词汇:common

adj. 普通的;共同的;通常的;一般的

相关场景

Did you kill any more of them bucks?” “Don’t think so,” July said. “I might have hit the buffalo hunter. We never expected to find Indians.” “I killed six this afternoon,” Augustus said. “I think there was twelve to begin with, not counting the buffalo hunter. I expect they work for Blue Duck. He stole a woman and I’m after him. I think he sent them bucks to slow me down.” “I hope there ain’t too much of a bunch,” Roscoe said. “I never kilt one before.” In fact he had never killed anyone before, or even given the possibility much thought. Sudden death was not unknown in Fort Smith, but it was not common, either. It had been a big shock when the Indians turned their guns on them and beganto shoot at them. Not until he saw July draw his rifle and start firing did it dawn on him that they were under attack. He had hastily drawn his pistol and shot several times—it had not affected the Indians but it angered July.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
“They wouldn’t want you,” Augustus said. “They don’t bother with crazies.” “I wisht we’d get a cook,” Jasper said. “I’m dern tired of eating slop.” It was a common complaint. Since Bolivar’s departure the food had been uneven, various men trying their hand at cooking. Call had ridden into several settlements, hoping to find someone they could hire as cook, but he had had no luck.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
“I seen you get stung,” she said. “There’s a creek just along there. Mud poultices are the best for them yellow-jacket stings. You mix ’em with spit and it helps.” That of course was common knowledge, though it was thoughtful of the girl to mention it. The running-away business he thought he better deal with at once.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
“That might have worked if there’d been a bridge,” Soupy Jones said, laughing.Jasper was embarrassed. He knew he couldn’t run a horse across a river, but at the last minute a fear of snakes had overcome him and blocked out his common sense.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
“Well, I guess we’ll see you when we see you, Roscoe,” July said. Then he turned his horse away from the river and the glowing sky, and he and little Joe were soon out of town.SIX DAYS LATER responsibility descended upon Roscoe Brown with a weight far beyond anything he had ever felt. As usual, it fell out of a clear blue sky—as fine a day as one could want, with the Arkansas River sparkling down at the end of the street. Roscoe, having no pressing duties, was sitting in front of the jail whittling, when he noticed Peach Johnson coming up the street with little Charlie Barnes at her side. Charlie was a banker, and the only man in town to wear a necktie every day. He was also the main deacon in the church, and, by common consent the man most likely to marry Peach if she ever remarried. Charlie was a widower, and richer by far than Benny had ever been. Nobody liked him, not even Peach, but she was too practical a woman to let that stop her if she took a notion to marry.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
She seldom did eat with them. It bothered July a good deal, though he made no complaint. Since their little table was almost under the loft he could look up and see Elmira’s bare legs as he ate. It didn’t seem normal to him. His mother had died when he was six, yet he could remember that she always ate with the family; she would never have sat with her legs dangling practically over her husband’s head. He had been at supper at many cabins in his life, but in none of them had the wife sat in the loft while the meal was eaten. It was a thing out of the ordinary, and July didn’t like for things to be out of the ordinary in his life. It seemed to him it was better to do as other people did—if society at large did things a certain way it had to be for a good reason, and he looked upon common practices as rules that should be obeyed. After all, his job was to see that common practices were honored—that citizens weren’t shot, or banks robbed.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
“If I ain’t back in a month, you girls feel free to start without me,” Augustus said. Then he drove off, amused that Dish Boggett looked so out of sorts just from being in love with a woman who didn’t want him. It was a peril too common to take seriously.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
Jake let that one float. Of course Gus would know all about the girl. Not that it took brains to know about women: they spread their secrets around like honey in a flytrap. Of course Lorie would want to go to San Francisco, by common agreement the prettiest town in the west.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
Some nights, laying on the porch, he felt a fool for even thinking about such things, and yet think he did. He had lived with men his whole life, rangering and working; during his whole adult life he couldn’t recollect spending ten minutes alone with a woman. He was better acquainted with Gus’s pigs than he was with Mary Cole, and more comfortable with them too. The sensible thing would be to ignore Gus and Deets and think about things that had some bearing on his day’s work, like how to keep his old boot from rubbing a corn on his left big toe. An Army mule had tromped the toe ten years before, and since then it had stuck out slightly in the wrong direction, just enough to make his boot rub a corn. The only solution to the problem was to cut holes in his boot, which worked fine in dry weather but had its disadvantages when it was wet and cold. Gus had offered to rebreak the toe and set it properly, but Pea didn’t hate the corn that bad. It did seem to him that it was only common sense that a sore toe made more difference in his life than a woman he had barely spoken to; yet his mind didn’t see it that way. There were nights when he lay on the porch too sleepy to shave his corn, or even to worry about the problem, when the widow Cole would pop to the surface of his consciousness like a turtle on the surface of a pond. At such times he would pretend to be asleep, for Gus was so sly he could practically read minds, and would surely tease him if he figured out that he was thinking about Mary and her scratchy voice.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
Gus’s disregard of common sense in such matters was legendary. Jake appeared to have the same disregard, but Call knew his was mostly bluff. Gus started the joking, and Jake felt like he had to keep up his end of it, because he wanted to be thought a cool customer.
>> Lonesome Dove 孤鸽镇
He had patience and common sense.
>> 倾城佳话 It Could Happen to You (1994) Movie Script
You seem like you have common sense.
>> 侏罗纪公园2 The Lost World Jurassic Park (1997)Movie Script
GRANT (cont'd) Great. Well maybe dinosaurs have more in common with present-day birds than reptiles. Look at the public bone - - it's turned backwards, just like a bird. The vertebrae - - full of hollows and air sacs, just like a bird. Even the word raptor means "bird of prey".
>> 侏罗纪公园 1 Jurassic Park (1993) Movie Script
GRANT:
That's two things we have in common.
>> 侏罗纪公园3 Jurassic Park 3 (2001) Movie Script
That's something we have in common.
>> 侏罗纪公园3 Jurassic Park 3 (2001) Movie Script
WINSTON CHURCHILL (referring again to the painting) You're well aware, of course, George IV's wife, Mrs. Fitzherbert, was very common indeed...and previously married. She signed an agreement that she could never become Queen, and their children could not be Royal. A rather sensible morganatic arrangement.
>> 国王的演讲 The King's Speech Movie Script
LIONEL:
Glad we have something in common.
>> 国王的演讲 The King's Speech Movie Script
JENNY (V.O.)(cont’d) As for the girl, the common belief wasthat she’d become a witch, and crazy atthat. She became something of a legendherself.
>> 大鱼 Big Fish (2003) Movie Script
EDWARD:
I’ve travelled from Tennessee to Timbuktu, and if there’s one thingpeople have in common, is we could alluse a hand around the house.
>> 大鱼 Big Fish (2003) Movie Script
WILL:
Josephine and I have a lot in common.
>> 大鱼 Big Fish (2003) Movie Script
EDWARD (V.O.) (cont'd) So I spent the better part of threeyears confined to my bed, with theWorld Book Encyclopedia being my onlymeans of exploration. I had made it all the way to the “G’s,” hoping tofind an answer to mygigantificationism, when I uncovered anarticle about the common goldfish.
>> 大鱼 Big Fish (2003) Movie Script
MOVING UP behind the kids, we find ourselves at the gatesof... EXT. A CREEPY OLD HOUSE - NIGHT ADULT EDWARD (V.O.) Now, it’s common knowledge that mosttowns of a certain size have a witch, if only to eat misbehaving children andthe occasional puppy who wanders intoher yard. Witches use those bones to cast spells and curses that make theland infertile.
>> 大鱼 Big Fish (2003) Movie Script
She was not a common rose.
她不是一朵普通的玫瑰。
>> 小王子 2015 The Little Prince Movie Script
But she is not a common rose.
>> 小王子 2015 The Little Prince Movie Script
My rose is just a common rose?
>> 小王子 2015 The Little Prince Movie Script