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  • I haven't seen you in a while

  • >> I know I haven't seen you in a while, you look fantastic.

  • >> Thank you, so do you!

  • >> Thanks for being here, it's been a while.

  • >> I had to come, had to bring you messages from my family.

  • >> I know. >> My brother Drew and Brandy, and

  • my mother and my father think you're brilliant.

  • >> Well.

  • [CROSSTALK] And my emails this morning were it's about time.

  • >> Really?

  • >> [LAUGH] Yeah.

  • >> Well it's not like we haven't asked you so but-

  • >> No, no they thought

  • it's about time you got around to going to see her cuz they think you're so clever.

  • >> Exactly, where you living now?

  • >> I live here now.

  • >> You live here?

  • >> Yeah. >> All right, let's talk about the movie,

  • is Colin Firth in it?

  • >> Yeah, he's back.

  • >> He is?

  • And then Patrick Dempsey I heard is in it?

  • >> Yes, lovely Patrick.

  • >> Wow. >> [APPLAUSE]

  • >> It's fun, right?

  • >> So will there be any fight scenes in this movie?

  • >> I can't give it up.

  • >> No. >> I can't tell.

  • >> All right, so you have a baby.

  • >> She's having a baby.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Yeah, she's having a baby.

  • >> Cuz it's called Bridget Jones' Baby, right?

  • >> [CROSSTALK] makes sense then, right?

  • >> So that's, so I'm guessing.

  • >> Yeah. [LAUGH] >> Yeah.

  • Unless it's just called that for no reason.

  • >> Which would be weird.

  • [LAUGH] >> Yeah, I know, but

  • there are weird titles.

I haven't seen you in a while

Subtitles and vocabulary

A2 US TheEllenShow crosstalk baby patrick haven bridget

Renée Zellweger's Ellen Debut

  • 1103 107
    鄭小鬼 posted on 2016/08/28
Video vocabulary

Keywords

weird

US /wɪrd/

UK /wɪəd/

  • adjective
  • Odd or unusual; surprising; strange
  • Suggesting something supernatural; odd.
  • Eerily strange or disturbing.
time

US /taɪm/

UK /taɪm/

  • noun
  • Speed at which music is played; tempo
  • Point as shown on a clock, e.g. 3 p.m
  • Number of hours, minutes needed to do something
  • Occasion when something happens
  • Period or occasion that something occurred
  • Period in history or the past
  • Something measured in minutes, hours, days, etc.
  • How long an event takes; duration
  • verb
  • To check speed at which music is performed
  • To choose a specific moment to do something
  • To measure how long an event takes, e.g. a race
  • To schedule something to occur at a specific moment
sense

US /sɛns/

UK /sens/

  • noun
  • Certain mental feeling or emotion
  • Normal or clear state of mind
  • Meaning of a particular word, phrase or text
  • verb
  • To perceive using sight, sound, taste touch etc.
  • To recognize the presence of something
applause

US /əˈplɔz/

UK /ə'plɔ:z/

  • noun
  • The sound made by clapping a performance or speech
think

US /θɪŋk/

UK /θɪŋk/

  • verb
  • Have a particular belief or idea.
  • To have an idea about something without certainty
  • To have an idea, opinion or belief about something
reason

US /ˈrizən/

UK /'ri:zn/

  • noun
  • Ability to think about facts and form a judgment
  • Explanation for why something occurred or was done
  • verb
  • To think and make conclusions in a logical manner
fantastic

US /fænˈtæstɪk/

UK /fænˈtæstɪk/

  • adjective
  • Extraordinarily good or attractive.
  • Strange or unusual in design or appearance
  • Very large, fast or great
  • Hard to believe; amazing
  • Based on imagination rather than reason; unreal
  • Extremely large
  • Very strange or unusual
  • Based on or existing only in fantasy; unreal.
draw

US /drɔ/

UK /drɔ:/

  • noun
  • Something that attracts people to visit a place
  • A lottery or prize
  • Result of a game, contest where the score is equal
  • verb
  • To attract attention to someone or something
  • To get closer to or approach something or someone
  • To influence a person's involvement in something
  • To move an object by pulling
  • To create an image using pen or pencil and paper
  • To take one thing out of a container, etc.
  • (Of 2 teams) to finish a game with the same score
give

US /ɡɪv/

UK /ɡɪv/

  • other
  • To administer something, such as medicine
  • To allow someone to have something
  • To produce offspring
  • To cause someone to experience something
  • To provide instructions or guidance
  • To donate something, especially money
  • To provide as an instance
  • To hold or host
  • To perform an action
  • To present something voluntarily to someone
  • To provide something needed or wanted
  • To utter or emit something
  • noun
  • Degree of flexibility in something, a material
  • verb
  • To hand over or present something to someone
  • To cause someone to have or experience something
  • other
  • To collapse or break
  • To collapse or break under pressure
bring

US /brɪŋ/

UK /brɪŋ/

  • verb
  • To take or go with someone to a place

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