My Fair Lady
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:25:09
Your name, please?
:25:11
Your name, miss?
:25:12
My name is of no concern to you
whatsoever.

:25:15
One moment, please.
:25:26
London is gettin' so dirty these days.
:25:29
I'm Mrs. Pearce, the housekeeper.
Can I help you?

:25:32
Good morning, missus.
I'd like to see the professor, please.

:25:36
Could you tell me what it's about?
:25:37
It's business of a personal nature.
:25:42
One moment, please.
:25:52
- Mr. Higgins?
- What is it, Mrs. Pearce?

:25:55
There's a young woman
who wants to see you, sir.

:25:58
A young woman?
:26:00
What does she want?
:26:01
She's quite a common girl, sir.
Very common indeed.

:26:04
I should've sent her away, only I thought...
:26:06
...you wanted her to talk
into your machine.

:26:08
- Has she an interesting accent?
- Simply ghastly.

:26:10
Good. Let's have her in.
Show her in, Mrs. Pearce.

:26:14
This is rather a bit of luck.
I'll show you how I make records.

:26:18
We'll set her talking, then I'll take
her down first in Bell's Visible Speech...

:26:21
...then in broad Romic.
Then we'll get her on the phonograph...

:26:24
...so you can turn her on when you want
with the written transcript before you.

:26:32
This is the young woman, sir.
:26:34
Good mornin', my good man.
:26:35
Might I 'ave a word with you?
:26:37
Oh, no. This is the girl
I jotted down last night.

:26:39
She's no use. I got the records I want
of the Lisson Grove lingo.

:26:43
I won't waste another cylinder on that.
:26:44
Be off with you. I don't want you.
:26:46
Don't be so saucy.
You ain't 'eard what I come for yet.

:26:49
Did you tell 'im I come in a taxi?
:26:51
Nonsense. Do you think a gentleman
like Mr. Higgins cares...

:26:54
...what you came in?
:26:55
Oh, we are proud.
:26:57
He ain't above givin' lessons, not 'im.
I 'eard 'im say so.


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