But of course

Status
Not open for further replies.

tree123

Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2019
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
China
Current Location
China
American moive- Django unchained

A dentist bought a black slave whose name is Django from a slave trader. He asks Django to put on an acting for a valet.

Django: What's valet?

Dentist: a fancy name for servant. Don't break the character. Now go to choose your own costume.

Django: You let me choose my own costume?

Dentist: But of course.


What does 'but' before 'of course' mean? Is there any different if I remove 'but' from 'but of course'?


PS- I don't transcribe the lines veratin above.
 
You could think of "but" here as meaning that the dentist is a little surprised at the question. It doesn't change the meaning.
 
"But of course" is stronger than "Yes."

I suspect we got it from the French. They say
Mais bien sûr," which translates exactly.
 
[STRIKE]American movie-[/STRIKE] Source: Django Unchained, 2012

A dentist bought a black slave whose name is Django from a slave trader. He asks Django to put on [STRIKE]an acting[/STRIKE] a play for a valet.

Django: What's a valet?
Dentist: A fancy name for servant. Don't break [STRIKE]the[/STRIKE] character. Now go [STRIKE]to[/STRIKE] and choose your own costume.
Django: You are going to let me choose my own costume?
Dentist: But of course.

What does 'but' before 'of course' mean? [STRIKE]Is[/STRIKE] Would there be any difference if I removed 'but' from 'But of course'?

PS- I [STRIKE]don't[/STRIKE] haven't transcribed the lines verbatim above.

Note my corrections above. Even if you aren't transcribing the dialogue verbatim, you should ensure that it's grammatically correct.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top