فیلم ها GMAT-GRE-TOEFL-IELTS-آموزشگاه زبان صبای سحر-چمران جنوب، بلوار جلال آل احمد، جنب داروخانه شبانه روزی جلال آل احمد، پلاک 87، طبقه سوم تلفن: 42-88679341 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs 2024-05-05T23:08:04+00:00 IELTSTOEFLCENTER info@ieltstoeflcenter.com Joomla! - Open Source Content Management A Most Violent Year 2014 2015-12-10T16:06:57+00:00 2015-12-10T16:06:57+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/510-a-most-violent-year-2014 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="621"> <p align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1394/A Most Violent Year 2014 idioms.pdf"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="font-size: 24pt; font-family: 'arial black', 'avant garde';"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1394/A Most Violent Year 2014.srt">برای دانلود زیر نویس کلیک کنید</a></span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">7/10·IMDb 90%·Rotten Tomatoes 79%·Metacritic In 1981 New York, a fuel supplier (Oscar Isaac) tries to adhere to his own moral compass amid the rampant violence, corruption and decay that threaten his family and his business. A crime drama set in New York City during the winter of 1981, statistically one of the most violent years in the city's history, and centered on the lives of an immigrant and his family trying to expand their business and capitalize on opportunities as the rampant violence, decay, and corruption of the day drag them in and threaten to destroy all they have built. Release date: November 13, 2014 (USA) Director: J. C. Chandor Screenplay: J. C. Chandor Cinematography: Bradford Young Awards: National Board of Review Award for Best Film, More idioms and slangs skimming money = take money illegally mortgage = the money you get from the bank but your house is the guarantee of the payment coward = someone without courage, not brave garment business = clothes close the transaction = finish the job mazel tov = exclamation (among Jews) congratulations; good luck. He has been working his ass off = workimg too hard pretending like the elephant perched on the corner of my desk isn't there. = pretend the obvious is not there Synopsis Abel Morales is a businessman who tries to do everything honestly. He has been building his business of fuel distribution to quite a big position. He now lands a deal to purchase a bay‐front storage facility that will increase the business greatly. But this deal has a risky clause which states that if Abel fails to pay the rest of the due payment, the facility and the deposit will be gone. His trucks have been targeted by robbers from the last few months, which scared his drivers. He even gets an intimidation visit by burglars. Additionally, the DA wants to charge the business with felony counts. His wife suddenly reveals a gun she purchases for her protection, with which he strongly disagrees. Despite his disapproval, Abel's drivers arm themselves with guns but lack the permit for them. When another heist occurs and one of his drivers fires shots, Abel has to go himself and find the missing driver to turn him to the police. The driver Julian is found, but he ran away when he's about to be turned in. Abel goes every where to get loans as the closure time nears. From one of his competitors the Lefkowicz, Abel gets a deal for 500 thousand dollars or the 1.5 millions he needs. The facility owner grants him an extra three day time, in which he uses to see his brother to ask him to mortgage his apartment to help Abel. He also convenes all his other surrounding competitors saying that he knows at least one of them is in league with his trucks hijackers. On his way home he accidentally finds one of his trucks being hijacked. He follows the truck through a chase. After capturing the robber he finds that one of his competitors has been buying the stolen fuel. When the money needed is only 600 thousand more, he runs out of time. But his wife suddenly pulls out a bank account with enough cash in it. To his surprise, his wife has been skimming money from the company all this time. Finally he decides to use the money and completes the deal. Julian comes to the facility; angry thinking that he gets nothing while Abel gets everything. Abel convinces him theres a second chance, but he commit suicide then and there. Abel then asks for a deal with the visiting DA for his business.</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="621"> <p align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1394/A Most Violent Year 2014 idioms.pdf"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="font-size: 24pt; font-family: 'arial black', 'avant garde';"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1394/A Most Violent Year 2014.srt">برای دانلود زیر نویس کلیک کنید</a></span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">7/10·IMDb 90%·Rotten Tomatoes 79%·Metacritic In 1981 New York, a fuel supplier (Oscar Isaac) tries to adhere to his own moral compass amid the rampant violence, corruption and decay that threaten his family and his business. A crime drama set in New York City during the winter of 1981, statistically one of the most violent years in the city's history, and centered on the lives of an immigrant and his family trying to expand their business and capitalize on opportunities as the rampant violence, decay, and corruption of the day drag them in and threaten to destroy all they have built. Release date: November 13, 2014 (USA) Director: J. C. Chandor Screenplay: J. C. Chandor Cinematography: Bradford Young Awards: National Board of Review Award for Best Film, More idioms and slangs skimming money = take money illegally mortgage = the money you get from the bank but your house is the guarantee of the payment coward = someone without courage, not brave garment business = clothes close the transaction = finish the job mazel tov = exclamation (among Jews) congratulations; good luck. He has been working his ass off = workimg too hard pretending like the elephant perched on the corner of my desk isn't there. = pretend the obvious is not there Synopsis Abel Morales is a businessman who tries to do everything honestly. He has been building his business of fuel distribution to quite a big position. He now lands a deal to purchase a bay‐front storage facility that will increase the business greatly. But this deal has a risky clause which states that if Abel fails to pay the rest of the due payment, the facility and the deposit will be gone. His trucks have been targeted by robbers from the last few months, which scared his drivers. He even gets an intimidation visit by burglars. Additionally, the DA wants to charge the business with felony counts. His wife suddenly reveals a gun she purchases for her protection, with which he strongly disagrees. Despite his disapproval, Abel's drivers arm themselves with guns but lack the permit for them. When another heist occurs and one of his drivers fires shots, Abel has to go himself and find the missing driver to turn him to the police. The driver Julian is found, but he ran away when he's about to be turned in. Abel goes every where to get loans as the closure time nears. From one of his competitors the Lefkowicz, Abel gets a deal for 500 thousand dollars or the 1.5 millions he needs. The facility owner grants him an extra three day time, in which he uses to see his brother to ask him to mortgage his apartment to help Abel. He also convenes all his other surrounding competitors saying that he knows at least one of them is in league with his trucks hijackers. On his way home he accidentally finds one of his trucks being hijacked. He follows the truck through a chase. After capturing the robber he finds that one of his competitors has been buying the stolen fuel. When the money needed is only 600 thousand more, he runs out of time. But his wife suddenly pulls out a bank account with enough cash in it. To his surprise, his wife has been skimming money from the company all this time. Finally he decides to use the money and completes the deal. Julian comes to the facility; angry thinking that he gets nothing while Abel gets everything. Abel convinces him theres a second chance, but he commit suicide then and there. Abel then asks for a deal with the visiting DA for his business.</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Birdman 2014 2015-09-26T09:53:24+00:00 2015-09-26T09:53:24+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/114-birdman-2014 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="833"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Birdman-2014%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Birdman</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Summary<br /> A washed-up actor, who once played an iconic superhero, battles his ego and attempts to recover<br /> his family, his career and himself in the days leading up to the opening of his Broadway play.<br /> Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu (as Alejandro G. Iñárritu)<br /> Writers: Alejandro González Iñárritu (as Alejandro G. Iñárritu) , Nicolás Giacobone, 3 more<br /> credits »<br /> Stars: Michael Keaton, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2562232/<br /> idioms and slangs<br /> I will be earning my living = making money through wotking = نان در آوردن<br /> I will be baring my soul = To reveal one's innermost feelings and thoughts, especially<br /> concerning one's doubts, regrets = حرف دل خود را زدن<br /> If she likes us, we run. = succeed = موفق شدن = خرمون از پل گذشته = پول دار ميشيم<br /> If she doesn't, we're dead. = if the movie critic dislikes us, we go bankrupt = بدبخت می شيم<br /> Tonight was about seeing if it's even alive, if it can bleed. = is it still working?<br /> This isn't a backlot, Riggan. = noun an outdoor area in a film studio where large exterior sets<br /> are made and some outside scenes are filmed.<br /> this is New York City. This is how we do things.<br /> Are we good? = is everything fine? = ؟ اوضاع احوال مان خوبه<br /> Depression started to eat away at him. = erode or destroy him gradually = مثل خوره به<br /> جانش افتاد<br /> My head was a jar of Bolognese. =<br /> Eat me! = a taboo idiom meaning get lost or go …. Yourself = گورت رو گم کن<br /> You antagonize people. = make them your enemy = مردم رو دشمن خودت ميکنی<br /> Truth or dare? = a game where you either tell an embarrassing truth or do sth embarrassing<br /> You f… dilettante! = a beginner with little knowledge<br /> It's a mental formation. I'm not a mental formation.<br /> One hour till curtain! = next hour the show begins<br /> I'm the one keeping this afloat! = without me this company goes bankrupt = من نباشم که رو<br /> هواييد<br /> This is exciting. We have a full house. Jake just told me. = full of spectators = سالن پر است<br /> Let me put the blood rig on. = device to pretend that the actor is bleeding = ماسماسک خون نما<br /> Give the people what they want...old‐fashioned apocalyptic por‐n.<br /> Birdman: The Phoenix rises. = success after a disaster = سيمرغ بيدار می شود<br /> Pimple‐faced gamers creaming in their pants. = defecate = they will be losers = از ترس خود را<br /> خراب کردن</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="833"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Birdman-2014%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Birdman</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Summary<br /> A washed-up actor, who once played an iconic superhero, battles his ego and attempts to recover<br /> his family, his career and himself in the days leading up to the opening of his Broadway play.<br /> Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu (as Alejandro G. Iñárritu)<br /> Writers: Alejandro González Iñárritu (as Alejandro G. Iñárritu) , Nicolás Giacobone, 3 more<br /> credits »<br /> Stars: Michael Keaton, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2562232/<br /> idioms and slangs<br /> I will be earning my living = making money through wotking = نان در آوردن<br /> I will be baring my soul = To reveal one's innermost feelings and thoughts, especially<br /> concerning one's doubts, regrets = حرف دل خود را زدن<br /> If she likes us, we run. = succeed = موفق شدن = خرمون از پل گذشته = پول دار ميشيم<br /> If she doesn't, we're dead. = if the movie critic dislikes us, we go bankrupt = بدبخت می شيم<br /> Tonight was about seeing if it's even alive, if it can bleed. = is it still working?<br /> This isn't a backlot, Riggan. = noun an outdoor area in a film studio where large exterior sets<br /> are made and some outside scenes are filmed.<br /> this is New York City. This is how we do things.<br /> Are we good? = is everything fine? = ؟ اوضاع احوال مان خوبه<br /> Depression started to eat away at him. = erode or destroy him gradually = مثل خوره به<br /> جانش افتاد<br /> My head was a jar of Bolognese. =<br /> Eat me! = a taboo idiom meaning get lost or go …. Yourself = گورت رو گم کن<br /> You antagonize people. = make them your enemy = مردم رو دشمن خودت ميکنی<br /> Truth or dare? = a game where you either tell an embarrassing truth or do sth embarrassing<br /> You f… dilettante! = a beginner with little knowledge<br /> It's a mental formation. I'm not a mental formation.<br /> One hour till curtain! = next hour the show begins<br /> I'm the one keeping this afloat! = without me this company goes bankrupt = من نباشم که رو<br /> هواييد<br /> This is exciting. We have a full house. Jake just told me. = full of spectators = سالن پر است<br /> Let me put the blood rig on. = device to pretend that the actor is bleeding = ماسماسک خون نما<br /> Give the people what they want...old‐fashioned apocalyptic por‐n.<br /> Birdman: The Phoenix rises. = success after a disaster = سيمرغ بيدار می شود<br /> Pimple‐faced gamers creaming in their pants. = defecate = they will be losers = از ترس خود را<br /> خراب کردن</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Blended 2014 2015-09-26T10:26:53+00:00 2015-09-26T10:26:53+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/115-blended-2014 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="text-align: left;" height="1726"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Blended%202014%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Blended</span></p> <br /> blended 2014<br /> Recently divorced mom Lauren (Drew Barrymore) and widowed dad Jim<br /> (Adam Sandler) let their friends push them into a blind date, which goes<br /> disastrously wrong. Unsurprisingly, neither wants to see the other ever again.<br /> However, fate intervenes when both Jim and Lauren, unbeknown to each<br /> other, purchase one-half of the same vacation package at a South African<br /> resort; they and their children are forced to share the same suite and<br /> participate in a slew of family activities together. (imdb)<br /> Initial release: May 23, 2014 (United Kingdom, USA)<br /> Director: Frank Coraci<br /> Running time: 1h 57m<br /> \Initial DVD release: August 26, 2014 (USA)<br /> Producers: Adam Sandler, Jack Giarraputo, Mike Karz<br /> Critic reviews<br /> The movie spends a lot of time venturing to develop a meaningful relationship between the<br /> two families and, at times, the filmmakers actually brush against a deeper (not to mention<br /> smarter) story.<br /> Ben Kendrick·Screen Rant<br /> The exasperating result is a movie that gets so much right even as it insists on blending in<br /> so much of Adam Sandler trademark naughtiness.<br /> Adam R. Holz·Plugged In<br /> Idioms, slangs and expressions<br /> Roofie her and shave her head = drug her = spike her drink/food = چيز خورکردن کسی<br /> I "L" word you = love<br /> We set it last night = arranged it<br /> He needs Retalin = a pill which help with concentration<br /> What a milf dress = beautiful dress<br /> One of our selling points = a particular quality that something has which will make people<br /> want to buy it = مزيت در فروش کالای يک شرکت که آن را از رقبا پيش می اندازد<br /> I don't want to drop North on camera = Kim Kardashian's baby<br /> This dress changes you from a person they cheat on to a person they cheat with<br /> He's a big pile of crap = a jerk = فرد عوضی<br /> ٢<br /> A bit on the plus size = a bit fat<br /> That's one fugly girl = very ugly<br /> How's your math homework coming? = how's your progress?<br /> A buffoon = FOOL, idiot, dunce, ignoramus, simpleton, jackass; informal chump,<br /> blockhead, nincompoop, numbskull, dope, twit, nitwit, halfwit, clot, birdbrain, twerp<br /> A lasting memory = a good one<br /> I'm putting you down = writing your name on the noticeboard<br /> How about a fist bump? Are we cool? = two fists meeting which shows we are<br /> friends<br /> How about going over to the snack bar for a chill pill? = a pill for relaxing tension<br /> Every kid has to play two innings = a time period in baseball or softball<br /> It's ok. Shake it off = relax<br /> He's gonna have one of his meltdowns = bad time, the time when you are not fine<br /> Shocker. He cancelled = I am surprised<br /> I'm racking my brain trying to figure out … = working too hard mentally<br /> Are you taking a hit out on somebody = kill someone?<br /> What a progressive mother = a mother who is permissive/not strict<br /> I found a centerfold under his bed = 1. the two pages that face each other in the middle<br /> of a magazine or newspaper 2. a picture of a woman with no clothes on that covers the<br /> two pages in the middle of a magazine<br /> He taped a picture of the babysitter on it = stuck = چسباندن-چسب کاری کردن<br /> I tried to tape it back up after tearing it up = stick it together = با چسب تکه های پاره را<br /> چسباندن<br /> You can hardly tell = very hard to ascertain , determine, work out, make out, deduce,<br /> discern, perceive, see, identify, recognize, understand, comprehend; informal figure out;<br /> Brit. informal suss out.= به سختی بتوان گفت<br /> Her "friend" just paid a visit = she began her menstruation = دوران قائدگی اش شروع شد<br /> You lost me. = I'm not following = متوجه نمی شوم<br /> ٣<br /> You must be doing your kegels = a kind of exercise<br /> Thanks for selling me out back there = betray = خوب مارو فروختی<br /> I panicked = I got scared = هول شدم<br /> Your wife must have been a saint = how could your wife tolerate you?<br /> I have sth to sort out with your mom = to settle a dispute<br /> The old bag mixed up our cards = the old woman<br /> A high phlegmy voice = husky, gravelly, rough voice = صدای خش دار<br /> Our cards got switched = exchanged = کارت هايمان قاطی شد<br /> Your dad just dropped a major bomb on us = he ruined our plan, gave us bad news<br /> Special needs people = disabled people = معلولين<br /> Joint custody = both parents keep the kids = حضانت مشترک<br /> Refund policies = instruction on how to return the customer's money<br /> You gotta bulk up for the season = get stronger and heavier = .... بايد کمی چاق شوی چله شوی بلکه پ<br /> She is trying out for girls' varsity = university team<br /> Are you voguing right now? = walking like a model = عين مدل ها راه رفتن<br /> Swiss army knife = a pocket knife or multi-tool manufactured by Victorinox AG (and up to<br /> 2005 also by Wenger SA).<br /> He's goofy and flabby all over = he makes mistakes and is fat = ادم گندزن و خپلو<br /> That was out of context = the whole situation was not explained = خارج از فحوا<br /> Prince Valiant haircut = type of haircut</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="text-align: left;" height="1726"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Blended%202014%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Blended</span></p> <br /> blended 2014<br /> Recently divorced mom Lauren (Drew Barrymore) and widowed dad Jim<br /> (Adam Sandler) let their friends push them into a blind date, which goes<br /> disastrously wrong. Unsurprisingly, neither wants to see the other ever again.<br /> However, fate intervenes when both Jim and Lauren, unbeknown to each<br /> other, purchase one-half of the same vacation package at a South African<br /> resort; they and their children are forced to share the same suite and<br /> participate in a slew of family activities together. (imdb)<br /> Initial release: May 23, 2014 (United Kingdom, USA)<br /> Director: Frank Coraci<br /> Running time: 1h 57m<br /> \Initial DVD release: August 26, 2014 (USA)<br /> Producers: Adam Sandler, Jack Giarraputo, Mike Karz<br /> Critic reviews<br /> The movie spends a lot of time venturing to develop a meaningful relationship between the<br /> two families and, at times, the filmmakers actually brush against a deeper (not to mention<br /> smarter) story.<br /> Ben Kendrick·Screen Rant<br /> The exasperating result is a movie that gets so much right even as it insists on blending in<br /> so much of Adam Sandler trademark naughtiness.<br /> Adam R. Holz·Plugged In<br /> Idioms, slangs and expressions<br /> Roofie her and shave her head = drug her = spike her drink/food = چيز خورکردن کسی<br /> I "L" word you = love<br /> We set it last night = arranged it<br /> He needs Retalin = a pill which help with concentration<br /> What a milf dress = beautiful dress<br /> One of our selling points = a particular quality that something has which will make people<br /> want to buy it = مزيت در فروش کالای يک شرکت که آن را از رقبا پيش می اندازد<br /> I don't want to drop North on camera = Kim Kardashian's baby<br /> This dress changes you from a person they cheat on to a person they cheat with<br /> He's a big pile of crap = a jerk = فرد عوضی<br /> ٢<br /> A bit on the plus size = a bit fat<br /> That's one fugly girl = very ugly<br /> How's your math homework coming? = how's your progress?<br /> A buffoon = FOOL, idiot, dunce, ignoramus, simpleton, jackass; informal chump,<br /> blockhead, nincompoop, numbskull, dope, twit, nitwit, halfwit, clot, birdbrain, twerp<br /> A lasting memory = a good one<br /> I'm putting you down = writing your name on the noticeboard<br /> How about a fist bump? Are we cool? = two fists meeting which shows we are<br /> friends<br /> How about going over to the snack bar for a chill pill? = a pill for relaxing tension<br /> Every kid has to play two innings = a time period in baseball or softball<br /> It's ok. Shake it off = relax<br /> He's gonna have one of his meltdowns = bad time, the time when you are not fine<br /> Shocker. He cancelled = I am surprised<br /> I'm racking my brain trying to figure out … = working too hard mentally<br /> Are you taking a hit out on somebody = kill someone?<br /> What a progressive mother = a mother who is permissive/not strict<br /> I found a centerfold under his bed = 1. the two pages that face each other in the middle<br /> of a magazine or newspaper 2. a picture of a woman with no clothes on that covers the<br /> two pages in the middle of a magazine<br /> He taped a picture of the babysitter on it = stuck = چسباندن-چسب کاری کردن<br /> I tried to tape it back up after tearing it up = stick it together = با چسب تکه های پاره را<br /> چسباندن<br /> You can hardly tell = very hard to ascertain , determine, work out, make out, deduce,<br /> discern, perceive, see, identify, recognize, understand, comprehend; informal figure out;<br /> Brit. informal suss out.= به سختی بتوان گفت<br /> Her "friend" just paid a visit = she began her menstruation = دوران قائدگی اش شروع شد<br /> You lost me. = I'm not following = متوجه نمی شوم<br /> ٣<br /> You must be doing your kegels = a kind of exercise<br /> Thanks for selling me out back there = betray = خوب مارو فروختی<br /> I panicked = I got scared = هول شدم<br /> Your wife must have been a saint = how could your wife tolerate you?<br /> I have sth to sort out with your mom = to settle a dispute<br /> The old bag mixed up our cards = the old woman<br /> A high phlegmy voice = husky, gravelly, rough voice = صدای خش دار<br /> Our cards got switched = exchanged = کارت هايمان قاطی شد<br /> Your dad just dropped a major bomb on us = he ruined our plan, gave us bad news<br /> Special needs people = disabled people = معلولين<br /> Joint custody = both parents keep the kids = حضانت مشترک<br /> Refund policies = instruction on how to return the customer's money<br /> You gotta bulk up for the season = get stronger and heavier = .... بايد کمی چاق شوی چله شوی بلکه پ<br /> She is trying out for girls' varsity = university team<br /> Are you voguing right now? = walking like a model = عين مدل ها راه رفتن<br /> Swiss army knife = a pocket knife or multi-tool manufactured by Victorinox AG (and up to<br /> 2005 also by Wenger SA).<br /> He's goofy and flabby all over = he makes mistakes and is fat = ادم گندزن و خپلو<br /> That was out of context = the whole situation was not explained = خارج از فحوا<br /> Prince Valiant haircut = type of haircut</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Blue Jasmine 2013 2017-04-28T07:31:11+00:00 2017-04-28T07:31:11+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/1196-blue-jasmine-2013 <p> </p> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td> <p align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1396/Blue Jasmine 2013.pdf"><img src="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Download-Button.png" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><span class="fontstyle0">Telegram Channel: </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #0563c1;"><a href="https://t.me/Sabaitc">@sabaitc</a><br /> <a href="http://www.ieltstoeflcenter.com">www.ieltstoeflcenter.com</a><br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0">Direct Link :<br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #0563c1;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs">http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs</a><br /> </span> <span class="fontstyle0">Blue Jasmine 2013<br /> </span><span style="font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12pt;"><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #000000;">1. he swept me off my feet = I fell in love with her<br /> 2. It wouldn't wash me out? = exhaust<br /> 3. The match was washed out = cancelled due to rain<br /> 4. She had no panache = no style<br /> 5. Lug sb's furniture upstairs = carry<br /> 6. We ate franks and beans = type of food<br /> 7. While she gets back on her feet = recover<br /> 8. When all those diamonds and minks were flying in, she looked the other<br /> way = when she was rich, she ignored her husband's deceptions<br /> 9. I have no head for that sort of thing = it is hard for me<br /> 10. Famous last words! = I don't believe it<br /> 11. Your place is homey = cozy, nice<br /> 12. I thought you were tapped out = poor, no money<br /> 13. I've run up some serous debts = </span><span class="fontstyle2">بدهی بالا اوردم<br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #000000;">14. I splurge from habit =spend too much<br /> 15. Met Gala = a charity occasion<br /> 16. He is a piece of work = intolerable<br /> 17. He is a handyman = fixes or repairs things<br /> 18. We stashed the kids with Aggie's sister = she is taking care of them.</span> </span></p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <p> </p> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td> <p align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Estelahat Films/Film/1396/Blue Jasmine 2013.pdf"><img src="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/Download/Download-Button.png" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><span class="fontstyle0">Telegram Channel: </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #0563c1;"><a href="https://t.me/Sabaitc">@sabaitc</a><br /> <a href="http://www.ieltstoeflcenter.com">www.ieltstoeflcenter.com</a><br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0">Direct Link :<br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #0563c1;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs">http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs</a><br /> </span> <span class="fontstyle0">Blue Jasmine 2013<br /> </span><span style="font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12pt;"><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #000000;">1. he swept me off my feet = I fell in love with her<br /> 2. It wouldn't wash me out? = exhaust<br /> 3. The match was washed out = cancelled due to rain<br /> 4. She had no panache = no style<br /> 5. Lug sb's furniture upstairs = carry<br /> 6. We ate franks and beans = type of food<br /> 7. While she gets back on her feet = recover<br /> 8. When all those diamonds and minks were flying in, she looked the other<br /> way = when she was rich, she ignored her husband's deceptions<br /> 9. I have no head for that sort of thing = it is hard for me<br /> 10. Famous last words! = I don't believe it<br /> 11. Your place is homey = cozy, nice<br /> 12. I thought you were tapped out = poor, no money<br /> 13. I've run up some serous debts = </span><span class="fontstyle2">بدهی بالا اوردم<br /> </span><span class="fontstyle0" style="color: #000000;">14. I splurge from habit =spend too much<br /> 15. Met Gala = a charity occasion<br /> 16. He is a piece of work = intolerable<br /> 17. He is a handyman = fixes or repairs things<br /> 18. We stashed the kids with Aggie's sister = she is taking care of them.</span> </span></p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Bridesmaids 2011 2015-09-26T10:39:10+00:00 2015-09-26T10:39:10+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/126-bridesmaids-2011 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Bridesmaids.2011%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Bridesmaids</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Annie (Kristen Wiig), is a maid of honor whose life unravels as she leads her best friend,<br /> Lillian (Maya Rudolph), and a group of colorful bridesmaids (Rose Byrne, Melissa<br /> McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey and Ellie Kemper) on a wild ride down the road to<br /> matrimony. Annie's life is a mess. But when she finds out her lifetime best friend is<br /> engaged, she simply must serve as Lillian's maid of honor. Though lovelorn and broke,<br /> Annie bluffs her way through the expensive and bizarre rituals. With one chance to get it<br /> perfect, she'll show Lillian and her bridesmaids just how far you'll go for someone you<br /> love. (Imdb)<br /> http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1478338/<br /> Slangs, idioms and expressions used in the movie (by Rahmat Vahdani Sanavi)<br /> Your mom is my sponsor in AA = supports me in alcoholics anonymous<br /> My pits are sweating = armpits<br /> Are you sure you're up for it? = ready to do it<br /> A lot to put on your plate = a lot of responsibility<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 2 of 11<br /> Painting those giant bangs was a royal pain in my can = painting the hair bangs<br /> was very hard<br /> He realized he had hit his bottom = couldn't take it any more<br /> Thanks for the pep talk = exciting speech intended to motivate people<br /> Greets him in the morning beaver first = a woman's genitalia or pubic hair<br /> Cup your hands/… = form a cup with your hands<br /> We are on different rhythms here = we disagree<br /> You slept over = slept longer than expected<br /> We're on the same page = we agree<br /> Freeloaders = people who only receive and never give<br /> I hung out with Ted = spent time together<br /> You are a total catch = charming, lovely person<br /> Anyone would be psyched to be with you = happy<br /> Monkey lamps at Terry's = a type of lamp<br /> Look away = avert your gaze = look elsewhere<br /> Menstrual cramps = pain suffered during the menstruation period<br /> The car needs a wash = it's dirty<br /> You need to punch it a few times = hit it with a punch<br /> I cracked a blanket in half = cut<br /> We are in the trenches together = (doing the hard work) together<br /> I'm on the mend (healing) = improving<br /> I pin‐balled = a game with a sloping board<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 3 of 11<br /> I gotta check on the Hors d'oeuvres = a savory appetizer<br /> You saved me a shitload of money = a lot of money<br /> We ate peanut brittle = a brittle sweet made from nuts and set melted<br /> sugar.<br /> You better not keep my Lil on a leash = don't restrict Lillian too much<br /> Get it (all) out = tell me why you are upset<br /> Cream or custard =<br /> Cream puffs = kind of cake made of puff pastry filled with cream. نان خامه<br /> ای<br /> He left when the business went under = went bankrupt<br /> Poor thing she is too busy = I feel pity for her<br /> Get your shit together = start to behave correctly<br /> I've seen better tennis playing in a tampon commercial = a tube-shaped<br /> mass of cotton or similar material that a woman use during her period<br /> McMuffin = The McMuffin is a family of breakfast sandwiches in various<br /> sizes and configurations, sold by the fast-food restaurant chain<br /> McDonald's.<br /> This is such a stone‐cold pack of weirdoes = unemotional strange people<br /> Can I set you up please? (relationships) = do you want me to find you a date?<br /> Eat a big meal before a fitting = the time when trying on a new dress to see if it<br /> fits<br /> I feel a bit bloated = my stomach is so full, I am exploding<br /> The other night I was slaving away making dinner = working too hard<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 4 of 11<br /> A French‐themed shower = a shower (party for giving presents to women<br /> before wedding or birth of a child wedding) with French traditions<br /> Dip them in chocolate fondue = put it in chocolate<br /> We can top it = we can do better<br /> Paris seems a bit "been there done that" = repetitious, not innovative<br /> We should throw ideas around = brainstorm<br /> We grease up. We pull in = having sex<br /> I've got a new tube top = a piece of women's clothing that goes around<br /> your chest and back to cover your breasts but does not cover your<br /> shoulders or stomach<br /> I wanna cut the tags off =<br /> I second it = support<br /> In the bathroom bawling her eyes out = fighting<br /> I'll buzz you right in = I let you come in by buzzing the door<br /> It's a fritz Bernaise. It's couture = an expensive clothing brand. It's custom<br /> made<br /> We don't want to upstage Lilian with a big fancy dress = we shouldn't look<br /> better than the bride<br /> Start your engines = are you ready?<br /> May I interject? = can I break in or make a comment while you are talking<br /> You are stunning head to toe. That's a given = very attractive. It's for sure,<br /> undeniable<br /> You got food‐poisoning from the restaurant = become sick<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 5 of 11<br /> The sink's a goner = useless, broken<br /> It's coming out like lava = she has defecating big time<br /> My tire feels just a little low = I think the tire doesn't have enough air in it<br /> I'm not really a setup guy = organized<br /> I'm going upstairs to throw on a couple of finishing/final touches = نازک کاری<br /> I'm not over you yet = I'm not finished with you yet<br /> Boy stuff = this issue is to be shared among men not women<br /> Doesn't sound very inviting = not intersting<br /> Her hair started falling out but it grew back = hair loss<br /> Don't litter = don't throw garbage<br /> I'm anal about littering = I get very annoyed<br /> They made a special dispensation so I could become a cop here = exception,<br /> they allowed me only to get this job although I'm not originally American<br /> Flex a muscle = contract your muscle<br /> Plant your feet (position). Take aim = stand firmly<br /> Drop your left hip =<br /> Put your arms out straight<br /> Handsome thoughts about the bachelorette party<br /> Easy‐peasy = very easy<br /> She got the jump on you = she did it first<br /> Overhead bin = a box over you on a plane or a bus where you put your bags or<br /> small luggage<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 6 of 11<br /> Infringe on sb's privacy = violate<br /> We went down (plane) =<br /> More sense of community in coach = people are friendlier in the coach section<br /> of the plane<br /> I can't help but feel bad for you = I feel pity for you<br /> Cut a hole in the back of your jeans = make a hole<br /> Slutty college years to experiment to get it out of your system = engage in<br /> some indecent behavior to relax<br /> Two double 7&amp;7s = kind of drink<br /> It will give the pill a little kick = the pill will be more effective<br /> Just toss it back/off = throw<br /> Looks like somebody is relaxing = somebody is the euphemism for you<br /> It's policy = it's protocol<br /> Why don't you go lay down = lie down, relax<br /> I got to take a whizz = urinate<br /> Colonial woman on the wing churning butter on the wing dressed in tradition<br /> garb<br /> From here on out = from now on<br /> You got bits and pieces going on = you have certain personality problems but<br /> mot that serious<br /> It was very fun = enjoyable<br /> It was a bit of a curve ball/pitch sb a curve ball = it was surprising in a bad way<br /> = I didn't expect it<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 7 of 11<br /> I'd like to talk this out with you = sort it out by talking about it<br /> Woke up sweet and nice and cute = in a good mood<br /> Did u forget to take your Xanax this morning? = why are you so aggressive?<br /> Call me when your boobs come in = get lost you stupid little girl!/when you<br /> grow mature<br /> Have fun having a baby at your prom = the seller is insulting a teenage girl with<br /> teenage pregnancy<br /> Get those taillights fixed = the light at the back of the car (rear light)<br /> That's prickly = rough not soft (while touching her friend's legs)<br /> Giving out the cutest party favors = a small gift for children at a party<br /> Pink berets = a round flattish cap of felt or cloth.<br /> I didn't want you to bug yourself = bother<br /> You've really outdone yourself (above and beyond)<br /> Your face, I fooled you = an expression used when teasing someone<br /> Have a fitting = an occasion when you put on a piece of clothing that is<br /> being made for you, to see if it fits properly<br /> You would have rolled your eyes = you wouldn't like it<br /> This is over‐the‐top = too much, extreme<br /> You have no idea. Let me fill you in= explain, brief you<br /> She does not get a party favor = present<br /> I don't need a lecture right now = don't criticize me, stop giving me advice<br /> Roadside assistance = when cars break down and another car whose driver is a<br /> mechanic helps you out<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 8 of 11<br /> From here on out = from now on<br /> Come on dingus. Tick tock = hurry up idiot, getting late<br /> It is super‐gravelly = full of gravel or small rocks<br /> Heel. We are heeling (walk next to me) = lean on me<br /> I slightly over‐commit to this = I am more committed than necessary<br /> You need a little pity party = when friends get together and share their<br /> miseries<br /> Glad to see a bit of spark in you = excitement<br /> I didn't breeze through high school. They threw firecrackers at my head = relax<br /> I bought an 18‐wheeler = a truck with 18 wheels<br /> All right come on. Bring it in = I'm ready to fight or argue<br /> It's on the house = free, you don't have to pay<br /> I owe him big time = very much<br /> You made that artichoke dip? Kind of sauce with a plant called artichoke<br /> Bridal store = store where brides accessories are sold<br /> Here comes the litter bug = someone who drops rubbish in public places<br /> I'm going to hurl = vomit<br /> Have you ever seen CSI? 24 hours? Two popular series (Crime Scene<br /> Investigation)<br /> It's kind of high‐octane stuff = high-octane petrol is of a very high quality<br /> It's adrenalin pinching = I'm excited<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 9 of 11<br /> I out‐crazied you = I was more irrational<br /> get Q‐tips = a cotton swab on a small stick, used for cleaning the ears,<br /> applying make-up, etc.<br /> you need to blaze the trail for me = light it<br /> we will fix it. We will tweak it = adjust<br /> by the powers vested in me by the state of Illinois I pronounce you …. =<br /> granted to me, given to me<br /> Put your hands together for Wilson Philips = clap, applaud,<br /> Good luck!<br /> Synopsis<br /> Annie Walker (Kristen Wiig) is a single woman in her mid 30s, living in Milwaukee,<br /> Wisconsin. After her bakery failed, she lost her boyfriend and all of her savings, and<br /> now works in a jewelers store selling engagement rings. Although her flaky mother<br /> (Jill Clayburgh) encourages her to return home, Annie rents a bedroom from British<br /> immigrant Gil (Matt Lucas) and his lazy overweight sister Brynn (Rebel Wilson). She<br /> has a sexual no-strings-attached relationship with the self-absorbed Ted (Jon<br /> Hamm) but hopes for something more. Only her friendship with Lillian Donovan<br /> (Maya Rudolph) keeps her sane.<br /> Lillian becomes engaged to a wealthy banker living in Chicago and asks Annie to be<br /> her maid of honor. At the engagement party at Lillian's house, Annie meets her<br /> fellow bridesmaids: Lillian's cynical cousin Rita (Wendi McLendon-Covey), idealistic<br /> friend Becca (Ellie Kemper), raunchy future sister-in-law Megan (Melissa McCarthy)<br /> and Helen Harris, III (Rose Byrne), the beautiful but vain wife of Lillian's fiance's<br /> boss. Helen and Annie take an instant dislike to each other as they are both become<br /> immediately jealous of the other's friendship with Lillian, but Lillian persuades them<br /> to spend time together. During a game of doubles tennis, Annie and Helen are both<br /> hyper competitive, deliberately hitting each other with their volleys multiple times.<br /> A few days later, Annie takes Lillian and the bridesmaids to a Brazilian restaurant for<br /> lunch before going to a chic bridal gown studio. While Lillian is in the restroom,<br /> Annie suggests a Parisian themed bridal shower, but Helen thinks this is a bad idea.<br /> At the bridal gown studio, Helen again uses her influence to gain them access<br /> because Annie did not realize that reservations were needed. However, everyone<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 10 of 11<br /> except Helen (who did not eat the meat at the restaurant) becomes ill with food<br /> poisoning. While everyone else becomes ill, Helen orders for everyone the<br /> bridesmaids dress that she liked the best.<br /> Worried about her finances, Annie suggests a bachelorette party at Lillian's parents'<br /> beach house. Helen overrules her and books a trip to Las Vegas. Due to her pride<br /> and ego, Annie refuses to allow Helen to buy a first class ticket for her and sits in<br /> coach. Because Annie is afraid to fly, Helen gives her sedatives and alcohol. This<br /> makes Annie inebriated and paranoid, and her outbursts cause the plane to land in<br /> Caspar, Wyoming, where she, Lillian and the bridesmaids are escorted off the plane<br /> and the bachelorette party plans are thus canceled. On the bus trip back to<br /> Milwaukee, Annie tries to apologize but Lillian announces that she wants Helen to<br /> take over planning the shower and wedding.<br /> Annie continues to hope for a relationship with Ted, but begins flirting with Officer<br /> Nathan Rhoads (Chris O'Dowd), a friendly traffic cop who earlier had let her off<br /> without a ticket for broken taillights. Nathan encourages her to open a new bakery,<br /> but Annie refuses; her business's failure was so painful that she has given up baking<br /> entirely. After spending the night together, Nathan buys baking supplies so Annie<br /> can make them a delicious breakfast. Offended, Annie leaves. At her apartment, Gil<br /> and Brynn tell her she has to move out. With nowhere else to go, she moves back in<br /> with her mother.<br /> Annie travels back to Chicago for the bridal shower at Helen's house. Helen has<br /> created an elaborate version of Annie's Parisian theme, then upstages Annie's<br /> heartfelt, handmade shower gift by giving Lillian a trip to Paris to be fitted for her<br /> wedding gown by one of the world's top designers. Enraged that Helen has taken<br /> credit for the Parisian theme, Annie throws a temper tantrum and is kicked out of the<br /> shower. Lillian tells her not to come to the wedding either. On the way home, Annie's<br /> car breaks down. Nathan answers the emergency call and tells Annie how much she<br /> hurt him and not to contact him again. Ted comes to pick Annie up but, when he<br /> expects her to perform oral sex on him on the way home, she breaks off the<br /> relationship and walks home.<br /> Over the next several days, Annie becomes reclusive, refusing to leave her mother's<br /> house and watching television obsessively. Megan finds her and tells her to stop<br /> feeling sorry for herself. Annie realizes her errors and tries to make amends with<br /> Nathan by baking him a cake. But he appears to leave it on his doorstep for<br /> raccoons to eat.<br /> On the day of the wedding, which Annie doesn't intend to attend, Helen appears on<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 11 of 11<br /> the doorstep, begging for help in finding Lillian who has gone missing. Helen<br /> tearfully explains how lonely she feels and apologizes for all she has done to hurt<br /> Annie out of jealousy. They pull up alongside Nathan in his police car and after some<br /> persuasion, he begrudgingly helps Annie and Helen find Lillian at her own<br /> apartment. Lillian had gone there distressed by the micromanaging Helen had done<br /> in planning everything and her fear that Annie will have no one to be with. Annie tells<br /> her everything will be fine and helps her get ready for the wedding.<br /> Annie resumes her place as maid of honor at the wedding, which Helen has<br /> arranged to include neon signs, fireworks and an appearance by Wilson Phillips.<br /> After the wedding, Helen again apologizes to Annie and hopes they can be friends in<br /> the future. Realizing that Annie and Nathan were falling in love, Helen arranged for<br /> him to pick Annie up after the wedding. He takes her home in his squad car, lights<br /> flashing and siren wailing. (Imdb) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1478338/synopsis?ref_=ttpl_pl_syn</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Bridesmaids.2011%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Bridesmaids</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Annie (Kristen Wiig), is a maid of honor whose life unravels as she leads her best friend,<br /> Lillian (Maya Rudolph), and a group of colorful bridesmaids (Rose Byrne, Melissa<br /> McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey and Ellie Kemper) on a wild ride down the road to<br /> matrimony. Annie's life is a mess. But when she finds out her lifetime best friend is<br /> engaged, she simply must serve as Lillian's maid of honor. Though lovelorn and broke,<br /> Annie bluffs her way through the expensive and bizarre rituals. With one chance to get it<br /> perfect, she'll show Lillian and her bridesmaids just how far you'll go for someone you<br /> love. (Imdb)<br /> http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1478338/<br /> Slangs, idioms and expressions used in the movie (by Rahmat Vahdani Sanavi)<br /> Your mom is my sponsor in AA = supports me in alcoholics anonymous<br /> My pits are sweating = armpits<br /> Are you sure you're up for it? = ready to do it<br /> A lot to put on your plate = a lot of responsibility<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 2 of 11<br /> Painting those giant bangs was a royal pain in my can = painting the hair bangs<br /> was very hard<br /> He realized he had hit his bottom = couldn't take it any more<br /> Thanks for the pep talk = exciting speech intended to motivate people<br /> Greets him in the morning beaver first = a woman's genitalia or pubic hair<br /> Cup your hands/… = form a cup with your hands<br /> We are on different rhythms here = we disagree<br /> You slept over = slept longer than expected<br /> We're on the same page = we agree<br /> Freeloaders = people who only receive and never give<br /> I hung out with Ted = spent time together<br /> You are a total catch = charming, lovely person<br /> Anyone would be psyched to be with you = happy<br /> Monkey lamps at Terry's = a type of lamp<br /> Look away = avert your gaze = look elsewhere<br /> Menstrual cramps = pain suffered during the menstruation period<br /> The car needs a wash = it's dirty<br /> You need to punch it a few times = hit it with a punch<br /> I cracked a blanket in half = cut<br /> We are in the trenches together = (doing the hard work) together<br /> I'm on the mend (healing) = improving<br /> I pin‐balled = a game with a sloping board<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 3 of 11<br /> I gotta check on the Hors d'oeuvres = a savory appetizer<br /> You saved me a shitload of money = a lot of money<br /> We ate peanut brittle = a brittle sweet made from nuts and set melted<br /> sugar.<br /> You better not keep my Lil on a leash = don't restrict Lillian too much<br /> Get it (all) out = tell me why you are upset<br /> Cream or custard =<br /> Cream puffs = kind of cake made of puff pastry filled with cream. نان خامه<br /> ای<br /> He left when the business went under = went bankrupt<br /> Poor thing she is too busy = I feel pity for her<br /> Get your shit together = start to behave correctly<br /> I've seen better tennis playing in a tampon commercial = a tube-shaped<br /> mass of cotton or similar material that a woman use during her period<br /> McMuffin = The McMuffin is a family of breakfast sandwiches in various<br /> sizes and configurations, sold by the fast-food restaurant chain<br /> McDonald's.<br /> This is such a stone‐cold pack of weirdoes = unemotional strange people<br /> Can I set you up please? (relationships) = do you want me to find you a date?<br /> Eat a big meal before a fitting = the time when trying on a new dress to see if it<br /> fits<br /> I feel a bit bloated = my stomach is so full, I am exploding<br /> The other night I was slaving away making dinner = working too hard<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 4 of 11<br /> A French‐themed shower = a shower (party for giving presents to women<br /> before wedding or birth of a child wedding) with French traditions<br /> Dip them in chocolate fondue = put it in chocolate<br /> We can top it = we can do better<br /> Paris seems a bit "been there done that" = repetitious, not innovative<br /> We should throw ideas around = brainstorm<br /> We grease up. We pull in = having sex<br /> I've got a new tube top = a piece of women's clothing that goes around<br /> your chest and back to cover your breasts but does not cover your<br /> shoulders or stomach<br /> I wanna cut the tags off =<br /> I second it = support<br /> In the bathroom bawling her eyes out = fighting<br /> I'll buzz you right in = I let you come in by buzzing the door<br /> It's a fritz Bernaise. It's couture = an expensive clothing brand. It's custom<br /> made<br /> We don't want to upstage Lilian with a big fancy dress = we shouldn't look<br /> better than the bride<br /> Start your engines = are you ready?<br /> May I interject? = can I break in or make a comment while you are talking<br /> You are stunning head to toe. That's a given = very attractive. It's for sure,<br /> undeniable<br /> You got food‐poisoning from the restaurant = become sick<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 5 of 11<br /> The sink's a goner = useless, broken<br /> It's coming out like lava = she has defecating big time<br /> My tire feels just a little low = I think the tire doesn't have enough air in it<br /> I'm not really a setup guy = organized<br /> I'm going upstairs to throw on a couple of finishing/final touches = نازک کاری<br /> I'm not over you yet = I'm not finished with you yet<br /> Boy stuff = this issue is to be shared among men not women<br /> Doesn't sound very inviting = not intersting<br /> Her hair started falling out but it grew back = hair loss<br /> Don't litter = don't throw garbage<br /> I'm anal about littering = I get very annoyed<br /> They made a special dispensation so I could become a cop here = exception,<br /> they allowed me only to get this job although I'm not originally American<br /> Flex a muscle = contract your muscle<br /> Plant your feet (position). Take aim = stand firmly<br /> Drop your left hip =<br /> Put your arms out straight<br /> Handsome thoughts about the bachelorette party<br /> Easy‐peasy = very easy<br /> She got the jump on you = she did it first<br /> Overhead bin = a box over you on a plane or a bus where you put your bags or<br /> small luggage<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 6 of 11<br /> Infringe on sb's privacy = violate<br /> We went down (plane) =<br /> More sense of community in coach = people are friendlier in the coach section<br /> of the plane<br /> I can't help but feel bad for you = I feel pity for you<br /> Cut a hole in the back of your jeans = make a hole<br /> Slutty college years to experiment to get it out of your system = engage in<br /> some indecent behavior to relax<br /> Two double 7&amp;7s = kind of drink<br /> It will give the pill a little kick = the pill will be more effective<br /> Just toss it back/off = throw<br /> Looks like somebody is relaxing = somebody is the euphemism for you<br /> It's policy = it's protocol<br /> Why don't you go lay down = lie down, relax<br /> I got to take a whizz = urinate<br /> Colonial woman on the wing churning butter on the wing dressed in tradition<br /> garb<br /> From here on out = from now on<br /> You got bits and pieces going on = you have certain personality problems but<br /> mot that serious<br /> It was very fun = enjoyable<br /> It was a bit of a curve ball/pitch sb a curve ball = it was surprising in a bad way<br /> = I didn't expect it<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 7 of 11<br /> I'd like to talk this out with you = sort it out by talking about it<br /> Woke up sweet and nice and cute = in a good mood<br /> Did u forget to take your Xanax this morning? = why are you so aggressive?<br /> Call me when your boobs come in = get lost you stupid little girl!/when you<br /> grow mature<br /> Have fun having a baby at your prom = the seller is insulting a teenage girl with<br /> teenage pregnancy<br /> Get those taillights fixed = the light at the back of the car (rear light)<br /> That's prickly = rough not soft (while touching her friend's legs)<br /> Giving out the cutest party favors = a small gift for children at a party<br /> Pink berets = a round flattish cap of felt or cloth.<br /> I didn't want you to bug yourself = bother<br /> You've really outdone yourself (above and beyond)<br /> Your face, I fooled you = an expression used when teasing someone<br /> Have a fitting = an occasion when you put on a piece of clothing that is<br /> being made for you, to see if it fits properly<br /> You would have rolled your eyes = you wouldn't like it<br /> This is over‐the‐top = too much, extreme<br /> You have no idea. Let me fill you in= explain, brief you<br /> She does not get a party favor = present<br /> I don't need a lecture right now = don't criticize me, stop giving me advice<br /> Roadside assistance = when cars break down and another car whose driver is a<br /> mechanic helps you out<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 8 of 11<br /> From here on out = from now on<br /> Come on dingus. Tick tock = hurry up idiot, getting late<br /> It is super‐gravelly = full of gravel or small rocks<br /> Heel. We are heeling (walk next to me) = lean on me<br /> I slightly over‐commit to this = I am more committed than necessary<br /> You need a little pity party = when friends get together and share their<br /> miseries<br /> Glad to see a bit of spark in you = excitement<br /> I didn't breeze through high school. They threw firecrackers at my head = relax<br /> I bought an 18‐wheeler = a truck with 18 wheels<br /> All right come on. Bring it in = I'm ready to fight or argue<br /> It's on the house = free, you don't have to pay<br /> I owe him big time = very much<br /> You made that artichoke dip? Kind of sauce with a plant called artichoke<br /> Bridal store = store where brides accessories are sold<br /> Here comes the litter bug = someone who drops rubbish in public places<br /> I'm going to hurl = vomit<br /> Have you ever seen CSI? 24 hours? Two popular series (Crime Scene<br /> Investigation)<br /> It's kind of high‐octane stuff = high-octane petrol is of a very high quality<br /> It's adrenalin pinching = I'm excited<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 9 of 11<br /> I out‐crazied you = I was more irrational<br /> get Q‐tips = a cotton swab on a small stick, used for cleaning the ears,<br /> applying make-up, etc.<br /> you need to blaze the trail for me = light it<br /> we will fix it. We will tweak it = adjust<br /> by the powers vested in me by the state of Illinois I pronounce you …. =<br /> granted to me, given to me<br /> Put your hands together for Wilson Philips = clap, applaud,<br /> Good luck!<br /> Synopsis<br /> Annie Walker (Kristen Wiig) is a single woman in her mid 30s, living in Milwaukee,<br /> Wisconsin. After her bakery failed, she lost her boyfriend and all of her savings, and<br /> now works in a jewelers store selling engagement rings. Although her flaky mother<br /> (Jill Clayburgh) encourages her to return home, Annie rents a bedroom from British<br /> immigrant Gil (Matt Lucas) and his lazy overweight sister Brynn (Rebel Wilson). She<br /> has a sexual no-strings-attached relationship with the self-absorbed Ted (Jon<br /> Hamm) but hopes for something more. Only her friendship with Lillian Donovan<br /> (Maya Rudolph) keeps her sane.<br /> Lillian becomes engaged to a wealthy banker living in Chicago and asks Annie to be<br /> her maid of honor. At the engagement party at Lillian's house, Annie meets her<br /> fellow bridesmaids: Lillian's cynical cousin Rita (Wendi McLendon-Covey), idealistic<br /> friend Becca (Ellie Kemper), raunchy future sister-in-law Megan (Melissa McCarthy)<br /> and Helen Harris, III (Rose Byrne), the beautiful but vain wife of Lillian's fiance's<br /> boss. Helen and Annie take an instant dislike to each other as they are both become<br /> immediately jealous of the other's friendship with Lillian, but Lillian persuades them<br /> to spend time together. During a game of doubles tennis, Annie and Helen are both<br /> hyper competitive, deliberately hitting each other with their volleys multiple times.<br /> A few days later, Annie takes Lillian and the bridesmaids to a Brazilian restaurant for<br /> lunch before going to a chic bridal gown studio. While Lillian is in the restroom,<br /> Annie suggests a Parisian themed bridal shower, but Helen thinks this is a bad idea.<br /> At the bridal gown studio, Helen again uses her influence to gain them access<br /> because Annie did not realize that reservations were needed. However, everyone<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 10 of 11<br /> except Helen (who did not eat the meat at the restaurant) becomes ill with food<br /> poisoning. While everyone else becomes ill, Helen orders for everyone the<br /> bridesmaids dress that she liked the best.<br /> Worried about her finances, Annie suggests a bachelorette party at Lillian's parents'<br /> beach house. Helen overrules her and books a trip to Las Vegas. Due to her pride<br /> and ego, Annie refuses to allow Helen to buy a first class ticket for her and sits in<br /> coach. Because Annie is afraid to fly, Helen gives her sedatives and alcohol. This<br /> makes Annie inebriated and paranoid, and her outbursts cause the plane to land in<br /> Caspar, Wyoming, where she, Lillian and the bridesmaids are escorted off the plane<br /> and the bachelorette party plans are thus canceled. On the bus trip back to<br /> Milwaukee, Annie tries to apologize but Lillian announces that she wants Helen to<br /> take over planning the shower and wedding.<br /> Annie continues to hope for a relationship with Ted, but begins flirting with Officer<br /> Nathan Rhoads (Chris O'Dowd), a friendly traffic cop who earlier had let her off<br /> without a ticket for broken taillights. Nathan encourages her to open a new bakery,<br /> but Annie refuses; her business's failure was so painful that she has given up baking<br /> entirely. After spending the night together, Nathan buys baking supplies so Annie<br /> can make them a delicious breakfast. Offended, Annie leaves. At her apartment, Gil<br /> and Brynn tell her she has to move out. With nowhere else to go, she moves back in<br /> with her mother.<br /> Annie travels back to Chicago for the bridal shower at Helen's house. Helen has<br /> created an elaborate version of Annie's Parisian theme, then upstages Annie's<br /> heartfelt, handmade shower gift by giving Lillian a trip to Paris to be fitted for her<br /> wedding gown by one of the world's top designers. Enraged that Helen has taken<br /> credit for the Parisian theme, Annie throws a temper tantrum and is kicked out of the<br /> shower. Lillian tells her not to come to the wedding either. On the way home, Annie's<br /> car breaks down. Nathan answers the emergency call and tells Annie how much she<br /> hurt him and not to contact him again. Ted comes to pick Annie up but, when he<br /> expects her to perform oral sex on him on the way home, she breaks off the<br /> relationship and walks home.<br /> Over the next several days, Annie becomes reclusive, refusing to leave her mother's<br /> house and watching television obsessively. Megan finds her and tells her to stop<br /> feeling sorry for herself. Annie realizes her errors and tries to make amends with<br /> Nathan by baking him a cake. But he appears to leave it on his doorstep for<br /> raccoons to eat.<br /> On the day of the wedding, which Annie doesn't intend to attend, Helen appears on<br /> Bridesmaids 2011<br /> Page 11 of 11<br /> the doorstep, begging for help in finding Lillian who has gone missing. Helen<br /> tearfully explains how lonely she feels and apologizes for all she has done to hurt<br /> Annie out of jealousy. They pull up alongside Nathan in his police car and after some<br /> persuasion, he begrudgingly helps Annie and Helen find Lillian at her own<br /> apartment. Lillian had gone there distressed by the micromanaging Helen had done<br /> in planning everything and her fear that Annie will have no one to be with. Annie tells<br /> her everything will be fine and helps her get ready for the wedding.<br /> Annie resumes her place as maid of honor at the wedding, which Helen has<br /> arranged to include neon signs, fireworks and an appearance by Wilson Phillips.<br /> After the wedding, Helen again apologizes to Annie and hopes they can be friends in<br /> the future. Realizing that Annie and Nathan were falling in love, Helen arranged for<br /> him to pick Annie up after the wedding. He takes her home in his squad car, lights<br /> flashing and siren wailing. (Imdb) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1478338/synopsis?ref_=ttpl_pl_syn</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Cash 2010 2015-09-26T10:32:46+00:00 2015-09-26T10:32:46+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/117-cash-2010 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/cash%202010%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">cash</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Storyline<br /> A stroke of good luck turns lethal for Sam Phelan and his wife Leslie when<br /> they are faced with a life-changing decision that brings strange and sinister<br /> Pyke Kubic to their doorstep. As Pyke leads Sam and Leslie on a tumultuous<br /> adventure through the streets of Chicago, each are pulled deeper and<br /> deeper into a desperate spiral of deception and violence... All in the name of<br /> money. Written by The Film CA$H<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> 1. You said you would make it worth my while برام بصرف باشد = 5.28<br /> 2. Somebody hit a dog track 5.32 =<br /> 3. Spread them 7.00 = spread your legs<br /> Page 2 of 7<br /> 4. Word is half a million 7.19 = they say<br /> 5. Don't be down. it will work out 9.31 = don't worry. It will be ok<br /> 6. The walk will do me good 9.38 = beneficial<br /> 7. Keep it down 10.35 = quiet<br /> 8. This barney 10.49 = argument, police office<br /> 9. The trail is still as hot as a street whore's snatch 10.52 = fresh<br /> 10. That will set him apart from the other worker‐ant f….s 10.57<br /> 11. The split's 50‐50 11.07 = we share it 50‐50<br /> 12. Are you in or out? 11.07 = agree to be with us?<br /> 13. I'll give it a shot 11.15 = try<br /> 14. I'll sure as hell try 11.50 = definitely try<br /> 15. I'll cream my Calvins 11.59 = I will excrement my pants,<br /> 16. About the only thing we do 12.16 = nothing more<br /> 17. Cash deal 12.31 = not a check<br /> 18. Stamp it "cash" مهر نقد بزن = 12.39<br /> 19. Chicago DMV 12.40 = Department of Motor Vehicles<br /> 20. Rude f….. goombah 12.55 = an associate or accomplice, especially a senior member<br /> of a criminal gang.<br /> 21. Behind in payment 13.16<br /> 22. This constitutes serious arrears to this size institution 13.20 = this is a big unpaid sum of<br /> money<br /> 23. We know where we stand 13.23 = our position<br /> 24. You are asking much of this institution to reschedule your loan 13.30<br /> 25. In view of his tardiness 13.36 = considering = as a result of = given<br /> 26. You are being the weenie that you are 13.45 = disgusting person<br /> 27. Finalize foreclosure proceedings نهايی کردن روال مصادره خانه بعلت عدم پرداخت بدهی = 14.06<br /> 28. We have paid on that house. Doesn't it count for anything 14.15 = important<br /> 29. You got four singles? 14.42 = four one pennies<br /> 30. Straight from heaven 15.24 =<br /> Page 3 of 7<br /> 31. A police chase went by 15.28 = police car<br /> 32. It crashed onto the hood of my car افتاد روی کاپوت ماشينم = 15.30<br /> 33. Did it dent the car? 15.32 = a hollow area caused by a hit = تورفتگی<br /> 34. You hit him up for the buck 88 16.59 = bothered him<br /> 35. You wanna play John Q. Dipshit citizen? 17.59 = average man on the street<br /> 36. Wrong joint 19.16 = wrong place<br /> 37. I was thinking more along the lines of Ruger 20.33 = almost = ..... تو مايه های<br /> 38. Very swanky 22.30 = fashionable and expensive<br /> 39. You get in my face and ask a stupid question? 22.55 = come to me<br /> 40. Looks like to me you are casing the joint 24.58 = checking a house for breaking into it =<br /> زاغ زدن خانه يا مکانی برای سرقت کردن<br /> 41. Shall I bust a cast in your ass? 25.02 = teach you a good lesson = پدرتو در می آرم<br /> 42. I'm headed for the shower 33.30 = going to take a shower<br /> 43. Kind of bad timing 34.15 = two things happen at a bad time = بد موقعی بود<br /> 44. I was just about to make a coffee 34.32 = near<br /> 45. We have it. Most of that is. 37.50 = when correcting a mistake we say "that is" = ... منظورم<br /> 46. Save it 37.54 = shut up = ساکت شو<br /> 47. Not a bad haul 39.40 = big enough amount of that we have stolen =<br /> 48. You have been busy little bees 43.48 = very busy<br /> 49. Loose change 44.23 = the coins in your pocket<br /> 50. Why don't you slip into the kitchen and .. 45.36 = go quickly<br /> 51. We all better turn in. We need to be up bright and early 46.32 = go to bed<br /> 52. What have you gotten us into 46.56 = you forced us to do bad things = ما را به کارهايی<br /> واداشته ای<br /> 53. Just wait it out 47.17 = wait till the problem is over<br /> 54. Straight‐up honest citizens 48.48 = trustworthy, law‐abiding<br /> 55. I'm on fixed income. Gonna put it back 49.45 = limited salary, give the money back<br /> 56. Stay put 50.31 = don't move<br /> 57. Are we in the right here? 51.16 = correct<br /> Page 4 of 7<br /> 58. Do sth against your will 51.22 = unwillingly<br /> 59. You got shit in your ears? 51.55 = are you deaf?<br /> 60. Get on down the road 51.58 =<br /> 61. Count out the money and hand it over 52.29 =<br /> 62. 78000 still outstanding 54.19 = not paid or settled = تسويه نشده<br /> 63. We still got 250k apiece 54.24 = we each 250,000 USD<br /> 64. Have it your f…… way 54.49 = do as you wish<br /> 65. We thought God smiled down on us 56.17 = we were lucky<br /> 66. A real domestic 57.16 = someone who enjoys being home and do housework<br /> 67. Dip into your own pocket 58.33 = spend your own money<br /> 68. When a line is crossed 59.40 = when you break my rules<br /> 69. Do you want me to assume your debt? 1.00.39 = pay/forgive your debt<br /> 70. You are not getting our house buster 1.01.01 = jerk<br /> 71. I was more thinking along the lines of cash refinancing 1.01.06 = similar to<br /> 72. This shit has gone far enough 1.01.18 = this is intolerable = ديگه شورش رو درآوردی<br /> 73. Privy to your personal financial affairs 1.02.27 = informed of = محرم کسی بودن<br /> 74. How much down? 1.02.56 = down payment پيش پرداخت<br /> 75. A down payment being the same as equity 1.03.00<br /> 76. The property has appreciated 1.03.56 = rise in value = گران شدن<br /> 77. Can't be sure without an appraisal 1.04.01 = assessment=evaluation=estimation<br /> 78. Let's use a conservative figure 1.04.06 = to be on the safe side, not exaggerate<br /> 79. That's a measly 4000 per year 1.04.10 = a little amount<br /> 80. They have 53000 equity in the house 1.04.30 = remaining<br /> 81. No doc home equity loan 1.04.58 = a loan without any document or proof<br /> 82. Lenders do not verify any information beyond a credit profile 1.05.10 = prove<br /> 83. In view of the fact that this institute holds the first mortgage 1.05.49 = because<br /> 84. Name your terms 1.05.59 = we will accept your conditions<br /> 85. Sweet deal 1.06.09 = good deal<br /> Page 5 of 7<br /> 86. We take the fair market value 1.06.29 = (FMV) is an estimate of the market value of a property,<br /> based on what a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured buyer would probably pay to a knowledgeable,<br /> willing, and unpressured seller in the market.<br /> 87. Make a bank draft to cash. They will redeem it here چک بانکی بکشيد و همين جا = 1.06.55<br /> نقدش می کنند<br /> 88. Why do you keep at this? 1.07.16 = why do you do this repeatedly<br /> 89. In the morning we will work sth out 1.08.29 = solve, settle<br /> 90. Out for a midnight stroll? 1.09.42 = walk for pleasure<br /> 91. I'm gonna overlook tonight's indiscretion 1.09.53 = I will forgive your mistake<br /> 92. Slip over to the stove 1.11.11 = go<br /> 93. No fear of reprisal 1.12.35 = retaliation, revenge<br /> 94. Say foul things 1.12.43 = insult<br /> 95. If you get ugly or if the line goes dead 1.14.40 = make a silly mistake or the phone<br /> is disconnected<br /> 96. It's not a great score 1.15.58 = unsatisfactory result<br /> 97. You get cute in there, he loses his life 1.17.27 = try to be clever<br /> 98. It feeds you like your mother's milk 1.19.33 = you like it<br /> 99. My haul was bigger 1.20.18 = the money I stole was bigger<br /> 100. They held up a liquor store 1.21.53 = robbed<br /> 101. The same trio 1.21.57 = three people<br /> 102. Convenience store 1.21.59 = store selling different things<br /> 103. In an all‐day crime spree 1.22.00 = a lot of crime happening<br /> 104. You are getting the hang of it1.24.29 = learning the technique<br /> 105. Pistol‐whipped the chink 12.27.36 = hit the Chinese guy with a gun<br /> 106. She upped the ante to robbery with aggravated assault 1.27.39<br /> 107. Banks are out of your league 1.33.30 = you can't possibly rob a bank<br /> 108. We stick to small stuff 1.33.46 = we limit ourselves to small projects<br /> 109. Ain't you got the stomach for it? 1.33.47 = you are not brave<br /> 110. I'll never be able to pull in 6000 sticking to small stuff 1.34.02 = collect<br /> 111. Play hero, you die 1.35.33 = try to be hero<br /> Page 6 of 7<br /> 112. Bag up the money, bag it up 1.5.39 = put it in a bag<br /> 113. All the f… lot of you 1.35.33 = all of you<br /> 114. The alarm has been tripped 1.36.09 = it sounded, went off<br /> 115. Get over (move) 1.6.37 = move<br /> 116. Grocery marts 1.42.40 = grocery store<br /> 117. Rash of robberies that occurred 1.42.44 = a number of<br /> 118. Detectives harbor little hope in solving it .43.05 = are almost disappointed<br /> 119. Apprehend the criminals 1.43.09 = arrest<br /> plot<br /> When a suitcase is thrown out of a car which is involved in a car chase and<br /> lands on the car of Sam Phelan (Chris Hemsworth), he initially curses his<br /> luck. But then he finds the suitcase is loaded with money. After bringing the<br /> money to his home, he convinces his wife Leslie (Victoria Profeta), that<br /> they should use the money.<br /> Meanwhile Pyke Kubic (Sean Bean) visits his twin brother Reese (also<br /> Bean) in jail, who tells him that he threw a suitcase with about half a million<br /> dollars from his car, when he was being chased by the police. Pyke<br /> decides to go and find the money.<br /> After Pyke finds the Phelans, he asks for the money back. They return<br /> whatever money they have left after they bought a new car, furniture and<br /> other minor expenses. Pyke forces the Phelans to rob stores, in order to<br /> get him the amount of money the Phelans spent, which they do, reluctantly<br /> at first, but later with more of a taste for it. After robbing over ten stores in<br /> the course of a few days, they are still short on the money, and Sam<br /> proposes to rob a bank. There he changes the gun without bullets which<br /> Pyke gave him with that of the guards, and Leslie shoots Pyke in a<br /> struggle. Pyke's car and his corpse are sent to a junkyard, where a worker<br /> is bribed into destroying the car and the body.<br /> Page 7 of 7</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/cash%202010%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">cash</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Storyline<br /> A stroke of good luck turns lethal for Sam Phelan and his wife Leslie when<br /> they are faced with a life-changing decision that brings strange and sinister<br /> Pyke Kubic to their doorstep. As Pyke leads Sam and Leslie on a tumultuous<br /> adventure through the streets of Chicago, each are pulled deeper and<br /> deeper into a desperate spiral of deception and violence... All in the name of<br /> money. Written by The Film CA$H<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> 1. You said you would make it worth my while برام بصرف باشد = 5.28<br /> 2. Somebody hit a dog track 5.32 =<br /> 3. Spread them 7.00 = spread your legs<br /> Page 2 of 7<br /> 4. Word is half a million 7.19 = they say<br /> 5. Don't be down. it will work out 9.31 = don't worry. It will be ok<br /> 6. The walk will do me good 9.38 = beneficial<br /> 7. Keep it down 10.35 = quiet<br /> 8. This barney 10.49 = argument, police office<br /> 9. The trail is still as hot as a street whore's snatch 10.52 = fresh<br /> 10. That will set him apart from the other worker‐ant f….s 10.57<br /> 11. The split's 50‐50 11.07 = we share it 50‐50<br /> 12. Are you in or out? 11.07 = agree to be with us?<br /> 13. I'll give it a shot 11.15 = try<br /> 14. I'll sure as hell try 11.50 = definitely try<br /> 15. I'll cream my Calvins 11.59 = I will excrement my pants,<br /> 16. About the only thing we do 12.16 = nothing more<br /> 17. Cash deal 12.31 = not a check<br /> 18. Stamp it "cash" مهر نقد بزن = 12.39<br /> 19. Chicago DMV 12.40 = Department of Motor Vehicles<br /> 20. Rude f….. goombah 12.55 = an associate or accomplice, especially a senior member<br /> of a criminal gang.<br /> 21. Behind in payment 13.16<br /> 22. This constitutes serious arrears to this size institution 13.20 = this is a big unpaid sum of<br /> money<br /> 23. We know where we stand 13.23 = our position<br /> 24. You are asking much of this institution to reschedule your loan 13.30<br /> 25. In view of his tardiness 13.36 = considering = as a result of = given<br /> 26. You are being the weenie that you are 13.45 = disgusting person<br /> 27. Finalize foreclosure proceedings نهايی کردن روال مصادره خانه بعلت عدم پرداخت بدهی = 14.06<br /> 28. We have paid on that house. Doesn't it count for anything 14.15 = important<br /> 29. You got four singles? 14.42 = four one pennies<br /> 30. Straight from heaven 15.24 =<br /> Page 3 of 7<br /> 31. A police chase went by 15.28 = police car<br /> 32. It crashed onto the hood of my car افتاد روی کاپوت ماشينم = 15.30<br /> 33. Did it dent the car? 15.32 = a hollow area caused by a hit = تورفتگی<br /> 34. You hit him up for the buck 88 16.59 = bothered him<br /> 35. You wanna play John Q. Dipshit citizen? 17.59 = average man on the street<br /> 36. Wrong joint 19.16 = wrong place<br /> 37. I was thinking more along the lines of Ruger 20.33 = almost = ..... تو مايه های<br /> 38. Very swanky 22.30 = fashionable and expensive<br /> 39. You get in my face and ask a stupid question? 22.55 = come to me<br /> 40. Looks like to me you are casing the joint 24.58 = checking a house for breaking into it =<br /> زاغ زدن خانه يا مکانی برای سرقت کردن<br /> 41. Shall I bust a cast in your ass? 25.02 = teach you a good lesson = پدرتو در می آرم<br /> 42. I'm headed for the shower 33.30 = going to take a shower<br /> 43. Kind of bad timing 34.15 = two things happen at a bad time = بد موقعی بود<br /> 44. I was just about to make a coffee 34.32 = near<br /> 45. We have it. Most of that is. 37.50 = when correcting a mistake we say "that is" = ... منظورم<br /> 46. Save it 37.54 = shut up = ساکت شو<br /> 47. Not a bad haul 39.40 = big enough amount of that we have stolen =<br /> 48. You have been busy little bees 43.48 = very busy<br /> 49. Loose change 44.23 = the coins in your pocket<br /> 50. Why don't you slip into the kitchen and .. 45.36 = go quickly<br /> 51. We all better turn in. We need to be up bright and early 46.32 = go to bed<br /> 52. What have you gotten us into 46.56 = you forced us to do bad things = ما را به کارهايی<br /> واداشته ای<br /> 53. Just wait it out 47.17 = wait till the problem is over<br /> 54. Straight‐up honest citizens 48.48 = trustworthy, law‐abiding<br /> 55. I'm on fixed income. Gonna put it back 49.45 = limited salary, give the money back<br /> 56. Stay put 50.31 = don't move<br /> 57. Are we in the right here? 51.16 = correct<br /> Page 4 of 7<br /> 58. Do sth against your will 51.22 = unwillingly<br /> 59. You got shit in your ears? 51.55 = are you deaf?<br /> 60. Get on down the road 51.58 =<br /> 61. Count out the money and hand it over 52.29 =<br /> 62. 78000 still outstanding 54.19 = not paid or settled = تسويه نشده<br /> 63. We still got 250k apiece 54.24 = we each 250,000 USD<br /> 64. Have it your f…… way 54.49 = do as you wish<br /> 65. We thought God smiled down on us 56.17 = we were lucky<br /> 66. A real domestic 57.16 = someone who enjoys being home and do housework<br /> 67. Dip into your own pocket 58.33 = spend your own money<br /> 68. When a line is crossed 59.40 = when you break my rules<br /> 69. Do you want me to assume your debt? 1.00.39 = pay/forgive your debt<br /> 70. You are not getting our house buster 1.01.01 = jerk<br /> 71. I was more thinking along the lines of cash refinancing 1.01.06 = similar to<br /> 72. This shit has gone far enough 1.01.18 = this is intolerable = ديگه شورش رو درآوردی<br /> 73. Privy to your personal financial affairs 1.02.27 = informed of = محرم کسی بودن<br /> 74. How much down? 1.02.56 = down payment پيش پرداخت<br /> 75. A down payment being the same as equity 1.03.00<br /> 76. The property has appreciated 1.03.56 = rise in value = گران شدن<br /> 77. Can't be sure without an appraisal 1.04.01 = assessment=evaluation=estimation<br /> 78. Let's use a conservative figure 1.04.06 = to be on the safe side, not exaggerate<br /> 79. That's a measly 4000 per year 1.04.10 = a little amount<br /> 80. They have 53000 equity in the house 1.04.30 = remaining<br /> 81. No doc home equity loan 1.04.58 = a loan without any document or proof<br /> 82. Lenders do not verify any information beyond a credit profile 1.05.10 = prove<br /> 83. In view of the fact that this institute holds the first mortgage 1.05.49 = because<br /> 84. Name your terms 1.05.59 = we will accept your conditions<br /> 85. Sweet deal 1.06.09 = good deal<br /> Page 5 of 7<br /> 86. We take the fair market value 1.06.29 = (FMV) is an estimate of the market value of a property,<br /> based on what a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured buyer would probably pay to a knowledgeable,<br /> willing, and unpressured seller in the market.<br /> 87. Make a bank draft to cash. They will redeem it here چک بانکی بکشيد و همين جا = 1.06.55<br /> نقدش می کنند<br /> 88. Why do you keep at this? 1.07.16 = why do you do this repeatedly<br /> 89. In the morning we will work sth out 1.08.29 = solve, settle<br /> 90. Out for a midnight stroll? 1.09.42 = walk for pleasure<br /> 91. I'm gonna overlook tonight's indiscretion 1.09.53 = I will forgive your mistake<br /> 92. Slip over to the stove 1.11.11 = go<br /> 93. No fear of reprisal 1.12.35 = retaliation, revenge<br /> 94. Say foul things 1.12.43 = insult<br /> 95. If you get ugly or if the line goes dead 1.14.40 = make a silly mistake or the phone<br /> is disconnected<br /> 96. It's not a great score 1.15.58 = unsatisfactory result<br /> 97. You get cute in there, he loses his life 1.17.27 = try to be clever<br /> 98. It feeds you like your mother's milk 1.19.33 = you like it<br /> 99. My haul was bigger 1.20.18 = the money I stole was bigger<br /> 100. They held up a liquor store 1.21.53 = robbed<br /> 101. The same trio 1.21.57 = three people<br /> 102. Convenience store 1.21.59 = store selling different things<br /> 103. In an all‐day crime spree 1.22.00 = a lot of crime happening<br /> 104. You are getting the hang of it1.24.29 = learning the technique<br /> 105. Pistol‐whipped the chink 12.27.36 = hit the Chinese guy with a gun<br /> 106. She upped the ante to robbery with aggravated assault 1.27.39<br /> 107. Banks are out of your league 1.33.30 = you can't possibly rob a bank<br /> 108. We stick to small stuff 1.33.46 = we limit ourselves to small projects<br /> 109. Ain't you got the stomach for it? 1.33.47 = you are not brave<br /> 110. I'll never be able to pull in 6000 sticking to small stuff 1.34.02 = collect<br /> 111. Play hero, you die 1.35.33 = try to be hero<br /> Page 6 of 7<br /> 112. Bag up the money, bag it up 1.5.39 = put it in a bag<br /> 113. All the f… lot of you 1.35.33 = all of you<br /> 114. The alarm has been tripped 1.36.09 = it sounded, went off<br /> 115. Get over (move) 1.6.37 = move<br /> 116. Grocery marts 1.42.40 = grocery store<br /> 117. Rash of robberies that occurred 1.42.44 = a number of<br /> 118. Detectives harbor little hope in solving it .43.05 = are almost disappointed<br /> 119. Apprehend the criminals 1.43.09 = arrest<br /> plot<br /> When a suitcase is thrown out of a car which is involved in a car chase and<br /> lands on the car of Sam Phelan (Chris Hemsworth), he initially curses his<br /> luck. But then he finds the suitcase is loaded with money. After bringing the<br /> money to his home, he convinces his wife Leslie (Victoria Profeta), that<br /> they should use the money.<br /> Meanwhile Pyke Kubic (Sean Bean) visits his twin brother Reese (also<br /> Bean) in jail, who tells him that he threw a suitcase with about half a million<br /> dollars from his car, when he was being chased by the police. Pyke<br /> decides to go and find the money.<br /> After Pyke finds the Phelans, he asks for the money back. They return<br /> whatever money they have left after they bought a new car, furniture and<br /> other minor expenses. Pyke forces the Phelans to rob stores, in order to<br /> get him the amount of money the Phelans spent, which they do, reluctantly<br /> at first, but later with more of a taste for it. After robbing over ten stores in<br /> the course of a few days, they are still short on the money, and Sam<br /> proposes to rob a bank. There he changes the gun without bullets which<br /> Pyke gave him with that of the guards, and Leslie shoots Pyke in a<br /> struggle. Pyke's car and his corpse are sent to a junkyard, where a worker<br /> is bribed into destroying the car and the body.<br /> Page 7 of 7</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Crossing Over 2009 2015-09-26T10:33:44+00:00 2015-09-26T10:33:44+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/118-crossing-over-2009 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/crossing%20over%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Crossing over</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Plot :<br /> Crossing Over is a multi-character canvas about immigrants of different nationalities<br /> struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles. The film deals with the border, document<br /> fraud, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office<br /> of counter terrorism and the clash of cultures. Written by Wayne Kramer (imdb)<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> Order of recognizance = ■ noun Law a bond by which a person undertakes before a court or<br /> magistrate to observe a particular condition, e.g. to appear when summoned.<br /> Bussed out 3 hours ago = they were transferred out by bus to another place<br /> Happy now? = this is the consequence of your attitude or action = ؟ حالا خوب شد؟ راضی شدی<br /> My dad's nationalization party = a party when new citizens are invited to become a legal US citizen<br /> Compadres! Let's do it = friends<br /> Why don't you go back to Camel‐humping Saudi Arabia? = برو به عربستان شتر سوار<br /> No sister to do your grunt work? = difficult work = ؟ آبجی نداری کارهاتو بکنه<br /> I got this little Glock/ruger, homie = types of gun = نوعی اسلحه کمری پليس آمريکا<br /> Page 2 of 7<br /> My uncle's into him for 50 large = 50 thousand dollars = عمويم برای ۵٠ هزار دلار دنبالش است<br /> Reverse ID on a Mary Smith number = try to find someone's identification<br /> I didn't have time to stop my car. You just shot out like that = get a parked car out of the space quickly<br /> You look dazed = without concentration<br /> Adjudication officer = I judge whether an immigrant can be granted citizenship<br /> AAA = Alcoholic Anonymous Association انجمن الکلی های بی نام و نشان<br /> I make it fly = make it attractive or acceptable = کاری می کنم که جذاب تر شه<br /> EB1 = The EB-1 is a preference category for United States employment-based permanent<br /> residency. It is intended for "priority workers" or foreign nationals with extraordinary talent. نوعی<br /> ويزای ورود به آمريکا برای افراد نابغه يا ويژه<br /> I hope you are not jerking me around = fooling me. cheating me<br /> Would you make it worth my while? = make up for it, compensate<br /> You are on the clock from tomorrow = your job starts as of tomorrow<br /> Rag‐head chick = insulting word for an Arab or a Moslem =<br /> Your essay elicits sympathy for suicide attacks = you are indirectly supporting terrorists = مقالات شما<br /> همدردی با تروريست ها را می طلبد<br /> They didn't go about it the right way = do it<br /> I'm gonna put the baby down = have it sleep = بچه رو بخوابونم<br /> Consorting with the outcast = socialize, associate, mingle, mix<br /> Never been invited to a shunning before = when people avoid, insult or do not respect strangers<br /> He doesn't pine = does not complain<br /> I feel gutted = shocked, disappointed<br /> In a hospice = a place for old, sick people to spend time till they die<br /> All of a sudden you lay it on me = you blame it on me<br /> Bar/bat mitzvah = the religious ceremony held when a Jewish boy/girl reaches the age of<br /> 13 and is considered an adult<br /> Have gone to shul? = a synagogue<br /> Page 3 of 7<br /> Beat yourself up = blame yourself<br /> Letterhead = piece of paper for a company to write its formal letters or requests<br /> Twiddle your hair/thumbs = move or turn, have nothing to do<br /> Wanna watch you on the set = on the shooting set<br /> If she signs me, it is major = excellent<br /> I'm pushing for a one‐on‐one = between only two people<br /> Bite the dust = die or be killed<br /> Print shop = place where photocopies<br /> Did someone have it in for her = harbor a grudge against someone, v. phr., informal To wish or<br /> mean to harm; have a bitter feeling against. George has it in for Bob because Bob told the<br /> teacher that George cheated in the examination. After John beat Ted in a fight, Ted always had<br /> it in for John.<br /> He was cranking them up (the documents) = forge, fake<br /> Perhaps someone was cutting into their action = interfere<br /> Do you doubt the veracity of my heart? = honesty, integrity<br /> Need sb to talk it through with? = talk about it seriously and deeply<br /> Don't play coy with me = don't pretend you are shy<br /> How austere it was = painful or hard<br /> Everything is a red flag = danger<br /> I could joust with you all day = argue<br /> She is illegal and removable = she will be deported<br /> They're shit out of luck = unlucky<br /> I N S guy = The United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) was an agency of the U.S.<br /> Department of Justice from 1933 to سازمان مهاجرت و اعطای شهروندی امريکا = 2003<br /> I don't have to be worried about being narced on = call the police to arrest me for my illegal activities<br /> She intimated to me that ….. = she tipped me off = indirectly informed me<br /> This is clean and press = when talking to a dry‐cleaner = لطفا اينها رو خشک شويی واتو کنيد<br /> Page 4 of 7<br /> We won't have to skulk around anymore = to hide or move about secretly so that you are not seen or<br /> arrested = قايم موشک بازی کردن، آسه برو آسه بيا<br /> On your own volition = without force or obligation = willingly<br /> I make your skin crawl = you hate me<br /> Start over again = start anew<br /> Her personal effects envelope = personal belongings or possessions<br /> An ordained rabbi = a religious leader for Jews = يک خاخام رسمی<br /> This will prove more expedient = it is the least harmful choice<br /> Another please. Last call pal = American English the time when customers in a bar can order<br /> one more drink before the bar closes SYN last orders British English<br /> They must have been lax in surveillance = not very serious in security cameras<br /> We ran a check on your name = we checked your name<br /> Walk‐on roles = small acting part with no words to say in a play or film, or an actor who has a<br /> part like this<br /> I take it you are familiar with Ms. Clair Shepard = I guess you know her<br /> She traded you for voluntary departure = she cooperated with the police so that she wouldn't be<br /> arrested and deported<br /> It's incumbent on me to remind you of your newfound responsibilities as citizens = I must tell you<br /> Got it on with a married man = had an affair<br /> Recite the oath of allegiance = promise that you will be loyal to the USA<br /> I ID'd Farid's Beemer = I identified his BMW = he was the driver of the BMW, so he is the murderer<br /> My father wanted her humiliated and brought in line = obedient<br /> She was seeing a degenerate effing beaner = a corrupt mexican<br /> I only wanted to get in his face a little bit = bother, tease<br /> I'll notify your FOS (factor of safety) = position, an operator talking to an officer in the field<br /> Synopsis :<br /> Page 5 of 7<br /> After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, officer Max Brogan takes care of her little son, and brings<br /> him to the boy's grandparents in Mexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border. Brogan returns<br /> to the grandparents to tell them the bad news.<br /> Cole Frankel, a corrupt immigration officer, makes a deal with Australian immigrant Claire Shepard: he<br /> can have unlimited sex with her for two months, then she gets a green card. In the course of the two<br /> months he separates from his wife and wants to make the relationship with Shepard one of love, but she<br /> declines. He exempts her from completing the two months and arranges the green card. However,<br /> authorities find out and arrest him and Shepard is deported. His wife Denise Frankel adopts a little girl<br /> from Nigeria, who has already been in the detention center several years.<br /> Brogan has an Iranian colleague, Hamid Baraheri. Hamid's family disapproves of his sister having sex<br /> with a married man. Encouraged by his father his brother plans to beat them up, but he ends up killing<br /> them, and is arrested.<br /> South Korean teenager Yong Kim, who is about to be naturalized, reluctantly participates in a robbery<br /> with four others. Hamid kills the four in a shootout but lets him go. He lies to the authorities that there<br /> were only four robbers.<br /> Gavin Kossef, a young British immigrant, pretends to be a religious Jew, to get a job at a Jewish school,<br /> which allows him to stay in the U.S. In a test where he has to demonstrate his familiarity with the Jewish<br /> religion he does not perform properly, but a rabbi asked to assess it approves it, so that the immigrant<br /> passes the test. After the test, in private, the rabbi requires from the immigrant to take lessons from him to<br /> eliminate the deficiencies in his knowledge.<br /> Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people<br /> should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. She is not<br /> charged for this, but it turns out that her parents and she are illegally in the U.S. One parent of choice can<br /> stay with the girl's two younger siblings, who are U.S. citizens because they were born in the U.S., the girl<br /> has to leave with the other parent to Bangladesh, even though she has lived there only until she was<br /> three. She leaves with her mother, and cannot even say goodbye to her father.<br /> Wikipedia:<br /> Crossing Over is a 2009 American independent drama film about illegal immigrants of different<br /> nationalities struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles. The film deals with the border, document<br /> fraud, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office of counterterrorism<br /> and the clash of cultures. Crossing Over was written and directed by Wayne Kramer, himself an<br /> immigrant from South Africa, and is a remake of his 1995 short film of the same name. Kramer produced<br /> the film alongside Frank Marshall.[1]<br /> Crossing Over was filmed on location in Los Angeles in 2007.<br /> Plot<br /> There are several stories interwoven throughout the movie. For simplicity, they are separated out in this<br /> description, each with its own paragraph.<br /> After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, immigration officer Max Brogan takes care of her little son,<br /> and brings him to the boy's grandparents inMexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border.<br /> Brogan returns to the grandparents to tell them the bad news.<br /> Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people<br /> should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. FBI agents<br /> raid the home and ransack her room, reading her diaries and a school assignment on the ethics of<br /> suicide, criticizing her room as "too austere" and noting that she has an account on an Islamic website.<br /> The profiler says this makes her look like a would-be suicide bomber. She is not charged for this, but it<br /> turns out that she has only resident status. She was born in Bangladesh and brought to America at age<br /> Page 6 of 7<br /> three. Her father is studying for the citizenship test and Taslima's continued presence jeopardizes his<br /> chances and puts the two younger siblings at risk. The young kids are U.S. citizens because they were<br /> born in the U.S. Denise Frankel, the immigration defense attorney, suggests that instead of the whole<br /> family being deported, Taslima can leave for Bangladesh with her mother while the rest of the family<br /> stays in the US.<br /> Cole Frankel, an immigration officer, gets into a car accident with Claire Shepard, an aspiring actress<br /> from Australia. Realizing that she is in the country illegally, Cole makes an arrangement with Claire where<br /> she will have unlimited sex with him for two months in exchange for a green card. When Cole eventually<br /> says he wants to leave his wife for Claire, she makes it clear that she holds him in contempt and is only<br /> sleeping with him for the green card. In a moment of clarity, Cole exempts Claire from completing the two<br /> months and arranges for Claire to get her green card in the mail. Authorities eventually confront Claire<br /> about the suspiciousness in her immigration paperwork and she admits to the sexual arrangement she<br /> had with Cole. She leaves the country "voluntarily." Cole is arrested. His wife Denise Frankel adopts a<br /> little girl from Nigeria, who has already been in the detention center for several years.<br /> Brogan has an Iranian colleague, Hamid Baraheri. Hamid's family disapproves of his sister having sex<br /> with Javier Pedroza, a married man. Encouraged by his father, Hamid's brother plans to scare the couple,<br /> but things get out of hand and he shoots both of them and goes to Hamid who helps him hide the<br /> evidence. Brogan slowly suspects Hamid's involvement as the film progresses.<br /> Also, Javier Pedroza works in a copy shop and made extra money by providing counterfeit immigration<br /> papers for undocumenteds. Claire had previously paid him for false papers before she had made her<br /> arrangement with Cole. But when Javier was killed, the authorities discovered her documents among his<br /> belongings which is what caused immigration to examine her case more closely.<br /> South Korean teenager Yong Kim is about to be naturalized with the rest of his family, but he has started<br /> to hang out with a bad crowd and ultimately participates in a convenience store robbery to "pop his<br /> cherry" with his gang. Hamid happens to be at the same convenience store and kills the other robbers but<br /> (due to his own guilt over his involvement in his sister's death) lets Yong Kim go free.<br /> Gavin Kossef, a Jewish musician (really an atheist) from the United Kingdom pretends to be a religious<br /> Jew in order to get a job at a Jewish school, which allows him to stay in the U.S. In a test where he has to<br /> demonstrate his familiarity with the Jewish religion he does not perform properly, but a rabbi asked to<br /> assess it approves it because of his voice. After the test, in private, the rabbi requires from the immigrant<br /> to take lessons from him to eliminate the deficiencies in his knowledge.<br /> [edit]Cast<br />  Harrison Ford as ICE Special Agent Max Brogan<br />  Ray Liotta as Cole Frankel<br />  Ashley Judd as Denise Frankel<br />  Jim Sturgess as Gavin Kossef<br />  Cliff Curtis as ICE Special Agent Hamid Baraheri<br />  Alice Braga as Mireya Sánchez<br />  Alice Eve as Claire Shephard<br />  Summer Bishil as Taslima Jahangir<br />  Jacqueline Obradors as FBI Special Agent Marina Phadkar<br />  Justin Chon as Yong Kim<br />  Sarah Shahi as Pooneh Baraheri<br />  Melody Khazae as Zahra Baraheri<br />  Merik Tadros as Farid Baraheri<br />  Marshall Manesh as Sanjar Baraheri<br />  Nina Nayebi as Minoo Baraheri<br />  Naila Azad as Rokeya Jahangir<br />  Shelley Malil as Munshi Jahangir<br />  Jamen Nanthakumar as Abul Jahangir<br />  Jaysha Patel as Jahanara Jahangir<br /> Page 7 of 7<br />  Leonardo Nam as Kwan<br />  Tim Chiou as Steve<br />  West Liang as Mark<br />  Mahershalalhashbaz Ali as Detective Strickland<br /> [edit]Production and distribution<br /> The film originally featured a scene in which an Iranian character is murdered by her brother in an honor<br /> killing, but the National Iranian American Council opposed the plotline as being unrealistic and offensive,<br /> and the killing was presented as a beating-up which got out of hand, removing the dialogue referring to<br /> "honor" and "family honor".[2][3]<br /> Additionally, Sean Penn filmed scenes as an immigration cop. However, his scenes were cut due to the<br /> controversy over the honor killing plot, though producer Harvey Weinstein later claimed that Penn's agent<br /> requested his scenes be cut out of the film.[4][5]<br /> Though the film was shot in 2007, it was not released until 2009, and even then only in a limited theatrical<br /> run. The film's original running length was 140 minutes long, but this film's producer (who had final cut<br /> privilege) was convinced to edit the film down to under 2 hours when Harvey Weinstein threatened to<br /> release the film straight to DVD and bypass a theatrical release altogether (in many countries outside of<br /> the US, this was the case anyway).[6]<br /> The film was distributed in the United States by MGM and The Weinstein Company. It was given a limited<br /> theatrical release on February 27, 2009. It ultimately grossed less than half a million dollars in North<br /> America, and just over $2.5 million internationally for a total of $3 million. The film has reportedly made<br /> another $1.7 million in US DVD sales</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/crossing%20over%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Crossing over</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Plot :<br /> Crossing Over is a multi-character canvas about immigrants of different nationalities<br /> struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles. The film deals with the border, document<br /> fraud, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office<br /> of counter terrorism and the clash of cultures. Written by Wayne Kramer (imdb)<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> Order of recognizance = ■ noun Law a bond by which a person undertakes before a court or<br /> magistrate to observe a particular condition, e.g. to appear when summoned.<br /> Bussed out 3 hours ago = they were transferred out by bus to another place<br /> Happy now? = this is the consequence of your attitude or action = ؟ حالا خوب شد؟ راضی شدی<br /> My dad's nationalization party = a party when new citizens are invited to become a legal US citizen<br /> Compadres! Let's do it = friends<br /> Why don't you go back to Camel‐humping Saudi Arabia? = برو به عربستان شتر سوار<br /> No sister to do your grunt work? = difficult work = ؟ آبجی نداری کارهاتو بکنه<br /> I got this little Glock/ruger, homie = types of gun = نوعی اسلحه کمری پليس آمريکا<br /> Page 2 of 7<br /> My uncle's into him for 50 large = 50 thousand dollars = عمويم برای ۵٠ هزار دلار دنبالش است<br /> Reverse ID on a Mary Smith number = try to find someone's identification<br /> I didn't have time to stop my car. You just shot out like that = get a parked car out of the space quickly<br /> You look dazed = without concentration<br /> Adjudication officer = I judge whether an immigrant can be granted citizenship<br /> AAA = Alcoholic Anonymous Association انجمن الکلی های بی نام و نشان<br /> I make it fly = make it attractive or acceptable = کاری می کنم که جذاب تر شه<br /> EB1 = The EB-1 is a preference category for United States employment-based permanent<br /> residency. It is intended for "priority workers" or foreign nationals with extraordinary talent. نوعی<br /> ويزای ورود به آمريکا برای افراد نابغه يا ويژه<br /> I hope you are not jerking me around = fooling me. cheating me<br /> Would you make it worth my while? = make up for it, compensate<br /> You are on the clock from tomorrow = your job starts as of tomorrow<br /> Rag‐head chick = insulting word for an Arab or a Moslem =<br /> Your essay elicits sympathy for suicide attacks = you are indirectly supporting terrorists = مقالات شما<br /> همدردی با تروريست ها را می طلبد<br /> They didn't go about it the right way = do it<br /> I'm gonna put the baby down = have it sleep = بچه رو بخوابونم<br /> Consorting with the outcast = socialize, associate, mingle, mix<br /> Never been invited to a shunning before = when people avoid, insult or do not respect strangers<br /> He doesn't pine = does not complain<br /> I feel gutted = shocked, disappointed<br /> In a hospice = a place for old, sick people to spend time till they die<br /> All of a sudden you lay it on me = you blame it on me<br /> Bar/bat mitzvah = the religious ceremony held when a Jewish boy/girl reaches the age of<br /> 13 and is considered an adult<br /> Have gone to shul? = a synagogue<br /> Page 3 of 7<br /> Beat yourself up = blame yourself<br /> Letterhead = piece of paper for a company to write its formal letters or requests<br /> Twiddle your hair/thumbs = move or turn, have nothing to do<br /> Wanna watch you on the set = on the shooting set<br /> If she signs me, it is major = excellent<br /> I'm pushing for a one‐on‐one = between only two people<br /> Bite the dust = die or be killed<br /> Print shop = place where photocopies<br /> Did someone have it in for her = harbor a grudge against someone, v. phr., informal To wish or<br /> mean to harm; have a bitter feeling against. George has it in for Bob because Bob told the<br /> teacher that George cheated in the examination. After John beat Ted in a fight, Ted always had<br /> it in for John.<br /> He was cranking them up (the documents) = forge, fake<br /> Perhaps someone was cutting into their action = interfere<br /> Do you doubt the veracity of my heart? = honesty, integrity<br /> Need sb to talk it through with? = talk about it seriously and deeply<br /> Don't play coy with me = don't pretend you are shy<br /> How austere it was = painful or hard<br /> Everything is a red flag = danger<br /> I could joust with you all day = argue<br /> She is illegal and removable = she will be deported<br /> They're shit out of luck = unlucky<br /> I N S guy = The United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) was an agency of the U.S.<br /> Department of Justice from 1933 to سازمان مهاجرت و اعطای شهروندی امريکا = 2003<br /> I don't have to be worried about being narced on = call the police to arrest me for my illegal activities<br /> She intimated to me that ….. = she tipped me off = indirectly informed me<br /> This is clean and press = when talking to a dry‐cleaner = لطفا اينها رو خشک شويی واتو کنيد<br /> Page 4 of 7<br /> We won't have to skulk around anymore = to hide or move about secretly so that you are not seen or<br /> arrested = قايم موشک بازی کردن، آسه برو آسه بيا<br /> On your own volition = without force or obligation = willingly<br /> I make your skin crawl = you hate me<br /> Start over again = start anew<br /> Her personal effects envelope = personal belongings or possessions<br /> An ordained rabbi = a religious leader for Jews = يک خاخام رسمی<br /> This will prove more expedient = it is the least harmful choice<br /> Another please. Last call pal = American English the time when customers in a bar can order<br /> one more drink before the bar closes SYN last orders British English<br /> They must have been lax in surveillance = not very serious in security cameras<br /> We ran a check on your name = we checked your name<br /> Walk‐on roles = small acting part with no words to say in a play or film, or an actor who has a<br /> part like this<br /> I take it you are familiar with Ms. Clair Shepard = I guess you know her<br /> She traded you for voluntary departure = she cooperated with the police so that she wouldn't be<br /> arrested and deported<br /> It's incumbent on me to remind you of your newfound responsibilities as citizens = I must tell you<br /> Got it on with a married man = had an affair<br /> Recite the oath of allegiance = promise that you will be loyal to the USA<br /> I ID'd Farid's Beemer = I identified his BMW = he was the driver of the BMW, so he is the murderer<br /> My father wanted her humiliated and brought in line = obedient<br /> She was seeing a degenerate effing beaner = a corrupt mexican<br /> I only wanted to get in his face a little bit = bother, tease<br /> I'll notify your FOS (factor of safety) = position, an operator talking to an officer in the field<br /> Synopsis :<br /> Page 5 of 7<br /> After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, officer Max Brogan takes care of her little son, and brings<br /> him to the boy's grandparents in Mexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border. Brogan returns<br /> to the grandparents to tell them the bad news.<br /> Cole Frankel, a corrupt immigration officer, makes a deal with Australian immigrant Claire Shepard: he<br /> can have unlimited sex with her for two months, then she gets a green card. In the course of the two<br /> months he separates from his wife and wants to make the relationship with Shepard one of love, but she<br /> declines. He exempts her from completing the two months and arranges the green card. However,<br /> authorities find out and arrest him and Shepard is deported. His wife Denise Frankel adopts a little girl<br /> from Nigeria, who has already been in the detention center several years.<br /> Brogan has an Iranian colleague, Hamid Baraheri. Hamid's family disapproves of his sister having sex<br /> with a married man. Encouraged by his father his brother plans to beat them up, but he ends up killing<br /> them, and is arrested.<br /> South Korean teenager Yong Kim, who is about to be naturalized, reluctantly participates in a robbery<br /> with four others. Hamid kills the four in a shootout but lets him go. He lies to the authorities that there<br /> were only four robbers.<br /> Gavin Kossef, a young British immigrant, pretends to be a religious Jew, to get a job at a Jewish school,<br /> which allows him to stay in the U.S. In a test where he has to demonstrate his familiarity with the Jewish<br /> religion he does not perform properly, but a rabbi asked to assess it approves it, so that the immigrant<br /> passes the test. After the test, in private, the rabbi requires from the immigrant to take lessons from him to<br /> eliminate the deficiencies in his knowledge.<br /> Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people<br /> should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. She is not<br /> charged for this, but it turns out that her parents and she are illegally in the U.S. One parent of choice can<br /> stay with the girl's two younger siblings, who are U.S. citizens because they were born in the U.S., the girl<br /> has to leave with the other parent to Bangladesh, even though she has lived there only until she was<br /> three. She leaves with her mother, and cannot even say goodbye to her father.<br /> Wikipedia:<br /> Crossing Over is a 2009 American independent drama film about illegal immigrants of different<br /> nationalities struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles. The film deals with the border, document<br /> fraud, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office of counterterrorism<br /> and the clash of cultures. Crossing Over was written and directed by Wayne Kramer, himself an<br /> immigrant from South Africa, and is a remake of his 1995 short film of the same name. Kramer produced<br /> the film alongside Frank Marshall.[1]<br /> Crossing Over was filmed on location in Los Angeles in 2007.<br /> Plot<br /> There are several stories interwoven throughout the movie. For simplicity, they are separated out in this<br /> description, each with its own paragraph.<br /> After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, immigration officer Max Brogan takes care of her little son,<br /> and brings him to the boy's grandparents inMexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border.<br /> Brogan returns to the grandparents to tell them the bad news.<br /> Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people<br /> should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. FBI agents<br /> raid the home and ransack her room, reading her diaries and a school assignment on the ethics of<br /> suicide, criticizing her room as "too austere" and noting that she has an account on an Islamic website.<br /> The profiler says this makes her look like a would-be suicide bomber. She is not charged for this, but it<br /> turns out that she has only resident status. She was born in Bangladesh and brought to America at age<br /> Page 6 of 7<br /> three. Her father is studying for the citizenship test and Taslima's continued presence jeopardizes his<br /> chances and puts the two younger siblings at risk. The young kids are U.S. citizens because they were<br /> born in the U.S. Denise Frankel, the immigration defense attorney, suggests that instead of the whole<br /> family being deported, Taslima can leave for Bangladesh with her mother while the rest of the family<br /> stays in the US.<br /> Cole Frankel, an immigration officer, gets into a car accident with Claire Shepard, an aspiring actress<br /> from Australia. Realizing that she is in the country illegally, Cole makes an arrangement with Claire where<br /> she will have unlimited sex with him for two months in exchange for a green card. When Cole eventually<br /> says he wants to leave his wife for Claire, she makes it clear that she holds him in contempt and is only<br /> sleeping with him for the green card. In a moment of clarity, Cole exempts Claire from completing the two<br /> months and arranges for Claire to get her green card in the mail. Authorities eventually confront Claire<br /> about the suspiciousness in her immigration paperwork and she admits to the sexual arrangement she<br /> had with Cole. She leaves the country "voluntarily." Cole is arrested. His wife Denise Frankel adopts a<br /> little girl from Nigeria, who has already been in the detention center for several years.<br /> Brogan has an Iranian colleague, Hamid Baraheri. Hamid's family disapproves of his sister having sex<br /> with Javier Pedroza, a married man. Encouraged by his father, Hamid's brother plans to scare the couple,<br /> but things get out of hand and he shoots both of them and goes to Hamid who helps him hide the<br /> evidence. Brogan slowly suspects Hamid's involvement as the film progresses.<br /> Also, Javier Pedroza works in a copy shop and made extra money by providing counterfeit immigration<br /> papers for undocumenteds. Claire had previously paid him for false papers before she had made her<br /> arrangement with Cole. But when Javier was killed, the authorities discovered her documents among his<br /> belongings which is what caused immigration to examine her case more closely.<br /> South Korean teenager Yong Kim is about to be naturalized with the rest of his family, but he has started<br /> to hang out with a bad crowd and ultimately participates in a convenience store robbery to "pop his<br /> cherry" with his gang. Hamid happens to be at the same convenience store and kills the other robbers but<br /> (due to his own guilt over his involvement in his sister's death) lets Yong Kim go free.<br /> Gavin Kossef, a Jewish musician (really an atheist) from the United Kingdom pretends to be a religious<br /> Jew in order to get a job at a Jewish school, which allows him to stay in the U.S. In a test where he has to<br /> demonstrate his familiarity with the Jewish religion he does not perform properly, but a rabbi asked to<br /> assess it approves it because of his voice. After the test, in private, the rabbi requires from the immigrant<br /> to take lessons from him to eliminate the deficiencies in his knowledge.<br /> [edit]Cast<br />  Harrison Ford as ICE Special Agent Max Brogan<br />  Ray Liotta as Cole Frankel<br />  Ashley Judd as Denise Frankel<br />  Jim Sturgess as Gavin Kossef<br />  Cliff Curtis as ICE Special Agent Hamid Baraheri<br />  Alice Braga as Mireya Sánchez<br />  Alice Eve as Claire Shephard<br />  Summer Bishil as Taslima Jahangir<br />  Jacqueline Obradors as FBI Special Agent Marina Phadkar<br />  Justin Chon as Yong Kim<br />  Sarah Shahi as Pooneh Baraheri<br />  Melody Khazae as Zahra Baraheri<br />  Merik Tadros as Farid Baraheri<br />  Marshall Manesh as Sanjar Baraheri<br />  Nina Nayebi as Minoo Baraheri<br />  Naila Azad as Rokeya Jahangir<br />  Shelley Malil as Munshi Jahangir<br />  Jamen Nanthakumar as Abul Jahangir<br />  Jaysha Patel as Jahanara Jahangir<br /> Page 7 of 7<br />  Leonardo Nam as Kwan<br />  Tim Chiou as Steve<br />  West Liang as Mark<br />  Mahershalalhashbaz Ali as Detective Strickland<br /> [edit]Production and distribution<br /> The film originally featured a scene in which an Iranian character is murdered by her brother in an honor<br /> killing, but the National Iranian American Council opposed the plotline as being unrealistic and offensive,<br /> and the killing was presented as a beating-up which got out of hand, removing the dialogue referring to<br /> "honor" and "family honor".[2][3]<br /> Additionally, Sean Penn filmed scenes as an immigration cop. However, his scenes were cut due to the<br /> controversy over the honor killing plot, though producer Harvey Weinstein later claimed that Penn's agent<br /> requested his scenes be cut out of the film.[4][5]<br /> Though the film was shot in 2007, it was not released until 2009, and even then only in a limited theatrical<br /> run. The film's original running length was 140 minutes long, but this film's producer (who had final cut<br /> privilege) was convinced to edit the film down to under 2 hours when Harvey Weinstein threatened to<br /> release the film straight to DVD and bypass a theatrical release altogether (in many countries outside of<br /> the US, this was the case anyway).[6]<br /> The film was distributed in the United States by MGM and The Weinstein Company. It was given a limited<br /> theatrical release on February 27, 2009. It ultimately grossed less than half a million dollars in North<br /> America, and just over $2.5 million internationally for a total of $3 million. The film has reportedly made<br /> another $1.7 million in US DVD sales</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Dear John 2010 2015-09-26T10:34:33+00:00 2015-09-26T10:34:33+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/119-dear-john-2010 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="1289"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/dear%20john%202010.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Dear John</span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><br /> 1. Black out 1.02 Dear John (2010)<br /> 2. The first thing that popped into my head 1.33<br /> 3. I'm on it 3.37<br /> 4. You are a lifesaver 4.02<br /> 5. Two steps behind 6.51<br /> 6. Very primal 9.11<br /> 7. For the record 11.40<br /> 8. Care to enlighten me? 19.31<br /> 9. Bright and early 36.12<br /> 10. Gotcha 37.06<br /> 11. That horse suits you just fine 39.09<br /> 12. Horse sense 39.21<br /> 13. Pipe dream 39.51<br /> 14. Kind of a cull 41.18<br /> 15. I'll be damned 43.46<br /> 16. Pass it down to your son 44.06<br /> 17. There isn't much left to talk about 45.20<br /> 18. Here's the deal 46.37<br /> 19. Requesting permission to extend my tour 46.34<br /> 20. Before we do anything rash 46.50<br /> 21. Mull it over 46.50<br /> 22. Spiffy 49.05<br /> 23. Brief sb 52.08<br /> 24. It was good intel 52.11<br /> 25. You look like you could use a drink 52.29<br /> 26. We got off on the wrong foot 52.56<br /> 27. In all seriousness, I'm sorry 53.04<br /> 28. Fair enough 53.11<br /> 29. I bench –press refrigerators 53.23<br /> 30. Beat sb to the punch 53.31<br /> 31. He'd rough me up if I ever hurt her 53.34<br /> 32. I made quite an impact 53.37<br /> 33. Reenlist for another tour 55.30<br /> 34. Do I have a say in this? 56.34<br /> 35. It's unanimous? 1.03.17<br /> 36. Making mud pies, dude? 1.08.13<br /> 37. I speak all kinds of shit 1.10.23<br /> 38. No talking you out of this? 1.14.33<br /> 39. Conscious but not lucid1.15.54<br /> 40. He's hardly ever responsive 1.15.57<br /> 41. Don't wana rush you but we have another service coming in 1.23.01<br /> 42. As soon as I get his stuff squared away 1.26.33<br /> 43. Wasn't until after ….. that I noticed a big change 1.28.21<br /> 44. Cooped up in a room 1.28.30<br /> 45. U must wana kick my a… 1.29.10<br /> 46. Wiped clean 1.29.38<br /> 47. In good hands 1.30.02<br /> 48. Plain as day, u can see it all over her face 1.30.28<br /> 49. A godsend 1.31.38<br /> 50. Do a few fundraisers 1.32.07<br /> 51. Tim got me started a few years ago 1.32.07<br /> 52. He recently passed 1.38.53<br /> 53. This comes up nickel/penny/head/tail 1.39.40<br /> 54. Anonymous donation 1.40.19</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="1289"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/dear%20john%202010.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Dear John</span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><br /> 1. Black out 1.02 Dear John (2010)<br /> 2. The first thing that popped into my head 1.33<br /> 3. I'm on it 3.37<br /> 4. You are a lifesaver 4.02<br /> 5. Two steps behind 6.51<br /> 6. Very primal 9.11<br /> 7. For the record 11.40<br /> 8. Care to enlighten me? 19.31<br /> 9. Bright and early 36.12<br /> 10. Gotcha 37.06<br /> 11. That horse suits you just fine 39.09<br /> 12. Horse sense 39.21<br /> 13. Pipe dream 39.51<br /> 14. Kind of a cull 41.18<br /> 15. I'll be damned 43.46<br /> 16. Pass it down to your son 44.06<br /> 17. There isn't much left to talk about 45.20<br /> 18. Here's the deal 46.37<br /> 19. Requesting permission to extend my tour 46.34<br /> 20. Before we do anything rash 46.50<br /> 21. Mull it over 46.50<br /> 22. Spiffy 49.05<br /> 23. Brief sb 52.08<br /> 24. It was good intel 52.11<br /> 25. You look like you could use a drink 52.29<br /> 26. We got off on the wrong foot 52.56<br /> 27. In all seriousness, I'm sorry 53.04<br /> 28. Fair enough 53.11<br /> 29. I bench –press refrigerators 53.23<br /> 30. Beat sb to the punch 53.31<br /> 31. He'd rough me up if I ever hurt her 53.34<br /> 32. I made quite an impact 53.37<br /> 33. Reenlist for another tour 55.30<br /> 34. Do I have a say in this? 56.34<br /> 35. It's unanimous? 1.03.17<br /> 36. Making mud pies, dude? 1.08.13<br /> 37. I speak all kinds of shit 1.10.23<br /> 38. No talking you out of this? 1.14.33<br /> 39. Conscious but not lucid1.15.54<br /> 40. He's hardly ever responsive 1.15.57<br /> 41. Don't wana rush you but we have another service coming in 1.23.01<br /> 42. As soon as I get his stuff squared away 1.26.33<br /> 43. Wasn't until after ….. that I noticed a big change 1.28.21<br /> 44. Cooped up in a room 1.28.30<br /> 45. U must wana kick my a… 1.29.10<br /> 46. Wiped clean 1.29.38<br /> 47. In good hands 1.30.02<br /> 48. Plain as day, u can see it all over her face 1.30.28<br /> 49. A godsend 1.31.38<br /> 50. Do a few fundraisers 1.32.07<br /> 51. Tim got me started a few years ago 1.32.07<br /> 52. He recently passed 1.38.53<br /> 53. This comes up nickel/penny/head/tail 1.39.40<br /> 54. Anonymous donation 1.40.19</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Devil 2010 2015-09-26T10:37:12+00:00 2015-09-26T10:37:12+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/123-devil-2010 <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/the%20devil%202010%20-%20teacher%20edition.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Devil</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">The Devil (2010)<br /> 1. Satan claims your soul 1.24<br /> 2. Tell an old wives' tale 1.34<br /> 3. The truck must have rolled 6.36<br /> 4. Dead guy turned the corner 6.46<br /> 5. Let's walk it 6.58<br /> 6. You can squeeze in 8.35<br /> 7. Put a stick on it 10.16<br /> 8. She is 76. Have at it 11.15<br /> 9. Keep up your equipment 11.57<br /> 10. Hang tough 12.18<br /> 11. Pick a fight 12.27<br /> 12. Why don't you lay off pal? 14.9<br /> 13. Levity 14.15<br /> 14. He doesn't take kindly to 16.17<br /> 15. inspecting prowess 16.44<br /> 16. do you wanna shimmy up the cables? 18.02<br /> 17. you have worn a groove into it 19.12<br /> 18. those shoes have been through the mills 19.20 (go,put) 19.20<br /> 19. you wish, sweetheart 23.42<br /> 20. the lights keep shorting out 24.15<br /> 21. there is a kill switch 26.53<br /> 22. we need to convey calm 30.23<br /> 23. that's as good as it takes 33.33<br /> 24. geniuses have done a bang‐up job so far 34.42<br /> 25. I guess that figures 38.50<br /> 26. A shard of glass sliced up and into the jugular 39.00<br /> 27. They are so worked up they can't control themselves 39.06<br /> 28. These people are shook up, but don't look murderous 39.10<br /> 29. Hold it up to the camera 39.37<br /> 30. Freight elevator 40.18<br /> 31. How is your jumper shaping up? 41.03<br /> 32. That line would stretch around the Block 43.00<br /> 33. He was a real scumbag 43.04<br /> 34. Started a ponzi scheme 43.07<br /> 35. He's impaled on the top of the elevator 48.37<br /> 36. I'm ruling nobody out 51.50<br /> 37. A shut‐off valve 51.51<br /> 38. I haven't thought that far ahead 53.03<br /> 39. Rig an elevator 54.41<br /> 40. It's an act 56.14<br /> 41. Electricity crackles 59.40<br /> 42. Bad wires could be shorting out the circuits 59.53<br /> 43. Heads up! Back up! 1.01.19<br /> 44. Back away! Move back! 1.01.36<br /> 45. Chick's a twist 1.02.05<br /> 46. Tempers would flare 1.02.19<br /> 47. He lawyered up 1.03.01<br /> 48. The two victims were just a decoy 1.03.47<br /> 49. They are pinning it on you 1.05.03<br /> 50. Sarah wheezing 1.11.34<br /> ===================================================================================<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> Satan claims your soul 1.24 the fire claimed four lives : TAKE, cause/result in the loss of.<br /> Tell an old wives' tale 1.34 An old wives' tale is a traditional belief, especially one which is<br /> incorrect. Ann Bradley dispels the old wives' tales and gives the medical facts. a myth, an old story that<br /> contains little truth One old wives' tale says that goose fat will cure a cold. the old superstitions held<br /> by sailors : MYTH, belief, old wives' tale; legend, story.<br /> medicine was riddled with superstition: UNFOUNDED BELIEF, credulity, fallacy, delusion, illusion;<br /> magic, sorcery.<br /> The truck must have rolled 6.36<br /> Dead guy turned the corner 6.46 achieve part of a goal, progress toward a goal Lan was very<br /> ill, but she's turned the corner. She's recovering. to start to become successful or to feel better or<br /> happier, after a time when you have been unsuccessful, ill, or unhappy<br /> We knew Dad had turned the corner when he started complaining about the hospital food.<br /> Let's walk it 6.58 achieve a victory easily. BrE spoken a) to make a journey by walking<br /> If the last bus has gone, we'll have to walk it. b) to succeed or win something easily<br /> You can squeeze in 8.35 manage to get into or through (a restricted space). we all squeezed into<br /> Steve's van : CROWD, crush, cram, pack, jam, squash, wedge oneself, shove, push, force one's way.<br /> Put a stick on it 10.16<br /> She is 76. Have at it 11.15 have at To set upon with violent force:<br /> aggress, assail, assault, attack, beset, fall on or (upon), go at, sail into, storm, strike. Informal : light<br /> into, pitch into.<br /> See ATTACK.<br /> Keep up your equipment 11.57 to make something continue at its present level or amount,<br /> instead of letting it decrease NATO kept up the pressure on the Serbs to get out of Kosovo<br /> Hang tough 12.18 be or remain inflexible or firmly resolved.<br /> Pick a fight 12.27 start a fight, begin an argument If Jamie tries to pick a fight with you, just walk<br /> away. he had an argument with Tony : QUARREL, disagreement, squabble, fight, dispute, wrangle, clash,<br /> altercation, feud, contretemps, disputation, falling-out; informal tiff, slanging match; Brit. informal row,<br /> barney.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> Why don't you lay off pal? 14.9 v. phr. 1. To mark out the boundaries or limits. He laid off a<br /> baseball diamond on the vacant lot.<br /> Compare: LAY OUT5. 2. To put out of work. The company lost the contract for making the shoes and laid<br /> off half its workers. 3. slang To stop bothering; leave alone. Usually used in the imperative. Lay off<br /> me, will you? I have to study for a test. 4. slang To stop using or taking. His doctor told him to lay off<br /> cigarettes. (informal) GIVE UP, stop, refrain from, abstain from, desist from, cut out; informal pack in,<br /> leave off, quit.<br /> Levity 14.15 formal lack of respect or seriousness when you are dealing with something serious<br /> ≠ gravity LIGHT-HEARTEDNESS, high spirits, vivacity, liveliness, cheerfulness, cheeriness, humour,<br /> gaiety, fun, jocularity, hilarity, frivolity, frivolousness, amusement, mirth, laughter, merriment, glee,<br /> comedy, wit, wittiness, jollity, joviality.<br /> He doesn't take kindly to 16.17 he took to carrying his money in his sock : MAKE A HABIT<br /> OF, resort to, turn to, have recourse to; start, commence.<br /> Ruth took to him instantly : LIKE, get on with, be friendly towards; informal take a shine to.<br /> the dog has really taken to racing: BECOME GOOD AT, develop an ability for; like, enjoy.<br /> inspecting prowess 16.44 formal great skill at doing something<br /> his physical prowess military prowess his prowess as a winemaker : SKILL, expertise, mastery,<br /> facility, ability, capability, capacity, savoir faire, talent, genius, adeptness, aptitude, dexterity, deftness,<br /> competence, accomplishment, proficiency, finesse; informal know-how.<br /> the knights' prowess in battle : COURAGE, bravery, gallantry, valour, heroism, intrepidity, nerve,<br /> pluck, pluckiness, boldness, daring, audacity, fearlessness; informal bottle, guts, spunk; N. Amer.<br /> informal moxie, sand.<br /> inability, ineptitude, cowardice.<br /> do you wanna shimmy up the cables? 18.02 to move forwards or backwards while also<br /> quickly moving slightly from side to side a kind of ragtime dance in which the whole body shakes or<br /> sways. shaking, especially abnormal vibration of the wheels of a motor vehicle.<br /> you have worn a groove into it 19.12 an established routine or habit. his morning routine :<br /> PROCEDURE, practice, pattern, drill, regime, regimen; programme, schedule, plan; formula, method,<br /> system; customs, habits; formal wont.<br /> those shoes have been through the mills 19.20 (go,put) 19.20 old clothes : WORN,<br /> worn out, shabby, threadbare, holey, torn, frayed, patched, tattered, moth-eaten, ragged; old-fashioned,<br /> out of date, outmoded; cast-off, hand-me-down; informal tatty.<br /> you wish, sweetheart 23.42 spoken used to tell someone that what they want to happen or be<br /> true will definitely not happen or become true<br /> 'I'm going to be famous one day.' 'You wish!'<br /> the lights keep shorting out 24.15 Short out is American slang for to lose one's temper. short4 v<br /> [I and T] also short out to short-circuit, or make something do this The toaster shorted and caused a<br /> fire.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> there is a kill switch 26.53 called an e-stop, is a security measure used to shut off a device in an emergency situation in<br /> which it cannot be shut down in the usual manner. Unlike a normal shut down, which shuts down all systems naturally and turns the machine<br /> off without damaging it, a kill switch is designed to completely abort the operation at all costs, and be configured so that it is quick to operate,<br /> and relatively obvious to someone other than the usual operator. It might have some protection to prevent accidental operation, but which<br /> can be quickly moved out of the way. Often, they are used to protect people from sustaining an injury or being killed, in which case damaging<br /> the machine may be considered to be acceptable.<br /> we need to convey calm 30.23 he conveys an air of competence :<br /> PROJECT, exude, emit, emanate.<br /> taxis conveyed guests to the station : TRANSPORT, carry, bring, take, fetch, bear, move,<br /> ferry, shuttle, shift, transfer.<br /> he conveyed the information to me: COMMUNICATE, pass on, make known, impart,<br /> relay, transmit, send, hand on, relate, tell, reveal, disclose.<br /> it's impossible to convey how I felt: EXPRESS, communicate, get across/over, put<br /> across/over, indicate, say.<br /> that's as good as it takes 33.33 be as good as it gets INFORMAL 1<br /> to be not very good and unlikely to improve People are asking themselves, is this as good as it gets?<br /> 2to be extremely good, so that nothing is likely to be better This job is probably about as good as it gets.<br /> geniuses have done a bang‐up job so far 34.42 adj., informal 1.Very successful; very<br /> good; splendid; excellent. The football coach has done a bang-up job this season. John did a bang-up job<br /> painting the house. 2. Make pregnant 3. terrible<br /> Synonym: FIRST-CLASS.<br /> I guess that figures 38.50 that figures/(it) figures spoken especially AmE a) used to say<br /> that something that happens is expected or typical, especially something bad<br /> 'It rained the whole weekend.' 'Oh, that figures.' b) used to say that something is reasonable or<br /> makes sense It figures that she'd be mad at you, after what you did.<br /> A shard of glass sliced up and into the jugular 39.00<br /> They are so worked up they can't control themselves 39.06 adj [not before noun]<br /> informal very upset or excited about something worked up about/over You shouldn't get so<br /> worked up about it. ■ work something up STIMULATE, rouse, raise, arouse, awaken, excite.<br /> These people are shook up, but don't look murderous 39.10 adj., slang In a state of<br /> great emotional upheaval; disturbed; agitated. What are you so shook up about? upset, worried He was<br /> really shook up after the accident and has not been back to work since.<br /> Hold it up to the camera 39.37<br /> Freight elevator 40.18<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> How is your jumper shaping up? 41.03 become physically fit. develop in a particular way.<br /> There are also indications that a major tank battle may be shaping up for tonight...<br /> The accident is already shaping up as a significant environmental disaster...<br /> It's shaping up to be a terrible winter.<br /> 2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P as n, V P adv If you ask how someone or something is shaping up, you want to<br /> know how well they are doing in a particular situation or activity.<br /> I did have a few worries about how Hugh and I would shape up as parents...<br /> Girls are being recruited now. I heard they are shaping up very well.<br /> 3 [PHRASAL VERB] V P If you tell someone to shape up, you are telling them to start behaving in a<br /> sensible and responsible way. It is no use simply to tell adolescents to shape up and do something<br /> useful.<br /> That line would stretch around the Block 43.00 to spread out or cover a large area of land<br /> He was a real scumbag 43.04 spoken informal not polite a nasty, unpleasant person<br /> Started a Ponzi scheme 43.07 investment scam by which early investors are paid off from the<br /> contributions of later ones, 1957, in ref. to Charles Ponzi, who perpetrated such a scam in U.S., 1919-20.<br /> He's impaled on the top of the elevator 48.37 adj. pinned down, fixed in place with a sharp<br /> or pointed object; pierced through with a sharp object, stabbed; made helpless, immobilized with a word<br /> or look Their heads were impaled on Charles Bridge as a warning to others. ▶ verb STICK, skewer,<br /> spear, spike, transfix; pierce, stab, run through; poetic/literary transpierce.<br /> I'm ruling nobody out 51.50 If you rule out a course of action, an idea, or a solution, you decide<br /> that it is impossible or unsuitable. The Prime Minister is believed to have ruled out cuts in child benefit or<br /> pensions... 2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron) If something rules out a situation, it prevents it from<br /> happening or from being possible. A serious car accident in 1986 ruled out a permanent future for him in<br /> farming.<br /> A shut‐off valve 51.51 n. valve, device used to shut off something; cessation, stoppage<br /> I haven't thought that far ahead 53.03 the ability to imagine what is likely to happen and to<br /> consider this when planning for the future→forethought It was an example of the authorities' lack of<br /> foresight . foresight to do sth Luckily I'd had the foresight to get in plenty of food. ▶ noun<br /> FORETHOUGHT, planning, far-sightedness, vision, anticipation, prudence, care, caution, precaution,<br /> readiness, preparedness; N. Amer. forehandedness. hindsight.<br /> Rig an elevator 54.41 ▶ noun VANDALISM, wrecking, destruction, impairment, incapacitation,<br /> damage; subversion, obstruction, disruption, spoiling, undermining; Brit. a spanner in the works.<br /> ▶ verb VANDALIZE, wreck, damage, destroy, cripple, impair, incapacitate; obstruct, disrupt, spoil, ruin,<br /> undermine, threaten, subvert.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> It's an act 56.14 we laughed, but most of us were just acting : PRETEND, play-act, put it on, fake<br /> it, feign it, dissemble, dissimulate. it was all just an act : PRETENCE, show, front, facade,<br /> masquerade, charade, posture, pose, affectation, sham, fake; informal a put-on.<br /> Electricity crackles 59.40 to make repeated short sounds like something burning in a fire logs<br /> crackling on the fire An announcement crackled over the tannoy. ▶ verb SIZZLE, fizz, hiss, crack,<br /> snap, sputter, crepitate; technical decrepitate.<br /> Bad wires could be shorting out the circuits 59.53<br /> Heads up! Back up! 1.01.19 interj., informal Keep your head up and be careful or ready. Used<br /> as a warning to prepare for something or clear the way "Heads up!" said the waiter carrying the hot food.<br /> Heads up, boys! A train is coming. Heads up, now! You can do better than that.<br /> Synonym: LOOK ALIVE, LOOK OUT.<br /> heads-up(2) adj., informal Wide-awake; alert; watchful; intelligent. You must play hard, heads-up<br /> baseball to win this game. Compare: ON ONE'S TOES, ON THE BALL.<br /> Back up = If you back up, the car or other vehicle that you are driving moves back a short distance.<br /> Back up, Hans...<br /> A police van drove through the protesters and backed up to the front door of the house.<br /> = reverse v. 1. To move backwards. The train was backing up.<br /> Back away! Move back! 1.01.36 If you back away, you walk backwards away from someone or<br /> something, often because you are frightened of them.<br /> James got to his feet and started to come over, but the girls hastily backed away.<br /> Chick's a twist 1.02.05 a liar and a cheat : SWINDLER, cheater, fraudster, (confidence)<br /> trickster, deceiver, hoaxer, hoodwinker, double-dealer, double-crosser, sham, fraud, fake, charlatan,<br /> quack, mountebank; informal con man/artist, shark, sharper, phoney, flimflammer; Brit. informal twister;<br /> N. Amer. informal grifter, bunco artist, gold brick, chiseller; Austral. informal magsman, illywhacker;<br /> dated confidence man, confidence woman.<br /> Tempers would flare 1.02.19 also flare up [I]<br /> if strong feelings flare or flare up, people suddenly become angry, violent etc Rioting has flared up in<br /> several northern towns. Tempers flared during the debate.<br /> He lawyered up 1.03.01<br /> The two victims were just a decoy 1.03.47 someone or something that is used to trick<br /> someone into going somewhere or doing something, so that you can catch them, attack them etc<br /> Officer Langley acted as a decoy to catch the rapist.<br /> a model of a bird used to attract wild birds so that you can watch them or shoot them<br /> ▶ noun a decoy to distract their attention : LURE, bait, red herring; enticement, inducement, temptation,<br /> attraction, carrot; snare, trap.<br /> ▶ verb he was decoyed to the mainland : LURE, entice, tempt; entrap, snare, trap.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> They are pinning it on you 1.05.03 to blame someone for something, often unfairly<br /> Don't try to pin the blame on me! They're trying to pin the murder on the boyfriend.<br /> pin your hopes/faith on sth/sbto hope that something will happen or someone will help you,<br /> because all your plans depend on this Chris is pinning his hopes on getting into Yale.<br /> Sarah wheezing 1.11.34 ▶ verb the illness left her wheezing : BREATHE NOISILY, gasp, whistle,<br /> hiss, rasp, croak, pant, cough.<br /> Brit. informal a clever or amusing scheme or trick.</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><span style="color: #000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/the%20devil%202010%20-%20teacher%20edition.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></span></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Devil</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">The Devil (2010)<br /> 1. Satan claims your soul 1.24<br /> 2. Tell an old wives' tale 1.34<br /> 3. The truck must have rolled 6.36<br /> 4. Dead guy turned the corner 6.46<br /> 5. Let's walk it 6.58<br /> 6. You can squeeze in 8.35<br /> 7. Put a stick on it 10.16<br /> 8. She is 76. Have at it 11.15<br /> 9. Keep up your equipment 11.57<br /> 10. Hang tough 12.18<br /> 11. Pick a fight 12.27<br /> 12. Why don't you lay off pal? 14.9<br /> 13. Levity 14.15<br /> 14. He doesn't take kindly to 16.17<br /> 15. inspecting prowess 16.44<br /> 16. do you wanna shimmy up the cables? 18.02<br /> 17. you have worn a groove into it 19.12<br /> 18. those shoes have been through the mills 19.20 (go,put) 19.20<br /> 19. you wish, sweetheart 23.42<br /> 20. the lights keep shorting out 24.15<br /> 21. there is a kill switch 26.53<br /> 22. we need to convey calm 30.23<br /> 23. that's as good as it takes 33.33<br /> 24. geniuses have done a bang‐up job so far 34.42<br /> 25. I guess that figures 38.50<br /> 26. A shard of glass sliced up and into the jugular 39.00<br /> 27. They are so worked up they can't control themselves 39.06<br /> 28. These people are shook up, but don't look murderous 39.10<br /> 29. Hold it up to the camera 39.37<br /> 30. Freight elevator 40.18<br /> 31. How is your jumper shaping up? 41.03<br /> 32. That line would stretch around the Block 43.00<br /> 33. He was a real scumbag 43.04<br /> 34. Started a ponzi scheme 43.07<br /> 35. He's impaled on the top of the elevator 48.37<br /> 36. I'm ruling nobody out 51.50<br /> 37. A shut‐off valve 51.51<br /> 38. I haven't thought that far ahead 53.03<br /> 39. Rig an elevator 54.41<br /> 40. It's an act 56.14<br /> 41. Electricity crackles 59.40<br /> 42. Bad wires could be shorting out the circuits 59.53<br /> 43. Heads up! Back up! 1.01.19<br /> 44. Back away! Move back! 1.01.36<br /> 45. Chick's a twist 1.02.05<br /> 46. Tempers would flare 1.02.19<br /> 47. He lawyered up 1.03.01<br /> 48. The two victims were just a decoy 1.03.47<br /> 49. They are pinning it on you 1.05.03<br /> 50. Sarah wheezing 1.11.34<br /> ===================================================================================<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> Satan claims your soul 1.24 the fire claimed four lives : TAKE, cause/result in the loss of.<br /> Tell an old wives' tale 1.34 An old wives' tale is a traditional belief, especially one which is<br /> incorrect. Ann Bradley dispels the old wives' tales and gives the medical facts. a myth, an old story that<br /> contains little truth One old wives' tale says that goose fat will cure a cold. the old superstitions held<br /> by sailors : MYTH, belief, old wives' tale; legend, story.<br /> medicine was riddled with superstition: UNFOUNDED BELIEF, credulity, fallacy, delusion, illusion;<br /> magic, sorcery.<br /> The truck must have rolled 6.36<br /> Dead guy turned the corner 6.46 achieve part of a goal, progress toward a goal Lan was very<br /> ill, but she's turned the corner. She's recovering. to start to become successful or to feel better or<br /> happier, after a time when you have been unsuccessful, ill, or unhappy<br /> We knew Dad had turned the corner when he started complaining about the hospital food.<br /> Let's walk it 6.58 achieve a victory easily. BrE spoken a) to make a journey by walking<br /> If the last bus has gone, we'll have to walk it. b) to succeed or win something easily<br /> You can squeeze in 8.35 manage to get into or through (a restricted space). we all squeezed into<br /> Steve's van : CROWD, crush, cram, pack, jam, squash, wedge oneself, shove, push, force one's way.<br /> Put a stick on it 10.16<br /> She is 76. Have at it 11.15 have at To set upon with violent force:<br /> aggress, assail, assault, attack, beset, fall on or (upon), go at, sail into, storm, strike. Informal : light<br /> into, pitch into.<br /> See ATTACK.<br /> Keep up your equipment 11.57 to make something continue at its present level or amount,<br /> instead of letting it decrease NATO kept up the pressure on the Serbs to get out of Kosovo<br /> Hang tough 12.18 be or remain inflexible or firmly resolved.<br /> Pick a fight 12.27 start a fight, begin an argument If Jamie tries to pick a fight with you, just walk<br /> away. he had an argument with Tony : QUARREL, disagreement, squabble, fight, dispute, wrangle, clash,<br /> altercation, feud, contretemps, disputation, falling-out; informal tiff, slanging match; Brit. informal row,<br /> barney.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> Why don't you lay off pal? 14.9 v. phr. 1. To mark out the boundaries or limits. He laid off a<br /> baseball diamond on the vacant lot.<br /> Compare: LAY OUT5. 2. To put out of work. The company lost the contract for making the shoes and laid<br /> off half its workers. 3. slang To stop bothering; leave alone. Usually used in the imperative. Lay off<br /> me, will you? I have to study for a test. 4. slang To stop using or taking. His doctor told him to lay off<br /> cigarettes. (informal) GIVE UP, stop, refrain from, abstain from, desist from, cut out; informal pack in,<br /> leave off, quit.<br /> Levity 14.15 formal lack of respect or seriousness when you are dealing with something serious<br /> ≠ gravity LIGHT-HEARTEDNESS, high spirits, vivacity, liveliness, cheerfulness, cheeriness, humour,<br /> gaiety, fun, jocularity, hilarity, frivolity, frivolousness, amusement, mirth, laughter, merriment, glee,<br /> comedy, wit, wittiness, jollity, joviality.<br /> He doesn't take kindly to 16.17 he took to carrying his money in his sock : MAKE A HABIT<br /> OF, resort to, turn to, have recourse to; start, commence.<br /> Ruth took to him instantly : LIKE, get on with, be friendly towards; informal take a shine to.<br /> the dog has really taken to racing: BECOME GOOD AT, develop an ability for; like, enjoy.<br /> inspecting prowess 16.44 formal great skill at doing something<br /> his physical prowess military prowess his prowess as a winemaker : SKILL, expertise, mastery,<br /> facility, ability, capability, capacity, savoir faire, talent, genius, adeptness, aptitude, dexterity, deftness,<br /> competence, accomplishment, proficiency, finesse; informal know-how.<br /> the knights' prowess in battle : COURAGE, bravery, gallantry, valour, heroism, intrepidity, nerve,<br /> pluck, pluckiness, boldness, daring, audacity, fearlessness; informal bottle, guts, spunk; N. Amer.<br /> informal moxie, sand.<br /> inability, ineptitude, cowardice.<br /> do you wanna shimmy up the cables? 18.02 to move forwards or backwards while also<br /> quickly moving slightly from side to side a kind of ragtime dance in which the whole body shakes or<br /> sways. shaking, especially abnormal vibration of the wheels of a motor vehicle.<br /> you have worn a groove into it 19.12 an established routine or habit. his morning routine :<br /> PROCEDURE, practice, pattern, drill, regime, regimen; programme, schedule, plan; formula, method,<br /> system; customs, habits; formal wont.<br /> those shoes have been through the mills 19.20 (go,put) 19.20 old clothes : WORN,<br /> worn out, shabby, threadbare, holey, torn, frayed, patched, tattered, moth-eaten, ragged; old-fashioned,<br /> out of date, outmoded; cast-off, hand-me-down; informal tatty.<br /> you wish, sweetheart 23.42 spoken used to tell someone that what they want to happen or be<br /> true will definitely not happen or become true<br /> 'I'm going to be famous one day.' 'You wish!'<br /> the lights keep shorting out 24.15 Short out is American slang for to lose one's temper. short4 v<br /> [I and T] also short out to short-circuit, or make something do this The toaster shorted and caused a<br /> fire.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> there is a kill switch 26.53 called an e-stop, is a security measure used to shut off a device in an emergency situation in<br /> which it cannot be shut down in the usual manner. Unlike a normal shut down, which shuts down all systems naturally and turns the machine<br /> off without damaging it, a kill switch is designed to completely abort the operation at all costs, and be configured so that it is quick to operate,<br /> and relatively obvious to someone other than the usual operator. It might have some protection to prevent accidental operation, but which<br /> can be quickly moved out of the way. Often, they are used to protect people from sustaining an injury or being killed, in which case damaging<br /> the machine may be considered to be acceptable.<br /> we need to convey calm 30.23 he conveys an air of competence :<br /> PROJECT, exude, emit, emanate.<br /> taxis conveyed guests to the station : TRANSPORT, carry, bring, take, fetch, bear, move,<br /> ferry, shuttle, shift, transfer.<br /> he conveyed the information to me: COMMUNICATE, pass on, make known, impart,<br /> relay, transmit, send, hand on, relate, tell, reveal, disclose.<br /> it's impossible to convey how I felt: EXPRESS, communicate, get across/over, put<br /> across/over, indicate, say.<br /> that's as good as it takes 33.33 be as good as it gets INFORMAL 1<br /> to be not very good and unlikely to improve People are asking themselves, is this as good as it gets?<br /> 2to be extremely good, so that nothing is likely to be better This job is probably about as good as it gets.<br /> geniuses have done a bang‐up job so far 34.42 adj., informal 1.Very successful; very<br /> good; splendid; excellent. The football coach has done a bang-up job this season. John did a bang-up job<br /> painting the house. 2. Make pregnant 3. terrible<br /> Synonym: FIRST-CLASS.<br /> I guess that figures 38.50 that figures/(it) figures spoken especially AmE a) used to say<br /> that something that happens is expected or typical, especially something bad<br /> 'It rained the whole weekend.' 'Oh, that figures.' b) used to say that something is reasonable or<br /> makes sense It figures that she'd be mad at you, after what you did.<br /> A shard of glass sliced up and into the jugular 39.00<br /> They are so worked up they can't control themselves 39.06 adj [not before noun]<br /> informal very upset or excited about something worked up about/over You shouldn't get so<br /> worked up about it. ■ work something up STIMULATE, rouse, raise, arouse, awaken, excite.<br /> These people are shook up, but don't look murderous 39.10 adj., slang In a state of<br /> great emotional upheaval; disturbed; agitated. What are you so shook up about? upset, worried He was<br /> really shook up after the accident and has not been back to work since.<br /> Hold it up to the camera 39.37<br /> Freight elevator 40.18<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> How is your jumper shaping up? 41.03 become physically fit. develop in a particular way.<br /> There are also indications that a major tank battle may be shaping up for tonight...<br /> The accident is already shaping up as a significant environmental disaster...<br /> It's shaping up to be a terrible winter.<br /> 2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P as n, V P adv If you ask how someone or something is shaping up, you want to<br /> know how well they are doing in a particular situation or activity.<br /> I did have a few worries about how Hugh and I would shape up as parents...<br /> Girls are being recruited now. I heard they are shaping up very well.<br /> 3 [PHRASAL VERB] V P If you tell someone to shape up, you are telling them to start behaving in a<br /> sensible and responsible way. It is no use simply to tell adolescents to shape up and do something<br /> useful.<br /> That line would stretch around the Block 43.00 to spread out or cover a large area of land<br /> He was a real scumbag 43.04 spoken informal not polite a nasty, unpleasant person<br /> Started a Ponzi scheme 43.07 investment scam by which early investors are paid off from the<br /> contributions of later ones, 1957, in ref. to Charles Ponzi, who perpetrated such a scam in U.S., 1919-20.<br /> He's impaled on the top of the elevator 48.37 adj. pinned down, fixed in place with a sharp<br /> or pointed object; pierced through with a sharp object, stabbed; made helpless, immobilized with a word<br /> or look Their heads were impaled on Charles Bridge as a warning to others. ▶ verb STICK, skewer,<br /> spear, spike, transfix; pierce, stab, run through; poetic/literary transpierce.<br /> I'm ruling nobody out 51.50 If you rule out a course of action, an idea, or a solution, you decide<br /> that it is impossible or unsuitable. The Prime Minister is believed to have ruled out cuts in child benefit or<br /> pensions... 2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron) If something rules out a situation, it prevents it from<br /> happening or from being possible. A serious car accident in 1986 ruled out a permanent future for him in<br /> farming.<br /> A shut‐off valve 51.51 n. valve, device used to shut off something; cessation, stoppage<br /> I haven't thought that far ahead 53.03 the ability to imagine what is likely to happen and to<br /> consider this when planning for the future→forethought It was an example of the authorities' lack of<br /> foresight . foresight to do sth Luckily I'd had the foresight to get in plenty of food. ▶ noun<br /> FORETHOUGHT, planning, far-sightedness, vision, anticipation, prudence, care, caution, precaution,<br /> readiness, preparedness; N. Amer. forehandedness. hindsight.<br /> Rig an elevator 54.41 ▶ noun VANDALISM, wrecking, destruction, impairment, incapacitation,<br /> damage; subversion, obstruction, disruption, spoiling, undermining; Brit. a spanner in the works.<br /> ▶ verb VANDALIZE, wreck, damage, destroy, cripple, impair, incapacitate; obstruct, disrupt, spoil, ruin,<br /> undermine, threaten, subvert.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> It's an act 56.14 we laughed, but most of us were just acting : PRETEND, play-act, put it on, fake<br /> it, feign it, dissemble, dissimulate. it was all just an act : PRETENCE, show, front, facade,<br /> masquerade, charade, posture, pose, affectation, sham, fake; informal a put-on.<br /> Electricity crackles 59.40 to make repeated short sounds like something burning in a fire logs<br /> crackling on the fire An announcement crackled over the tannoy. ▶ verb SIZZLE, fizz, hiss, crack,<br /> snap, sputter, crepitate; technical decrepitate.<br /> Bad wires could be shorting out the circuits 59.53<br /> Heads up! Back up! 1.01.19 interj., informal Keep your head up and be careful or ready. Used<br /> as a warning to prepare for something or clear the way "Heads up!" said the waiter carrying the hot food.<br /> Heads up, boys! A train is coming. Heads up, now! You can do better than that.<br /> Synonym: LOOK ALIVE, LOOK OUT.<br /> heads-up(2) adj., informal Wide-awake; alert; watchful; intelligent. You must play hard, heads-up<br /> baseball to win this game. Compare: ON ONE'S TOES, ON THE BALL.<br /> Back up = If you back up, the car or other vehicle that you are driving moves back a short distance.<br /> Back up, Hans...<br /> A police van drove through the protesters and backed up to the front door of the house.<br /> = reverse v. 1. To move backwards. The train was backing up.<br /> Back away! Move back! 1.01.36 If you back away, you walk backwards away from someone or<br /> something, often because you are frightened of them.<br /> James got to his feet and started to come over, but the girls hastily backed away.<br /> Chick's a twist 1.02.05 a liar and a cheat : SWINDLER, cheater, fraudster, (confidence)<br /> trickster, deceiver, hoaxer, hoodwinker, double-dealer, double-crosser, sham, fraud, fake, charlatan,<br /> quack, mountebank; informal con man/artist, shark, sharper, phoney, flimflammer; Brit. informal twister;<br /> N. Amer. informal grifter, bunco artist, gold brick, chiseller; Austral. informal magsman, illywhacker;<br /> dated confidence man, confidence woman.<br /> Tempers would flare 1.02.19 also flare up [I]<br /> if strong feelings flare or flare up, people suddenly become angry, violent etc Rioting has flared up in<br /> several northern towns. Tempers flared during the debate.<br /> He lawyered up 1.03.01<br /> The two victims were just a decoy 1.03.47 someone or something that is used to trick<br /> someone into going somewhere or doing something, so that you can catch them, attack them etc<br /> Officer Langley acted as a decoy to catch the rapist.<br /> a model of a bird used to attract wild birds so that you can watch them or shoot them<br /> ▶ noun a decoy to distract their attention : LURE, bait, red herring; enticement, inducement, temptation,<br /> attraction, carrot; snare, trap.<br /> ▶ verb he was decoyed to the mainland : LURE, entice, tempt; entrap, snare, trap.<br /> The Devil (2010)<br /> They are pinning it on you 1.05.03 to blame someone for something, often unfairly<br /> Don't try to pin the blame on me! They're trying to pin the murder on the boyfriend.<br /> pin your hopes/faith on sth/sbto hope that something will happen or someone will help you,<br /> because all your plans depend on this Chris is pinning his hopes on getting into Yale.<br /> Sarah wheezing 1.11.34 ▶ verb the illness left her wheezing : BREATHE NOISILY, gasp, whistle,<br /> hiss, rasp, croak, pant, cough.<br /> Brit. informal a clever or amusing scheme or trick.</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Dogville 2015-09-26T10:35:11+00:00 2015-09-26T10:35:11+00:00 http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/index.php/movie-series-idioms/movies-idioms-slangs/120-dogville <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Dogville.2003%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Dogville</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">a mysterious woman named Grace (Nicole Kidman) hides from the criminals who pursue<br /> her. The town is two-faced and offers to harbor Grace as long as she can make it worth<br /> their effort, so Grace works hard und… More<br /> Release date: March 26, 2004 (USA)<br /> Director: Lars von Trier<br /> Screenplay: Lars von Trier<br /> Film series: USA - Land of Opportunities<br /> Narrator: John Hurt<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> In his dotage = DECLINING YEARS, winter/autumn of one's life; advanced years, old age<br /> By his own lights = based on his own belief = به صلاح ديد خود<br /> Mutt = a breedless dog = سگ بی اصل و نصب<br /> A tad disappointed = a bit = يخده<br /> Misgivings = doubt = شک و شبهه<br /> Alabaster looking hands = white and smooth<br /> Put aloe on your hands = a kind of gel<br /> Wood shavings = small pieces of wood after sawing<br /> Iambs and pentameters = unit of ↑rhythm in poetry, that has one short or weak<br /> beat followed by a long or strong beat, as in the word 'alive'<br /> Cyclops = a very big man in ancient Greek stories who only had one eye in the<br /> middle of his forehead<br /> Entrancing view = enchanting, bewitching, beguiling, captivating, mesmerizing,<br /> fascinating; charming,<br /> Hymnal = a book of hymns = کتاب سرودهای مذهبی<br /> Doesn't matter a jot = unimportant = اصلا مهم نيست<br /> Flywheel = a heavy wheel that keeps a machine working at a steady speed =<br /> فلایویل – گردانه<br /> To resort to plebiscite = VOTE, referendum, ballot, poll. = همه پرسی<br /> Call us pronto = quickly<br /> We need some counterbalance = an equal and opposite effect to something such<br /> as a change, feeling etc: Riskier investments tend to be counterbalanced by high<br /> rewards. = اقدام يا کار متعادل کننده<br /> Why do you edge away? = withdraw or retreat gradually = تحويل نگرفتن<br /> She was right on the button = exactly right = قربون دهنت =راست می گه<br /> Profit from others' misfortunes = taking advantage of people's misery<br /> He would drive to the gates of hell and back for ten dollars = he would do<br /> everything = زمين و به زمان می دوزد برای چندرغاز<br /> If you catch my drift = do you follow me? ؟ متوجه ای<br /> There will be a surcharge = an additional charge or payment<br /> Copious belongings/lies = existing or being produced in large quantities: He could<br /> drink copious amounts of beer without ill effect. She listened to me and took copious<br /> notes. = دروغ فراوان<br /> See the light of day = to be born = to come into existence<br /> Don't be hateful or reproving = critical, criticizing = ملامت گر<br /> Misplaced augury of conciliation = a sign of becoming friends = نشانه تنش زدايی<br /> Get it all out of your system = relax = غصه ای را از خود به در کردن<br /> Trudge the streets = walk with heavy steps = کشان کشان رفتن<br /> Ominous words = THREATENING, menacing, baleful, forbidding, sinister, inauspicious,<br /> unpropitious, portentous, unfavourable, unpromising; black, dark, gloomy; formal minatory<br /> کلمات تهدید آميز =<br /> If you want to divest yourself, we can accept money = to be generous<br /> Full synopsis<br /> Dogville is a very small American town in the Rocky Mountains with a road leading up to it,<br /> but nowhere to go but the mountains. The film begins with a prologue in which we meet a<br /> dozen or so of the fifteen citizens. They are portrayed as lovable, good people with small<br /> flaws which are easy to forgive.<br /> The town is seen from the point of view of Tom Edison (Paul Bettany), an aspiring writer who<br /> procrastinates by trying to get his fellow citizens together for regular meetings on the subject<br /> of "moral rearmament." It is clear that Tom wants to succeed his aging father as the moral<br /> and spiritual leader of the town.<br /> It is Tom who first meets Grace (Nicole Kidman), who is on the run from gangsters who<br /> apparently shot at her. Grace, a beautiful but modest woman, wants to keep running, but<br /> Tom assures her that the mountains ahead are too difficult to pass. As they talk, the<br /> gangsters approach the town, and Tom quickly hides Grace in a nearby mine. One of the<br /> gangsters asks Tom if he has seen the woman, which he denies, and so the gangster offers<br /> him a reward and hands him a card with a phone number to call in case Grace shows up.<br /> Tom decides to use Grace as an "illustration" in his next meeting - a way for the<br /> townspeople to prove that they are indeed committed to community values, and willing to<br /> help the stranger. They remain skeptical, so Tom proposes that Grace should be given a<br /> chance to prove that she is a good person. Grace is accepted for two weeks in which, as<br /> Tom explains to her after the meeting, she has to convince the townspeople to like her.<br /> On Tom's suggestion, Grace offers to do chores for the citizens - talking to the lonely, blind<br /> Jack McCay (Ben Gazzara), helping to run the small shop, looking after the children of<br /> Chuck (Stellan Skarsgård) and Vera (Patricia Clarkson), and so forth. After some initial<br /> reluctance, the people accept her help in doing those chores that "nobody really needs" but<br /> which nevertheless make life better, and so she becomes a part of the community.<br /> In tacit agreement, she is expected to continue her chores, which she does gladly, and is<br /> even paid small wages in return. Grace begins to make friends, including Jack, who<br /> pretends that he is not blind. Grace tricks him into admitting that he is blind, earning his<br /> respect. After the two weeks are over, everyone votes that she should be allowed to stay.<br /> But when the police arrive to place a "Missing" poster with Grace's picture and name on it on<br /> the mission house, the mood darkens slightly. Should they not cooperate with the police?<br /> Still, things continue as usual until the 4th of July celebrations. After Tom awkwardly admits<br /> his love to Grace and the whole town expresses their agreement that it has become a better<br /> place thanks to her, the police arrive again to replace the "Missing" poster with a "Wanted"<br /> poster. Grace is now wanted for participation in a bank robbery. Everyone agrees that she<br /> must be innocent, since at the time the robbery took place, she was doing chores for the<br /> townspeople every day.<br /> Nevertheless, Tom argues that because of the increased risk to the town now that they are<br /> harboring someone who is wanted as a criminal, Grace should provide a quid pro quo and<br /> do more chores for the townspeople within the same time, for less pay. At this point, what<br /> was previously a voluntary arrangement takes on a slightly coercive nature as Grace is<br /> clearly uncomfortable with the idea. Still, being very amenable and wanting to please Tom,<br /> Grace agrees.<br /> At this point the situation worsens, as with her additional workload, Grace inevitably makes<br /> mistakes, and the people she works for seem to be equally irritated by the new schedule and<br /> take it out on Grace. The situation slowly escalates, with the male citizens making small<br /> sexual advances to Grace and the female ones becoming increasingly abusive. Even the<br /> children are perverse: Jason (Miles Purinton), the perhaps 10-year-old son of Chuck and<br /> Vera, asks Grace to spank him, until she finally complies after much provocation. Soon<br /> thereafter Chuck returns home and rapes Grace, as it becomes obvious that she is hardly<br /> able to defend herself against exploitation.<br /> After Tom discusses the possibility of escape with her, Grace is blamed by Vera both for<br /> spanking Jason and for being raped by Chuck. In revenge, Vera threatens Grace with<br /> destroying the porcelain figurines created by the town shop that she had acquired with the<br /> little wages she was given, Grace begs for mercy, reminding Vera of how she taught her<br /> children about stoicism. In response, Vera challenges Grace to stand up without shedding a<br /> tear while she destroys the first two of the porcelain figurines. Grace not being able to hold<br /> her tears, Vera destroys the remaining figurines. The symbol of her belonging in the town<br /> gone, she now knows that she must leave. With the help of Tom and Ben, the freight driver,<br /> she attempts escape in his apple truck, only to find herself raped by Ben and then returned<br /> to the town.<br /> The town agrees that they must not let her escape again. The money that she used to pay<br /> Ben had been taken by Tom from his father, and Grace is blamed for the theft. Tom refuses<br /> to come forward because, he explains, this is the only way he can still protect Grace without<br /> people getting suspicious. At this point, Grace's status as slave is finally confirmed as she is<br /> collared and chained to a large iron wheel which she must carry around with her, too heavy<br /> to allow her to move anywhere outside the town. More humiliatingly still, a bell is attached to<br /> her collar and announces her presence wherever she goes. Tom is the only male citizen of<br /> the town that does not rape her.<br /> This culminates in a late night general assembly in which Grace following Tom's suggestion<br /> relates calmly all that she has endured from everyone in town. Embarrassed and in complete<br /> denial, the townspeople finally decide to get rid of her. When Tom informs Grace to console<br /> her, he attempts to make love to her, having been the only adult male townperson who<br /> hasn't had sex with her. Grace, however, refuses to have sex with him. Angry partly at<br /> Grace's rejection, but even more at himself for his realization that he would eventually stoop<br /> to force himself upon her like everyone else in the town, Tom ends up personally calling the<br /> mobsters, and later proposes to unanimous approval that she be locked up in her shack.<br /> When the mobsters finally arrive, they are welcomed cordially by Tom and an impromptu<br /> committee of other townspeople. Grace is then freed and we finally learn who she really is:<br /> the daughter of a powerful gang leader who ran away because she could not stand her<br /> father's dirty work. Her father confronts her in his big limousine and tells her that she is<br /> arrogant for not holding others to the same high standards to which she holds herself. At first<br /> she refuses to listen, but as she looks again upon the town and its people, she is compelled<br /> to agree: she would have to condemn them to the worst possible punishment if she held<br /> them to her own standards, and it would be inhumane not to do so.<br /> So she accepts to be again her father's daughter, and immediately demands that the whole<br /> town be eliminated. In particular, she gives the order to have Vera look on at the murder of<br /> each of her children, having been told that it would stop if she can hold back her tears. The<br /> film ends in a crescendo of violence: the town is burned and all its citizens are brutally<br /> murdered by the gangsters on direct order from Grace, with the exception of Tom, whom she<br /> kills personally with a revolver. As the ashes of Dogville smolder around her, she finds and<br /> spares the only surviving resident, Moses the Dogville dog. Ironically, the only "dog" that<br /> hasn't wronged her was the town dog that had disappeared while the town was revealing its<br /> true nature. (Imdb)</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <table border="1" width="80%" align="center"> <tbody> <tr> <td height="2919"> <p dir="rtl" align="center"><a href="http://ieltstoeflcenter.com/../Download/Estelahat%20Films/Film/Dogville.2003%20idioms.pdf" rel="alternate"><img src="http://s6.picofile.com/file/8211445518/pdf_button24.png" alt="" border="0" /></a></p> <p dir="ltr" align="center"><span style="color: #ff0000; font-size: xx-large;">Dogville</span></p> <br /> <p dir="ltr" align="left">a mysterious woman named Grace (Nicole Kidman) hides from the criminals who pursue<br /> her. The town is two-faced and offers to harbor Grace as long as she can make it worth<br /> their effort, so Grace works hard und… More<br /> Release date: March 26, 2004 (USA)<br /> Director: Lars von Trier<br /> Screenplay: Lars von Trier<br /> Film series: USA - Land of Opportunities<br /> Narrator: John Hurt<br /> Idioms, slangs and vocabulary used<br /> In his dotage = DECLINING YEARS, winter/autumn of one's life; advanced years, old age<br /> By his own lights = based on his own belief = به صلاح ديد خود<br /> Mutt = a breedless dog = سگ بی اصل و نصب<br /> A tad disappointed = a bit = يخده<br /> Misgivings = doubt = شک و شبهه<br /> Alabaster looking hands = white and smooth<br /> Put aloe on your hands = a kind of gel<br /> Wood shavings = small pieces of wood after sawing<br /> Iambs and pentameters = unit of ↑rhythm in poetry, that has one short or weak<br /> beat followed by a long or strong beat, as in the word 'alive'<br /> Cyclops = a very big man in ancient Greek stories who only had one eye in the<br /> middle of his forehead<br /> Entrancing view = enchanting, bewitching, beguiling, captivating, mesmerizing,<br /> fascinating; charming,<br /> Hymnal = a book of hymns = کتاب سرودهای مذهبی<br /> Doesn't matter a jot = unimportant = اصلا مهم نيست<br /> Flywheel = a heavy wheel that keeps a machine working at a steady speed =<br /> فلایویل – گردانه<br /> To resort to plebiscite = VOTE, referendum, ballot, poll. = همه پرسی<br /> Call us pronto = quickly<br /> We need some counterbalance = an equal and opposite effect to something such<br /> as a change, feeling etc: Riskier investments tend to be counterbalanced by high<br /> rewards. = اقدام يا کار متعادل کننده<br /> Why do you edge away? = withdraw or retreat gradually = تحويل نگرفتن<br /> She was right on the button = exactly right = قربون دهنت =راست می گه<br /> Profit from others' misfortunes = taking advantage of people's misery<br /> He would drive to the gates of hell and back for ten dollars = he would do<br /> everything = زمين و به زمان می دوزد برای چندرغاز<br /> If you catch my drift = do you follow me? ؟ متوجه ای<br /> There will be a surcharge = an additional charge or payment<br /> Copious belongings/lies = existing or being produced in large quantities: He could<br /> drink copious amounts of beer without ill effect. She listened to me and took copious<br /> notes. = دروغ فراوان<br /> See the light of day = to be born = to come into existence<br /> Don't be hateful or reproving = critical, criticizing = ملامت گر<br /> Misplaced augury of conciliation = a sign of becoming friends = نشانه تنش زدايی<br /> Get it all out of your system = relax = غصه ای را از خود به در کردن<br /> Trudge the streets = walk with heavy steps = کشان کشان رفتن<br /> Ominous words = THREATENING, menacing, baleful, forbidding, sinister, inauspicious,<br /> unpropitious, portentous, unfavourable, unpromising; black, dark, gloomy; formal minatory<br /> کلمات تهدید آميز =<br /> If you want to divest yourself, we can accept money = to be generous<br /> Full synopsis<br /> Dogville is a very small American town in the Rocky Mountains with a road leading up to it,<br /> but nowhere to go but the mountains. The film begins with a prologue in which we meet a<br /> dozen or so of the fifteen citizens. They are portrayed as lovable, good people with small<br /> flaws which are easy to forgive.<br /> The town is seen from the point of view of Tom Edison (Paul Bettany), an aspiring writer who<br /> procrastinates by trying to get his fellow citizens together for regular meetings on the subject<br /> of "moral rearmament." It is clear that Tom wants to succeed his aging father as the moral<br /> and spiritual leader of the town.<br /> It is Tom who first meets Grace (Nicole Kidman), who is on the run from gangsters who<br /> apparently shot at her. Grace, a beautiful but modest woman, wants to keep running, but<br /> Tom assures her that the mountains ahead are too difficult to pass. As they talk, the<br /> gangsters approach the town, and Tom quickly hides Grace in a nearby mine. One of the<br /> gangsters asks Tom if he has seen the woman, which he denies, and so the gangster offers<br /> him a reward and hands him a card with a phone number to call in case Grace shows up.<br /> Tom decides to use Grace as an "illustration" in his next meeting - a way for the<br /> townspeople to prove that they are indeed committed to community values, and willing to<br /> help the stranger. They remain skeptical, so Tom proposes that Grace should be given a<br /> chance to prove that she is a good person. Grace is accepted for two weeks in which, as<br /> Tom explains to her after the meeting, she has to convince the townspeople to like her.<br /> On Tom's suggestion, Grace offers to do chores for the citizens - talking to the lonely, blind<br /> Jack McCay (Ben Gazzara), helping to run the small shop, looking after the children of<br /> Chuck (Stellan Skarsgård) and Vera (Patricia Clarkson), and so forth. After some initial<br /> reluctance, the people accept her help in doing those chores that "nobody really needs" but<br /> which nevertheless make life better, and so she becomes a part of the community.<br /> In tacit agreement, she is expected to continue her chores, which she does gladly, and is<br /> even paid small wages in return. Grace begins to make friends, including Jack, who<br /> pretends that he is not blind. Grace tricks him into admitting that he is blind, earning his<br /> respect. After the two weeks are over, everyone votes that she should be allowed to stay.<br /> But when the police arrive to place a "Missing" poster with Grace's picture and name on it on<br /> the mission house, the mood darkens slightly. Should they not cooperate with the police?<br /> Still, things continue as usual until the 4th of July celebrations. After Tom awkwardly admits<br /> his love to Grace and the whole town expresses their agreement that it has become a better<br /> place thanks to her, the police arrive again to replace the "Missing" poster with a "Wanted"<br /> poster. Grace is now wanted for participation in a bank robbery. Everyone agrees that she<br /> must be innocent, since at the time the robbery took place, she was doing chores for the<br /> townspeople every day.<br /> Nevertheless, Tom argues that because of the increased risk to the town now that they are<br /> harboring someone who is wanted as a criminal, Grace should provide a quid pro quo and<br /> do more chores for the townspeople within the same time, for less pay. At this point, what<br /> was previously a voluntary arrangement takes on a slightly coercive nature as Grace is<br /> clearly uncomfortable with the idea. Still, being very amenable and wanting to please Tom,<br /> Grace agrees.<br /> At this point the situation worsens, as with her additional workload, Grace inevitably makes<br /> mistakes, and the people she works for seem to be equally irritated by the new schedule and<br /> take it out on Grace. The situation slowly escalates, with the male citizens making small<br /> sexual advances to Grace and the female ones becoming increasingly abusive. Even the<br /> children are perverse: Jason (Miles Purinton), the perhaps 10-year-old son of Chuck and<br /> Vera, asks Grace to spank him, until she finally complies after much provocation. Soon<br /> thereafter Chuck returns home and rapes Grace, as it becomes obvious that she is hardly<br /> able to defend herself against exploitation.<br /> After Tom discusses the possibility of escape with her, Grace is blamed by Vera both for<br /> spanking Jason and for being raped by Chuck. In revenge, Vera threatens Grace with<br /> destroying the porcelain figurines created by the town shop that she had acquired with the<br /> little wages she was given, Grace begs for mercy, reminding Vera of how she taught her<br /> children about stoicism. In response, Vera challenges Grace to stand up without shedding a<br /> tear while she destroys the first two of the porcelain figurines. Grace not being able to hold<br /> her tears, Vera destroys the remaining figurines. The symbol of her belonging in the town<br /> gone, she now knows that she must leave. With the help of Tom and Ben, the freight driver,<br /> she attempts escape in his apple truck, only to find herself raped by Ben and then returned<br /> to the town.<br /> The town agrees that they must not let her escape again. The money that she used to pay<br /> Ben had been taken by Tom from his father, and Grace is blamed for the theft. Tom refuses<br /> to come forward because, he explains, this is the only way he can still protect Grace without<br /> people getting suspicious. At this point, Grace's status as slave is finally confirmed as she is<br /> collared and chained to a large iron wheel which she must carry around with her, too heavy<br /> to allow her to move anywhere outside the town. More humiliatingly still, a bell is attached to<br /> her collar and announces her presence wherever she goes. Tom is the only male citizen of<br /> the town that does not rape her.<br /> This culminates in a late night general assembly in which Grace following Tom's suggestion<br /> relates calmly all that she has endured from everyone in town. Embarrassed and in complete<br /> denial, the townspeople finally decide to get rid of her. When Tom informs Grace to console<br /> her, he attempts to make love to her, having been the only adult male townperson who<br /> hasn't had sex with her. Grace, however, refuses to have sex with him. Angry partly at<br /> Grace's rejection, but even more at himself for his realization that he would eventually stoop<br /> to force himself upon her like everyone else in the town, Tom ends up personally calling the<br /> mobsters, and later proposes to unanimous approval that she be locked up in her shack.<br /> When the mobsters finally arrive, they are welcomed cordially by Tom and an impromptu<br /> committee of other townspeople. Grace is then freed and we finally learn who she really is:<br /> the daughter of a powerful gang leader who ran away because she could not stand her<br /> father's dirty work. Her father confronts her in his big limousine and tells her that she is<br /> arrogant for not holding others to the same high standards to which she holds herself. At first<br /> she refuses to listen, but as she looks again upon the town and its people, she is compelled<br /> to agree: she would have to condemn them to the worst possible punishment if she held<br /> them to her own standards, and it would be inhumane not to do so.<br /> So she accepts to be again her father's daughter, and immediately demands that the whole<br /> town be eliminated. In particular, she gives the order to have Vera look on at the murder of<br /> each of her children, having been told that it would stop if she can hold back her tears. The<br /> film ends in a crescendo of violence: the town is burned and all its citizens are brutally<br /> murdered by the gangsters on direct order from Grace, with the exception of Tom, whom she<br /> kills personally with a revolver. As the ashes of Dogville smolder around her, she finds and<br /> spares the only surviving resident, Moses the Dogville dog. Ironically, the only "dog" that<br /> hasn't wronged her was the town dog that had disappeared while the town was revealing its<br /> true nature. (Imdb)</p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table>