Killers of the Flower Moon Trailer 2
Transcript
Whose land is this?
My land.
Well, well, well. Our war hero has arrived.
You made a good choice coming back here.
The Osage are the finest, wealthiest, and most beautiful people on God’s earth.
They outsmarted everybody.
They have the say who gets the oil.
Son, I got a question. You like women?
That’s my weakness.
Well we mix these families together and that estate money flows the right direction.
It’ll come to us.
Sho-mee-kah-see.
That’s how you are.
I don’t know what you said but it must’ve been Indian for handsome devil.
Why did you come here?
I work with my uncle.
You scared of him?
No, he’s a… the nicest man in the world.
The Osage, their time is over.
We’ve got to take back control of our home.
I was sent down from Washington, D.C. to see about these murders.
We have so many deaths we’ve lost count.
It’s just bad luck.
Seems more like an epidemic than bad luck to me.
The Osage is dying by the enemy.
Do not let them die alone.
Evil surrounds my heart.
You gotta pick a side.
I don’t even know if you love me anymore.
Of course I love you.
Then kill these men who killed my family
Did your wife say who she was most afraid of?
Don’t do something you’re gonna regret for the rest of your life.
I ain’t got nothing but regret.
Vocabulary List
arrive
(verb) to reach a place after a journey
fine
(adjective) of high quality or standard; excellent
wealthy
(adjective) having a lot of money or assets
outsmart
(verb) to be more clever than someone else
say
(noun) the right to take part in deciding something
estate
(noun) all the property and money belonging to someone, especially everything that is left after they die
over
(adverb) ended; to have finished
see about
(verb) to deal with something
epidemic
(noun) a widespread occurrence of a disease in a community at a particular time
surround
(verb) to be all around someone or something on every side
Grammar Lesson
In this lesson, we will learn:
- how to use whose
WHOSE
Whose land is this?
Whose can act as:
- a determiner
- a pronoun
1. We can use whose to ask questions about possession or ownership.
Whose house is that?
= Who owns that house?
Whose in this sentence is a determiner (followed by the noun house)
Whose books are those?
= Who owns those books?
Whose in this sentence is a determiner (followed by the noun books)
Whose is that?
= Who owns that …?
Whose are those?
= Who owns those …?
Whose in these sentences is a pronoun (standing on its own, not followed by a noun)
We can use whose as a pronoun if the object is already known or mentioned previously so that the listener understands what the speaker is referring to.
Example:
This is my key. Whose is that?
= This is my key. Whose key is that?
The word key has been mentioned in the first sentence.
Therefore, we can use whose as a pronoun in the second sentence so that we don’t have to repeat the word key.
2. We can also use whose to say which person or thing we mean.
He talked to the man whose house has burned down.
= He talked to a man. His house has burned down.
whose house has burned down
= adjective/relative clause (describing the noun phrase the man)
whose
= relative pronoun (a pronoun that starts a relative clause)
The lady whose purse was stolen was very upset.
= A lady was upset. Her purse was stolen.
whose purse was stolen
= adjective/relative clause (describing the noun phrase the lady)
whose
= relative pronoun (a pronoun that starts a relative clause)