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Mr. District Attorney and the Intimidated Jury, (Scene 4)
Taking offense:
Harrington has rounded up the accused jury foreman, Mr Taylor, and brought him back to the DA’s office. When Taylor hears the charge against him, he takes offense. “Ridiculous! That’s libelous!” he cries, but it is all a pretense. Deep down inside, he knows he manipulated the jurors and brought them all around to that “not guilty” verdict. He feels uneasy, but he can’t let the DA see that.
Debt free:
He’d been so relieved when the court case was finally over. Working for a gangster had made his jury duty rather tense, yet it had all gone like clockwork. Ah! Well, as he saw it, the gangster had been “paid in full” when Stanley walked, so he felt the relief of being debt free. Debt free, in more ways than one!
Was it worth it?
But now he’s suddenly in hot water — if the DA can prove he swayed the jury, he’ll land in jail. And all because he’d accepted a gangster’s offer to make his debt go away. How is he ever going to get out of this one?
FREE PDF: Keywords & Transcript
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Quizlet:
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Let’s Talk
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Do you have any questions about this episode — I’d love to get a dialogue going here. Ask me about the key words, the grammar, or even the culture. Perhaps there is something you’d like to comment on.
Here’s a question for you — Taylor is in hot water now. What will he do to keep from getting caught? What is your guess?
Please leave your questions and comments below, and I’ll be sure to get back to you!
Jill says
Can I say my teacher brought in me for questioning?
Wendy Lambert says
Yes, if you mean that your teacher is investigating something. Perhaps a student’s cell phone went missing at break time and the teacher wants to find out who took it. The teacher might call in witnesses and suspects to ask them questions about it. So you see, it is still an investigation of a crime or bad behavior. If the teacher wants you to come for an interview or to help you with your studies, you would not say this.
One more thing — “bring in” is a separable phrasal verb, so when it is used with a pronoun, the pronoun must come between the verb and the particle. The phrase should be “brought me in”, not “brought in me”.