影片對(duì)白 Gentlemen, milady. You will always remember this as the day that you almost caught...Capitan Jack Sparrow.
我觀之我見 一個(gè)瘋瘋癲癲的海盜,一個(gè)英俊執(zhí)著的鐵匠,一位敢愛敢恨的美女,再加上一群看了就想笑的骷髏船員,這部片子帶給你的絕對(duì)不止是冒險(xiǎn)的滿足,還有愉悅身心、輕松大腦的功能。
考考你 現(xiàn)學(xué)現(xiàn)賣
4. Sticks and stones.
我不認(rèn)為你的話會(huì)傷了我。
這是一句很長的英文句子的開頭,原話是這樣的:Stick and stone may break my bones, but names will never hurt me. 意思是:石頭和棍子能打斷我的骨頭,可是你的話一點(diǎn)也傷不到我。注意這里這個(gè)names的意思可不是名字。我們知道英語中罵人是call names,這句話中的names就是取“罵人的惡語”的意思。
5. Make a point of
意為"Treat something as important or essential",例如:She made a point of thanking everyone in the department for their efforts.
6. Ta
語氣詞,主要用在英國英語中,表示"thanks"。
文化面面觀
The history of piracy 海盜們的“光榮”歷史
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The flag of 18th-century pirate Calico Jack
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Because it is often the result of failure or laxity in patrolling sea routes, piracy flourished in times of unrest, or when navies ordinarily protecting commerce were engaged in war. Pirates found their most suitable base of operations in an archipelago that offered shelter together with proximity to trade routes. Pirates preyed upon Phoenician and Greek commerce and were so active in the 1st cent. B.C. that Rome itself was almost starved by their interception of the grain convoys.
Pompey swept piracy from the Mediterranean, but with the decline of the Roman Empire it revived there and was prevalent until modern times. Muslim pirates infested the W Mediterranean; the Venetians, who ostensibly policed the E Mediterranean, preyed upon the maritime trade of rival cities; and the Barbary States got much of their revenue from piracy. In the North, the Vikings harassed the commerce of the Baltic Sea and the English Channel. Emerging in the 13th cent., the Hanseatic League succeeded in curbing the piracy of its era.
New trade routes opened during the Renaissance, e.g., the shipment of precious metals from the Spanish colonies, the rich trade with the East, and the development of the slave trade, that made piracy especially lucrative. At this period no great stigma was attached to piracy because maritime law had not been systematized. This fact, together with the increasing colonial rivalry of the powers, led states to countenance those pirates who promoted the national cause by attacking the commerce of rival nations. With the tacit approval of the provincial authorities, the West Indies became a pirates' rendezvous, and the English buccaneers of the Spanish Main in the 17th and 18th cent., who despoiled the Spanish treasure armadas and pillaged Spanish-American coast settlements, returned to England to divide their spoils with the crown and to receive the royal pardon.