Russian Lessons: Time Schedule
тираду в свой адрес: "Тоже мне интеллигент! А ещё очки нацепил!"
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Enjoy Your Russian
тираду в свой адрес: "Тоже мне интеллигент! А ещё очки нацепил!"
23. Но если вам не нравится ездить в общественном транспорте, и у вас нет своей машины, вы можете вызвать такси. Только приготовьте, пожалуйста, доллары, потому что рубли сейчас уже не в почёте. Translation of the Russian text presented above (please refer to paragraphs 1 - 23) 1. Wherever you live in St. Petersburg, whatever point of the city you go to, trains, buses and trolleybuses are at your service each day from 6 a.m. until 1 a.m. the following morning. 2. All these types of public transport have many routes and run strictly according to a timetable (although you cannot usually see the latter at the stops within the city - probably because the time intervals are quite short). 3. Allocation of numbers for different routes is carried out independently for each kind of public transport. Therefore, a No. 5 bus, for example, will most likely have quite a different route than a tram or a trolleybus with the same number. 146 4. In any case, it is difficult to confuse routes because their details are conspicuously shown outside and inside any public vehicle, and each stop is clearly announced by the driver over an intercom. Besides, all these routes are shown on many maps of the city. 5. Passengers enter the vehicle through the back door and leave through the front one. If there are three doors, then entry is allowed only through the middle door and exits through the other two. All stops in the city are compulsory. 6. On coach routes, some stops are made by request. Prior to such a stop, a passenger should approach the driver and tell him where he or she wants to get off the bus (there are no bells which could inform the driver about passengers' intentions). 7. If you are a passenger in an overcrowded vehicle and you experience difficulty in making your way to the exit, you should ask the person standing in front of you, '"Will you be getting off at the next (stop)?" - the last word can be omitted. 8. If the answer is in the affirmative, relax and wait until people standing in front of you begin to alight. Instead of saying "no", a passenger would normally just step aside and let you pass. If that doesn't happen, politely ask: "Would you mind if I squeezed past?" 9. Many years ago you would have paid your fare to the conductor. Nowadays you simply drop the appropriate coin in a cash-box installed near the entrance door, and tear off a ticket. 147 10. If, having been pushed by other passengers trying to get in, you find yourself far from the cash-box, hand your money over to somebody who happens to be between yourself and the box, and ask, "Would you mind passing it along for a ticket?" Your money will go from hand to hand until it reaches the dispenser. Then in exactly the same way the torn-off ticket will be passed back to you. 11. The fare in a tram, trolleybus or city bus does not depend on the distance you travel, be that one stop or the whole route. In a coach you would normally pay the driver because travel on such a bus is significantly more expensive and does depend on the number of sections. 12. I have not yet mentioned one more and without a doubt the best kind of city transport - the underground railway (or as it is usually called: metro). Paraphrasing the expression with which we began this chapter, we can say that the metro in St. Petersburg or Moscow is not a means of transportation, but a luxury. 13. Underground stations are often shown to foreign tourists. No wonder! The interior of each station is interesting in its own way - being there gives you a feeling of being in a museum. And some stations, with their magnificent crystal chandeliers and walls covered with marble, will remind you of fairytale palaces. 14. However, residents of St. Petersburg, as well as Muscovites, are proud of their metro not only because it is incredibly beautiful. The underground there is also unbelievably convenient and comfortable. 148 15. It is convenient because trains go very fast and very often (during the rush hour, the time between two trains does not exceed one minute; at other times they follow each other at intervals of two to four minutes). 16. The metro is also comfortable because it is exceptionally clean, and the whole year round you can enjoy its pleasant microclimate; apart from this, both the underground stations and trains are completely safe for everyone, 17. In addition to everything else, the metro in the former Soviet Union was always amazingly inexpensive. After paying five copecks and taking an escalator down to one of the underground stations, you could then use the metro even all day long - there was no limit on either the time or the number of your trips. 18. St. Petersburg covers an enormous area. Commuting across the whole city from one's home to his/her place of work and then back again in a crowded tram or bus can be extremely tiring. However, if you are lucky enough to live and work within several minutes' walk from an underground station, you will honestly think that transport is not a problem for you. 19. The underground intercom system works even better than that in trains, buses or trolleybuses. Neither the train driver nor his assistant announce stops themselves. For this purpose they use a tape recorder. 20. Therefore, commuters on any underground train, as a rule, hear the same beautiful voice, which announces with immaculate pronunciation the names of 149 two stations: one - where the train has just stopped, and the following one (for instance:" 'Petrogradskaya'. Next stop: 'Gostiny Dvor'.") 21. On public transport, where it is rare for all passengers to find a seat, there is a custom to give up one's place to older and weaker people. Children give up their places to adults. In addition, almost any adult is prepared to give up his seat if he sees standing next to him an elderly person, an invalid, a pregnant woman or a woman with a little child. And last but not least, a real man will always give up his seat to a woman. 22. With all this gallantry, using public transport you always risk an encounter with rudeness and insult. If someone, for example, pushes you and you in turn accidentally step on somebody else's foot, you would immediately hear a tirade in your direction, "And you call yourself an intelligent person! What's the point of wearing glasses if you can't see?" 23. However, if you don't like public transport and you don't have a car, you can call a taxi. But be sure to have your foreign currency ready because roubles are not so highly regarded nowadays as they used to be. |
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