wood was mending a hole in Linda’s school dress. |
metre | ˈmi:tə | метр | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
milk | mɪlk | молоко | He ate Mrs Wood’s good country food. He drank a lot of milk. Soon he needed new clothes. |
mind | maɪnd | ум; разум; память | He wanted to hear the music in his mind… |
minute | ˈmɪnɪt | минута | But every minute of the day, music filled his mind. At four o’clock he cycled to his piano lesson with Mr Gordon. |
miss | mɪs | пропускать | Sometimes it snowed. Then he had to walk to and from the school. But he never missed a lesson. |
Monday | ˈmʌndeɪ | Понедельник | Every Monday Mrs Evans washed all the family’s clothes in the tin bath. |
money | ˈmʌni | деньги | He sent his family money, too. |
monkey | ˈmʌŋki | обезьяна | He had a little piano on wheels, and a poor thin monkey which sat on top of it. |
month | mʌnθ | месяц | They can’t send him to college. They have five small children at home. Tony sends them money every month.’ |
more | mɔ: | больше | Tony did not know their names. He wanted to know more about them. He wanted to know more about the trees too. |
morning | ˈmɔ:nɪŋ | утро | But Tuesday mornings were different, because Tuesday was music day. |
most | məʊst | самая | ‘Forget about your feet, boy – you’ve won the competition! This is the most important night in your life!’ |
most of | məʊst ɒv | большая часть из | Most of Tony’s friends found jobs in shops or factories in the town. Tony did not want to work in a shop or a factory. |
mother | ˈmʌðə | мать, мама | Tony and his mother got on a bus in the middle of the town. |
mouth | maʊθ | рот | My mouth was dry and my hands were shaking. |
move | mu:v | переезжать, двигаться, передвигать, перемещать | Then I met your father and we moved to the town. |
Mozart | ˈməʊtsɑ:t | Моцарт | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart?’ |
Mr (сокращение от mister) | ˈmɪstə | мистер | The teacher’s name was Mr Grey. He was grey, like his name: he was old and grey and tired. |
Mrs (сокращение от missis или от mistress) | ˈmɪsɪz\ˈmɪstrɪs | миссис, госпожа | Every Tuesday morning an old lady called Mrs Lark came to the school. Mrs Lark played the piano and the children sang. |
much | ˈmʌtʃ | много, намного | The old farmer did not pay him much money. |
music | ˈmju:zɪk | музыка, музыкальный, ноты | But Tuesday mornings were different, because Tuesday was music day. |
musical | ˈmju:zɪkl̩ | музыкальный | Did you come from a musical family? |
musician | mju:ˈzɪʃn̩ | музыкант | I am the first musician in my family. |
must | mʌst | должен | He stood and looked at the piano. ‘I must have it,’ he said to himself. ‘I’ll ask Mr Wood.’ |
name | ˈneɪm | имя, название | The teacher’s name was Mr Grey. He was grey, like his name: he was old and grey and tired. |
near | nɪə | близко; возле; рядом | They walked with him to an old wooden building near the farmhouse. |
need | ni:d | нуждаться в, быть должным, иметь надобность | But he needed a job because his family needed the money. |
never | ˈnevə | никогда | There were no flowers or trees in his street. He looked at the cows in the fields. ‘I’ve never seen a real cow,’ he said to himself. |
new | nju: | новая | He ate Mrs Wood’s good country food. He drank a lot of milk. Soon he needed new clothes. |
newspaper | ˈnju:speɪpə | газета; газетный | I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter. |
next | nekst | следующий | ‘Now,’ said Mr Wood. ‘My new car will arrive here next week. I want this building for a garage. |
nice | naɪs | приятный, милый, хороший | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
nice | naɪs | мило, приятно, приятный | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
nice to see you | naɪs tə ˈsi: ju | рад вас видеть | Mr Wood came to the door and spoke to Tony’s mother. ‘Hello, Betty. It’s nice to see you again. |
night | ˈnaɪt | вечер, ночь | Linda gave the boys their supper that night. Mrs Wood was at a meeting in the village. |
nine | naɪn | девять | The boys drove Linda to Catherine’s house. ‘Please come back at half past nine,’ she said to Pip. |
ninth | naɪnθ | девятое | ‘You’re on holiday too, aren’t you? When do you go back to school?’ ‘September the ninth,’ said John. |
no one | nəʊ wʌn | никто | School doesn’t start again until September. I can put the piano here. No one will come here. |
nobody | nəʊbədi | никто | Nobody taught me, but my mind tells my fingers what to do, and I can make music. |
noise | nɔɪz | шум | They heard a noise behind them. |
note | nəʊt | нота | He looked at the little black notes and the five thin black lines on the pages of the book. |
notebook | ˈnəʊtbʊk | записная книжка; блокнот | The old man saw my notebook and smiled at me. |
nothing | ˈnʌθɪŋ | ничего | When people came out of the factory in the evening their faces looked white and ill. ‘Nothing can be worse than that,’ he thought. |
now | naʊ | теперь, сейчас, итак, так вот, тотчас же | ‘Now, boys,’ he said, ‘I have a job for you.’ |
o’clock (сокращение от ‘of the clock’) | əˈklɒk | на часах, часов | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
of course | əv kɔ:s | разумеется; конечно; понятное дело | There were concerts in the town, of course, but poor people did not go to concerts. |
often | ˈɒfn̩ | часто | Tony did not often hear music. |
Oh dear! | əʊ dɪə | вот те на!; боже мой!; батюшки! | ‘Oh dear!’ thought Mr Gordon. ‘I forgot to lock the door. |
old | əʊld | старый | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. He was very old, but his eyes were blue and bright. |
old man | əʊld mæn | дедушка, старик | The old man saw my notebook and smiled at me. |
oldest | ˈəʊldɪst | самый старший | There were six children in the Evans family, and Tony was the oldest. |
on way | ɒn ˈweɪ | по дороге; по пути | On my way upstairs I thought about the famous pianist. |
once | wʌns | когда-то, однажды | ‘A very good newspaper. Come in and sit down. Ask your questions. We were young once, weren’t we, Linda? But of course that was a long time ago.’ |
one | wʌn | один | But the farmer was kind to him and taught him a lot. Mr Wood had no sons. He had one daughter. |
one after another | wʌn ˈɑ:ftər əˈnʌðə | один за другим; друг за другом | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
one day | wʌn deɪ | однажды | ‘Why does he work here?’ one of the children asked one day. ‘He doesn’t like us.’ |
open | ˈəʊpən | открывать, открытый | I was not afraid any more. I sat down and opened my notebook. |
other | ˈʌðə | другие, остальные | ‘But he likes the long school holidays!’ said Tony. The other children laughed. They thought that was a very clever answer. |
outside | ˌaʊtˈsaɪd | за пределами; снаружи; на улице | Hundreds of people were waiting outside the ticket office. |
over | ˈəʊvə | через, поверх, над | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. ‘Come on, Tony,’ said his mother. |
page | peɪdʒ | страница | He looked at the little black notes and the five thin black lines on the pages of the book. |
Palace | ˈpælɪs | дворец | Five years ago, the Queen invited us to Buckingham Palace. |
past | pɑ:st | после | The boys drove Linda to Catherine’s house. ‘Please come back at half past nine,’ she said to Pip. |
pay (paid, paid) | peɪ (peɪd, peɪd) | платить | The old farmer did not pay him much money. |
pen | pen | ручка | Then the pen fell from my hand and I just listened. I was lost in Sir Anthony’s wonderful story. |
penny | ˈpeni | пенс; цент | Then the monkey went round with a little tin cup. ‘Give us a penny!’ sang the musician. |
people | ˈpi:pl̩ | люди | Hundreds of people were waiting outside the ticket office. |
perhaps | pəˈhæps | возможно; может быть | And in six weeks perhaps I can find a home for my piano. |
photograph | ˈfəʊtəɡrɑ:f | фотография | He knew that he was the winner because he saw his photograph in the newspaper the next day. |
pianist | ˈpɪənɪst | пианист | I wanted to talk to the famous pianist before his concert. |
piano | pɪˈænəʊ | рояль; фортепьяно; пианино | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart? |
picture | ˈpɪktʃə | фотография; картинка | On the wall there was a big picture of Sir Anthony at the piano. |
plate | pleɪt | тарелка | They sat down at the big kitchen table and Mrs Wood put the food on three hot plates. |
play | pleɪ | играть | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
play football | pleɪ ˈfʊtbɔ:l | играть в футбол | The school yard was very small. As he spoke, pictures came into my mind. I saw a little boy called Tony Evans, playing football with an old tin… |
playing | ˈpleɪɪŋ | игра, исполнение | Mr Gordon stood and listened. There was a happy smile on his face. Then Tony stopped playing. ‘That wasn’t right,’ he said to himself. |
please | pli:z | пожалуйста, будьте добры | ‘Tell me about yourself, please, Sir Anthony. Did you come from a musical family? |
ˈpɒkɪt | карман | He felt in his pocket for the key – it was not there! | |
police | pəˈli:s | полиция | ‘Don’t tell the police,’ he said. ‘Please. I haven’t stolen anything. I haven’t done anything wrong.’ |
poor | pʊə | бедный; несчастный | Tony did not feel poor, because all his friends were poor too. |
potato | pəˈteɪtəʊ | картошка | Tony ate his meat and potatoes and drank two cups of strong, sweet tea. |
practise | ˈpræktɪs | заниматься; упражняться; практиковаться | He practised until seven o’clock, then he cycled back to the farm for supper. |
prestissimo | preˈstɪsɪməʊ | престиссимо; очень быстро | ‘Prestissimo,’ said the words at the top of the page. ‘Very fast.’ |
programme | ˈprəʊɡræm | программка; репертуар; программа | Look, this is the programme. |
push | pʊʃ | толкать | The musician shook his head and pushed his little piano away. |
put (put, put) | ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) | класть, положить, поместить | They sat down at the big kitchen table and Mrs Wood put the food on three hot plates. |
put (put, put) away | ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) əˈweɪ | убирать | He was always hungry. He washed his plate and his cup and put them away. |
put (put, put) on | ˈpʊt (ˈpʊt, ˈpʊt) ɒn | надеть | At seven o’clock Tony washed in cold water and put on his clean shirt. |
Queen | kwi:n | королева | Five years ago, the Queen invited us to Buckingham Palace. |
question | ˈkwestʃən | вопрос | Ask your questions. |
quick | kwɪk | сообразительный; быстрый | ‘How’s the boy getting on?’ the farmer asked Mr Gordon one day. ‘Very well,’ said the teacher. ‘But he’s too quick for me. Soon he’ll need a real teacher.’ |
quickly | ˈkwɪkli | быстро | But Tony learns very quickly. Soon he will need a really good teacher. |
quiet | ˈkwaɪət | спокойный; тихий | Tony saw green fields and small, quiet villages. |
quietly | ˈkwaɪətli | спокойно; тихо; молча | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
radio | ˈreɪdɪəʊ | радио | There was no TV or radio in those days. There were concerts in the town, of course, but poor people did not go to concerts. |
read (read, read) | ri:d (red, red) | читать | He was reading his Farmer’s Weekly. |
reader | ˈri:də | читатель | Tell the readers of your newspaper that I am a very lucky man.’ |
ready | ˈredi | готовый | ‘But I can’t do that! I need to practise more. I’m not ready!’ said Tony. ‘You will be ready,’ said his teacher quietly. |
real | rɪəl | настоящий | There were no flowers or trees in his street. He looked at the cows in the fields. ‘I’ve never seen a real cow,’ he said to himself. |
really | ˈrɪəli | действительно, на самом деле | Get the rubbish out of the building. Then clean it really well. I want to keep the car in it.’ |
red | red | румяный, красный, пунцовый | He looked into the farmer’s smiling red face. ‘Yes, sir,’ he said. ‘Yes, please.’ |
remember | rɪˈmembə | вспоминать, помнить | He remembered the street musician with his little monkey. Then he thought about Mrs Lark. |
reporter | rɪˈpɔ:tə | репортер; корреспондент | I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter. |
restaurant | ˈrestrɒnt | ресторан | Perhaps Tony can go to the College of Music in the daytime and work in a restaurant in the evenings…’ |
rich | rɪtʃ | богатый | But one day I shall be rich and famous. Then I’ll come back again, and I’ll ask you to marry me. |
right | raɪt | правый, прав, верный, правильный | ‘But you like it!’ said John, and he was right. Tony liked his job very much. |
river | ˈrɪvə | река | At last the bus stopped. Tony could see a river and an old bridge. |
road | rəʊd | дорога | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. ‘Come on, Tony,’ said his mother. |
room | ru:m | комната | Tony ate his meals in the kitchen and he slept in a little room at the top of the farmhouse. |
rubbish | ˈrʌbɪʃ | хлам; мусор | Get the rubbish out of the building. |
run (ran, run) | rʌn (ræn, rʌn) | бежать | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. ‘Come on, Tony,’ said his mother. |
run (ran, run) across | rʌn (ræn, rʌn) əˈkrɒs | пересекать | A small road ran across the bridge, through the fields and over a hill. |
sandwich | ˈsænwɪdʒ | бутерброд; сэндвич | They took some sandwiches and a bottle of cold tea, and they began to cut the long grass in Mr Wood’s biggest field. |
Saturday | ˈsætədeɪ | Суббота | On Saturday evenings everybody in the family had a bath one after another in an old tin bath in front of the fire. |
say (said, said) | ˈseɪ (ˈsed, ˈsed) | сказать; говорить | Father says you are borrowing the lorry tonight. |
say (said, said) goodbye | ˈseɪ (ˈsed, ˈsed) ˌɡʊdˈbaɪ | попрощаться | Then twelve o’clock came. Mrs Lark said ‘goodbye’ and locked up the piano for another week. |
school | sku:l | школа, школьный, уроки | You see, I left school when I was thirteen. |
sea | si: | море | He turned and looked at the sea of faces. He could not see the Wood family. He could not see Mr Gordon. |
seat | si:t | место; сиденье | The Woods went to their seats, but Mr Gordon took Anthony through the stage door. |
see (saw, seen) | ˈsi: (ˈsɔ:, ˈsi:n) | видеть | He did not want anybody to see him. |
sell (sold, sold) | sel (səʊld, səʊld) | продавать | ‘Sell it, then,’ said John. ‘Buy something nice with the money.’ |
send (sent, sent) | send (sent, sent) | послать; отправить | They can’t send him to college. |
September | sepˈtembə | Сентябрь | School doesn’t start again until September. I can put the piano here. No one will come here. |
seven | ˈsevn̩ | семь | At seven o’clock Tony washed in cold water and put on his clean shirt. |
seventeen | ˌsevnˈti:n | 17 | Pip was seventeen and John was sixteen, but they were both still at school. Their father had a large shoe shop in the town. |
shake (shook, shaken) | ʃeɪk (ʃʊk, ˈʃeɪkən) | встряхнуть; качать; покачать; дрожать | The musician shook his head and pushed his little piano away. |
shine (shone, shone) | ʃaɪn (ʃɒn, ʃɒn) | сиять; светить | The sun doesn’t always shine. |
shirt | ʃɜ:t | рубашка | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. |
shoe shop | [ʃu: ʃɒp | обувной магазин | Their father had a large shoe shop in the town. |
shoes | ʃu:z | обувь, ботинки | Tony looked down at his dirty old shoes. ‘I can’t play the piano,’ he said. |
shop | ʃɒp | магазин | Most of Tony’s friends found jobs in shops or factories in the town. Tony did not want to work in a shop or a factory. |
shopping | ˈʃɑ:pɪŋ | за покупками, посещение магазинов с целью покупки | While Mr Wood had a drink with some friends, Mrs Wood took Anthony shopping. |
short | ʃɔ:t | короткий; краткий | She showed him the long notes and the short notes. |
shortly | ˈʃɔ:tli | резко; грубо; отрывисто | ‘I’ve finished,’ said Tony shortly. He closed the piano. |
shout | ʃaʊt | кричать; выкрикнуть | ‘You’ve won!’ shouted Mrs Wood. |
show (showed, shown) | ˈʃoʊ (ʃoʊd, ˈʃoʊn) | показать | I showed my ticket to the doorman and went into the theatre. Then I walked upstairs to the dressing-room. |
side | saɪd | край; сторона | There were white and yellow flowers at the side of the road. |
silent | ˈsaɪlənt | тихий; молчаливый | But Tony was not a clever boy. He was big and slow and silent. |
silvery | ˈsɪlvəri | серебристый | He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
sing (sang, sung) | sɪŋ (sæŋ, sʌŋ) | петь | She was smiling now, and she was singing very quietly. |
sir | sɜ: | сэр | SIR ANTYONY EVANS PLAYS LISZT. The words above the door of the theatre were a metre high. |
sit (sat, sat) | sɪt (sæt, sæt) | сидеть | Anthony sat in the waiting room for a long time. |
sit (sat, sat) down | sɪt (sæt, sæt) daʊn | сесть | Come in and sit down. |
sitting-room | ˈsɪtɪŋ ru:m | гостиная | He knocked at the door of the sitting-room. |
six | sɪks | шесть | There were six children in the Evans family, and Tony was the oldest. |
sixteen | sɪkˈsti:n | 16 | Pip was seventeen and John was sixteen, but they were both still at school. Their father had a large shoe shop in the town. |
sixty | ˈsɪksti | 60 | We’ve been married for sixty years. Five years ago, the Queen invited us to Buckingham Palace. |
sleep (slept, slept) | sli:p (slept, slept) | спать | Tony ate his meals in the kitchen and he slept in a little room at the top of the farmhouse. |
sleepy | ˈsli:pi | сонный | A fat white cat sat on a wall and watched them with sleepy eyes. |
slow | sləʊ | тихий; медлительный; неторопливый; медленный | But Tony was not a clever boy. He was big and slow and silent. |
slowly | ˈsləʊli | медленно | He watched them moving very slowly though the long, green grass. |
small | smɔ:l | маленький, небольшой | They lived in a very small house at the end of a long, grey street. The toilet was outside, in the yard. |
smell | smel | запах | The smell of the flowers came in through the open windows of the bus. |
smile | smaɪl | улыбаться, улыбка | The famous pianist smiled. ‘No, no, my dear. I am the first musician in my family. |
smile at | smaɪl æt | улыбаться кому-либо | The old man saw my notebook and smiled at me. |
smiling | ˈsmaɪlɪŋ | улыбающийся | He looked into the farmer’s smiling red face. ‘Yes, sir,’ he said. ‘Yes, please.’ |
snow | snəʊ | идет снег | Sometimes it snowed. Then he had to walk to and from the school. But he never missed a lesson. |
so | ˈsəʊ | так | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
soft | sɒft | мягкий | She was a tall, thin girl with long, soft brown hair. |
some | sʌm | несколько | John came and moved some of the boxes. |
somebody | ˈsʌmbədi | кто-то | ‘Oh dear!’ thought Mr Gordon. ‘I forgot to lock the door. Now somebody is in the school. |
someone | ˈsʌmwʌn | кто-то | From a long way away he heard the sound of a piano. Every few minutes a man came in and called someone’s name. |
something | ˈsʌmθɪŋ | что-то, что-нибудь | He went to the back of the building. He saw something behind a lot of old boxes. It was very big. |
sometimes | ˈsʌmtaɪmz | иногда | Sometimes an Italian street musician came to town. |
son | sʌn | сын | One hot summer afternoon she decided to take her son to a farm outside the town. |
song | sɒŋ | песня | She knew a lot of songs too. |
soon | su:n | вскоре; скоро | Soon he needed new clothes. |
sound | ˈsaʊnd | звучать; звук | Anthony Evans – it sounds wonderful. |
speak (spoke, spoken) | spi:k (spəʊk, ˈspəʊkən) | говорить | As he spoke, pictures came into my mind. |
special | ˈspeʃl̩ | особенный; особый | I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter. |
spend (spent, spent) | spend (spent, spent) | проводить (время) | But the boys spent all their holidays on Mr Wood’s farm. |
spring | sprɪŋ | весна | Spring came, and the trees were green again. |
stage | steɪdʒ | сцена | He took him to a room behind the stage. |
stage door | steɪdʒ dɔ: | служебный вход в театр; актерский вход | The Woods went to their seats, but Mr Gordon took Anthony through the stage door. |
stairs | steəz | ступеньки | He followed the man up some stairs. |
stand (stood, stood) | stænd (stʊd, stʊd) | находиться; стоять; поставить | He turned to a tall woman, who was standing in the corner. |
stand (stood, stood) up | stænd (stʊd, stʊd) ʌp | встать | The famous musician stood up. |
star | stɑ: | звезда | There was a big gold star on the door. |
start | stɑ:t | начинать, начинаться, старт, начало | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart?’ |
steal (stole, stolen) | sti:l (stəʊl, ˈstəʊlən) | воровать; красть | I’m not going to steal anything. |
still | stɪl | всё ещё; до сих пор; по прежнему | Pip was seventeen and John was sixteen, but they were both still at school. |
stop | stɒp | останавливаться, прекратить | At last the bus stopped. Tony could see a river and an old bridge. |
story | ˈstɔ:ri | рассказ, история | We have a little time before my concert. I’ll tell you my story. It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
straight | streɪt | прямой | He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
strange | streɪndʒ | незнакомый; странно; удивительный; необыкновенный | It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
street | stri:t | улица | He told me about an old school behind a high wall in a dirty street. |
street musician | stri:t mju:ˈzɪʃn̩ | уличный музыкант; бродячий музыкант | Sometimes an Italian street musician came to town. |
strong | strɒŋ | крепкий; сильный; выносливый | He’s a good boy, and he’s very strong. |
stupid | ˈstju:pɪd | глупый | I’m going to put my piano in the classroom.’ |
suddenly | sʌdn̩li | вдруг; неожиданно; внезапно | He began to play an old song. He was suddenly very happy. |
suit | su:t | костюм | She bought him a new brown suit and a new white shirt. |
summer | ˈsʌmə | летний; лето | ‘But you just come here in the summer!’ said Tony. |
sun | sʌn | солнце | They got out of the bus and walked two kilometres in the hot sun. |
Sunday | ˈsʌndeɪ | воскресенье | ‘Don’t tell me. You’re a reporter. Which newspaper do you work for?’ |
supper | ˈsʌpə | ужин | Linda gave the boys their supper that night. |
surprise | səˈpraɪz | удивление | He saw the surprise on my face. |
sweet | swi:t | милый; приятный; сладкий | She was not beautiful, but she had big, kind brown eyes and a sweet smile. |
table | ˈteɪbl̩ | стол | They sat down at the big kitchen table and Mrs Wood put the food on three hot plates. |
take (took, taken) | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) | занимать; отнимать; брать; отводить; сопровождать; брать с собой; доставить; отвозить | ‘This is going to take a long time,’ said Tony. |
take (took, taken) away | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) əˈweɪ | убрать, забрать | ‘It is rubbish, boy. Take it away. Get rid of it. I want that building for my new car. |
take (took, taken) long | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ˈlɒŋ | занять много времени | Then he decided to look around the little school. It did not take him long. There was one classroom. |
take (took, taken) off | teɪk (tʊk, ˈteɪkən) ɒf | снимать | Tony took off his shirt and cleaned the wood with it. |
talk | ˈtɔ:k | говорить, разговаривать, разговор | I wanted to talk to the famous pianist before his concert. |
tall | tɔ:l | высокий | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. |
tap | tæp | кран (водопроводный) | There was a tap there and he turned it. |
tea | ti: | чай | Tony ate his meat and potatoes and drank two cups of strong, sweet tea. Then he had three small cakes and an apple. |
teach (taught, taught) | ti:tʃ (tɔ:t, tɔ:t) | обучать; учить | I don’t want any money – I’ll be very happy to teach this wonderful boy. |
teacher | ˈti:tʃə | учитель | I have been a teacher for forty years, but I have never met a boy like Tony. |
tell (told, told) | tel (təʊld, təʊld) | рассказать; сказать; говорить | Tell me about yourself, please, Sir Anthony. |
thank you | θæŋk ju | спасибо, спасибо тебе | Thank you for your letter. How are you?’ They talked together like old friends. |
that’s all | ðæts ɔ:l | вот и всё | He remembered those wonderful Tuesday mornings, and he smiled. ‘We sang a little on Tuesday mornings, that’s all,’ he said. |
that’s right | ðæts raɪt | верно, правильно | ‘I want to be a farmer,’ said Pip. ‘That’s right,’ said John. ‘Farming is the best job in the world!’ |
the same | ðə seɪm | один и тот же | Tony played the same line of music again and again. |
theatre | ˈθɪətə | театр | He looked just like his picture on the wall of the theatre. |
thief | θi:f | вор | Now somebody is in the school. Perhaps it’s a thief! |
thin | θɪn | бледный; тусклый; тонкий; худой | Everything about him was grey: grey suit, grey shirt, grey hair and a long, thin, grey face. |
thing | ˈθɪŋ | вещь | Sir Anthony Evans turned to me. ‘That competition was the start of wonderful things for me,’ he said. |
think (thought, thought) | ˈθɪŋk (ˈθɔ:t, ˈθɔ:t) | думать | We can think about your piano tomorrow. |
thirsty | ˈθɜ:sti | испытывать жажду | The boys were hot and thirsty. |
thirteen | ˌθɜ:ˈti:n | 13 | You see, I left school when I was thirteen. Everybody called me Tony in those days. I worked on a farm…’ |
thirteenth | ˌθɜ:ˈti:nθ | тринадцатый | A few days after his thirteenth birthday, Tony left school too. |
those | ðəʊz | те | Sometimes Tony visited his family. He enjoyed those visits, but he was always happy to leave again. |
thoughtful | ˈθɔ:tfəl | задумчивый | He looked unhappy and thoughtful. |
thousand | ˈθaʊzn̩d | тысяча | How many concerts have I given? Two thousand? Three thousand? For me, every concert is new and exciting. |
three | θri: | три | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart?’ |
through | θru: | сквозь; через | The smell of the flowers came in through the open windows of the bus. |
ticket | ˈtɪkɪt | билет | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
ticket office | ˈtɪkɪt ˈɒfɪs | билетная касса | Hundreds of people were waiting outside the ticket office. |
time | ˈtaɪm | время | That summer was a happy time for Tony. Every evening after supper he borrowed Linda’s bicycle. |
times | ˈtaɪmz | времена | ‘Don’t tell me. You’re a reporter. Which newspaper do you work for?’ ‘The Sunday Times, sir.’ |
tin | ˈtɪn | жестяной; оловянный; консервная банка | I saw a little boy called Tony Evans, playing football with an old tin… |
tired | ˈtaɪəd | уставший; потерявший интерес; утомленный | The sun was hot and they were tired. |
to and from | tu ənd frɒm | туда и обратно | Sometimes it snowed. Then he had to walk to and from the school. But he never missed a lesson. |
together | təˈɡeðə | вместе | Thank you for your letter. How are you?’ They talked together like old friends. |
toilet | ˈtɔɪlɪt | туалет; уборная | The toilet was outside, in the yard. |
tomorrow | təˈmɒrəʊ | завтра | ‘And I’m tired. I’m going to go to bed. We can think about your piano tomorrow.’ |
tonight | təˈnaɪt | сегодня вечером\ночью | Can you help me? We’ll put the piano on the lorry, and we’ll take it to the school.’ ‘When?’ asked Pip. ‘Tonight,’ said Tony. |
too | tu: | также, тоже, слишком | Farmers work hard in the winter too. It’s a hard, dirty job.’ |
too much | tu: ˈmʌtʃ | слишком сильно | When he got out of the car, he could not walk. His new shoes hurt him too much. |
tooth (teeth) | tu:θ (ti:θ) | зуб (зубы) | When he smiled the children saw his long, grey teeth. |
top | tɒp | вершина; верхушка; верх, верхняя поверхность | There was broken glass on top of the wall. |
touch | tʌtʃ | касаться; прикоснуться | And I was fourteen years old before I touched a piano for the first time. |
town | taʊn | город | There was no TV or radio in those days. There were concerts in the town, of course, but poor people did not go to concerts. |
travel | ˈtrævl̩ | двигаться | It travelled along his arms. His fingers danced over the keys. He did not look at his hands. |
tree | tri: | дерево | Tony did not know their names. He wanted to know more about them. He wanted to know more about the trees too. |
trousers | ˈtraʊzəz | брюки | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. |
true | tru: | верный; подлинный; правдивый | It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
try (tried) | traɪ (traɪd) | пытаться; стараться; пробовать | At first I tried to write everything down in my notebook. |
Tuesday | ˈtju:zdi | вторник | But Tuesday mornings were different, because Tuesday was music day. |
turn | tɜ:n | поворачиваться; поворачивать | He turned to a tall woman, who was standing in the corner. |
turn on | tɜ:n ɒn | зажигать; включать | Tony turned on the tap. |
turn round | tɜ:n ˈraʊnd | обернуться | Tony turned round. His face was white. ‘Don’t tell the police,’ he said. ‘Please. I haven’t stolen anything. I haven’t done anything wrong.’ |
TV | ˌti:ˈvi: | телевидение | There was no TV or radio in those days. There were concerts in the town, of course, but poor people did not go to concerts. |
twelfth | twelfθ | двенадцатое | ‘There’s a music competition in the town on June 12th,’ said Mr Gordon one evening. |
twelve | twelv | 12 | Then twelve o’clock came. Mrs Lark said ‘goodbye’ and locked up the piano for another week. |
twenty | ˈtwenti | 20 | And one summer, when I was twenty, I asked Miss Linda Wood a very important question. |
two | tu: | два | They got out of the bus and walked two kilometres in the hot sun. |
uncomfortable | ʌnˈkʌmftəbl̩ | испытывающий неудобство; испытывающий неловкость | He felt lost and uncomfortable. |
under | ˈʌndər | под | He wanted to feel the black and white keys under his fingers again. He wanted to hear the music in his mind… |
understand (understood, understood) | ˌʌndəˈstænd (ˌʌndəˈstʊd, ˌʌndəˈstʊd) | понимать | ‘Thank you, Tony. Now I understand. And I want to help you.’ |
unhappy | ʌnˈhæpi | несчастный | ‘I can’t read music,’ said Tony. ‘We didn’t have music lessons at my school.’ He looked unhappy and thoughtful. |
unlucky | ʌnˈlʌki | невезучий | He began to look for a job. But he was unlucky. |
unmusical | ʌnˈmju:zɪkl̩ | немузыкальный; немелодичный | He touched the keys. They made a loud, unmusical noise. |
until | ʌnˈtɪl | до, до того как | School doesn’t start again until September. I can put the piano here. No one will come here. |
up | ʌp | вверх, подняться, наверх | Anthony got up. ‘Oh, my feet hurt!’ he thought. He followed the man up some stairs. |
up and down | ʌp ənd daʊn | туда и сюда; вперед и назад; повсюду; вверх и вниз | Every Tuesday her fat little fingers flew like birds up and down the keys of the piano. |
upstairs | ˌʌpˈsteəz | вверх по лестнице; наверх; на верхний этаж | Then I walked upstairs to the dressing-room. |
usually | ˈju:ʒəli | обычно | In those days, poor children usually left school when they were thirteen. |
vegetables | ˈvedʒɪtəbl̩z | овощи | There were flowers and vegetables and a few fruit trees. |
very | ˈveri | очень | I knocked, and a tall man opened it. He was very old, but his eyes were blue and bright. |
very much | ˈveri ˈmʌtʃ | очень сильно | Mr Wood loved Linda dearly, but he wanted a son very much. He was like a father to Tony. |
very well | ˈveri wel | очень хорошо | ‘Very well,’ said the teacher. ‘But he’s too quick for me. Soon he’ll need a real teacher.’ |
village | ˈvɪlɪdʒ | деревенский; сельский; деревня | The bus stopped in every village. |
visit | ˈvɪzɪt | посещать; навещать; посещение; визит | Sometimes Tony visited his family. He enjoyed those visits, but he was always happy to leave again. |
voice | vɔɪs | голос | There was a knock at the door of the dressing-room. ‘Two minutes, Sir Anthony!’ said a voice. |
wait | weɪt | ждать | Usually he just sat at his desk and waited quietly for four o’clock to come, when he could go home. |
waiting room | ˈweɪtɪŋ ru:m | помещение для ожидания | Anthony sat in the waiting room for a long time. |
wake (woke, waken) up | weɪk (wəʊk, ˈweɪkən) ʌp | проснуться | When he woke up the music was still there. |
walk | wɔ:k | идти, идти пешком | I showed my ticket to the doorman and went into the theatre. Then I walked upstairs to the dressing-room. |
walk away | wɔ:k əˈweɪ | уходить | ‘Now stop asking questions, young Pip. I’m a busy man.’ He walked away. |
wall | wɔ:l | стена | On the wall there was a big picture of Sir Anthony at the piano. |
want | ˈwɒnt | хотеть, нуждаться, требоваться, понадобиться | It was Sir Anthony’s eightieth birthday concert and everybody wanted a ticket. |
warm | wɔ:m | теплый | The cakes were still warm… |
wash | wɒʃ | мыться; стирать | Everybody washed in the kitchen. |
watch | wɒtʃ | наблюдать, следить | He watched them moving very slowly through the long, green grass. They looked big and quiet. |
water | ˈwɔ:tə | вода | At seven o’clock Tony washed in cold water and put on his clean shirt. Then he went to the kitchen with Pip and John. |
wear (wore, worn) | weə (wɔ:, wɔ:n) | носить одежду; быть одетым во что-то | He was wearing his best suit. |
week | wi:k | неделя | He left school two weeks ago. |
weekly | ˈwi:kli | еженедельная газета | He was reading his Farmer’s Weekly. |
well | wel | что ж, ну | ‘Well,’ he said to himself, ‘of course I want to touch them. That’s why I’m here!’ And he began to play. |
well (better, best) | wel (ˈbetə, best) | хорошо (лучше, самое лучшее) | It was an exciting story and he told it well. At first I tried to write everything down in my notebook. |
what | ˈwɒt | что | ‘So this is Lady Evans,’ I thought. ‘What a nice face she has! She looks like a farmer’s wife.’ |
what about …? | ˈwɒt əˈbaʊt | как насчет …?, может …? | He began to look for a job. But he was unlucky. The factory did not want him. The shops did not want him. Then his mother thought, ‘What about farming?’ |
What time… | ˈwɒt ˈtaɪm | Когда …? В котором часу …? | ‘What time are we going?’ asked Pip. ‘Eight o’clock,’ answered Tony. |
wheel | ˈwi:l̩ | колесо | He had a little piano on wheels, and a poor thin monkey which sat on top of it. |
when | wen | когда | Did you start to learn the piano when you were three, like Mozart?’ |
where | weə | куда, где | ‘Where are you going?’ asked John. |
which | wɪtʃ | который, какой | ‘Don’t tell me. You’re a reporter. Which newspaper do you work for?’ |
while | ˈwaɪl | в то время как, пока | At night, while he slept, his mind was still full of music. Small black notes danced in front of his eyes. |
white | waɪt | белый, бледный | He was wearing black trousers and a beautiful white shirt. He had a lot of straight, silvery hair. |
who | ˈhu: | кто, который | He turned to a tall woman, who was standing in the corner. She smiled at me with friendly brown eyes. |
why | ˈwaɪ | почему | ‘Why does he work here?’ one of the children asked one day. ‘He doesn’t like us.’ |
wife | waɪf | жена | She looks like a farmer’s wife. |
win (won, won) | wɪn (wʌn, wʌn) | выиграть; завоевать | ‘He’s going to win the competition,’ Mr Gordon said to himself. |
window | ˈwɪndəʊ | окно | The smell of the flowers came in through the open windows of the bus. |
winner | ˈwɪnə | победитель | He knew that he was the winner because he saw his photograph in the newspaper the next day. |
winter | ˈwɪntə | зима | Farmers work hard in the winter too. |
woman (women) | ˈwʊmən (ˈwɪmɪn) | женщина (женщины) | She was usually a quiet woman, but her eyes were bright and excited. |
wonderful | ˈwʌndəfəl | замечательный; изумительный; чудесный; удивительный; потрясающе | I don’t want any money – I’ll be very happy to teach this wonderful boy. |
wood | wʊd | дерево; древесина | The piano was made of beautiful, dark brown wood. |
wooden | ˈwʊdn̩ | деревянный | They walked with him to an old wooden building near the farmhouse. |
word | ˈwɜ:d | слово | It’s a strange story, but every word of it is true. |
work | ˈwɜ:k | работа | She was not a very good pianist, but she liked children and she enjoyed her work. She knew a lot of songs too. |
work (worked/wrought, worked/wrought) | ˈwɜ:k (wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t, wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t) | работать | ‘Don’t tell me. You’re a reporter. Which newspaper do you work for?’ |
work (worked/wrought, worked/wrought) for | wɜ:k (wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t, wɜ:kt/ˈrɔ:t) fɔ: | работать для, работать на | ‘Don’t tell me. You’re a reporter. Which newspaper do you work for?’ |
world | wɜ:ld | мир | ‘That’s right,’ said John. ‘Farming is the best job in the world!’ |
Would you like…? | wʊd ju ˈlaɪk | хотел бы ты …? | ‘Would you like to work for me, Tony?’ asked Mr Wood. ‘Would you like to be a farm boy?’ |
write (wrote, written) | ˈraɪt (rəʊt, ˈrɪtn̩) | писать | Now go, my dear, and write your story. |
write (wrote, written) down | ˈraɪt (rəʊt, ˈrɪtn̩) daʊn | записывать | At first I tried to write everything down in my notebook. |
writing | ˈraɪtɪŋ | письмо, писание, написание | ‘This is easy,’ he said to Linda. ‘It’s like writing. The notes tell your fingers what to do.’ |
wrong | rɒŋ | дурной, неладный | ‘Don’t tell the police,’ he said. ‘Please. I haven’t stolen anything. I haven’t done anything wrong.’ |
yard | jɑ:d | двор | The school yard was very small. |
year | ˈjiə | год | Her name was Linda, and she was a year younger than Tony. |
years old | ˈjiəz əʊld | лет | And I was fourteen years old before I touched a piano for the first time.’ He saw the surprise on my face. |
yellow | ˈjeləʊ | желтый | They got out of the bus and walked two kilometres in the hot sun. There were white and yellow flowers at the side of the road. |
you know | ju nəʊ | знаете, понимаете | Please give him a job, Mr Wood. We need the money. We’ve got six children, you know.’ |
you see | ju ˈsi: | дело в том, видите, понимаете | You see, I left school when I was thirteen. Everybody called me Tony in those days. I worked on a farm…’ |
young | jʌŋ | молодой, юный | Come in and sit down. Ask your questions. We were young once, weren’t we, Linda? |
young child(children) | jʌŋ tʃaɪld (ˈtʃɪldrən) | ребенок (дети) младшего возраста | The desks and chairs were very small, because it was a school for young children. |
younger | ˈjʌŋɡə | младше | Her name was Linda, and she was a year younger than Tony. |
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