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Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook : ウィキペディア英語版 | Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook "Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook" is a Monty Python sketch. It first aired in 1970 on ''Monty Python's Flying Circus'' as part of Episode 25. == Plot == A Hungarian (John Cleese) enters a tobacconist's shop〔 carrying a phrasebook and begins a dialogue with the tobacconist (Terry Jones); he wants to buy cigarettes but his phrasebook's translations have no resemblance in the slightest to what he wants to say. Many of them are plainly bizarre (for example: "My hovercraft is full of eels."〔) and they become mildly sexual in nature as the skit progresses (for example: "Do you want to come back to my place, bouncy-bouncy?"〔). After the customer used gestures to convey his desire, the tobacconist looks in the phrasebook to find a Hungarian translation for "six and six"〔 (i.e. six shillings and sixpence); he reads out a phrase, which provokes the Hungarian to punch him in the face. A policeman (Graham Chapman), hearing the punch from a considerable distance, runs to the shop. The Hungarian angrily points out the shopkeeper to the constable, saying "Drop your panties Sir William, I cannot wait 'til lunchtime." In anger and confusion, the policeman arrests the Hungarian, who protests absurdly, "My nipples explode with delight!" The publisher of the phrasebook Alexander Yalt (Michael Palin) is taken to court, where he pleads not guilty to a charge of intent to cause a breach of the peace.〔 During initial questioning, the prosecutor (Eric Idle) hits a gong after Yalt answers "yes" to a question (a reference to the British game show ''Take Your Pick!''). After the prosecutor reads some samples from the book (a mistranslation for "Can you direct me to the station?" actually reads "Please fondle my buttocks."), Yalt changes his plea to incompetence.〔 A policeman in the court (Chapman) asks for an adjournment. When the judge (Jones) denies the request, the policeman lets off a loud fart he has been trying to suppress. When the judge asks him why he didn't mention the reason he wanted an adjournment, the policeman responds, "I didn't know an acceptable legal phrase, m'lud." (Cleese as the barrister can be seen corpsing during this scene.)
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook」の詳細全文を読む
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