更多"A meddlesome person who pries into "的相关试题:
[单项选择]A reserved person is one who()speaks a little and()gets excited.
A. always...sometimes
B. often...never
C. never...sometimes
D. always...seldom
[填空题]He is the (five)()person I see who wears this kind of jacket.
[填空题]He is the (five) ______ person I see who wears this kind of Jacket.
[单项选择]A. A person who stays up late.
B. A person who follows a timed program of light and dark.
C. A person who often goes on business.
D. A person who sleeps on the plane.
[单项选择]Others who spoke at the Democratic convention included but______.
A. Jimmy Carter
B. Bill Clinton
C. A1 Core
D. Powell
[填空题]A clerk is a person, who works in an office performing such tasks as keeping records, (attend) ()correspondence, or filing.
[填空题]A person who drives.
[简答题]The person who performs the acupuncture knows how to put in the needles so the needles themselves are not painful. ( Passage 3 )
[填空题]Judging from the passage, the person who develops negative style of daydreams may be ______.
[填空题]Person who travels to or visits a place.
[填空题]A person who receives the inheritance needs to pay for it no matter how much he has received.
[填空题]A person who catches thieves.
[填空题]A person who is studying.
[单项选择]The first person I came across who’d got the measure of e-mall was an American friend who was high up in a big corporation. Some years ago, when this method of communication first seeped into business life from academia, his company in New York and its satellites across the globe were among the first to get it. In the world’s great seats of learning, e-mail had for some years allowed researchers to share vital new jokes. And if there was cutting-edge wit to be had, there was no way my friend’s corporation would be without it.
One evening in New York, he was late for a drink we’d arranged. "Sorry," he said, "I’ve been away and had to deal with 998 e-mails in my queue." "Wow," I said, "I’m really surprised you made it before midnight."
"It doesn’t really take that tong," be explained, "if you simply delete them all."
True to form, he had developed a strategy before most of us had even heard of e-mail. If any information he was sent was sufficiently vital, his lack of
A. so that employees could contact academics more easily.
B. to avoid missing out on any musing novelty.
C. because it had been tried and tested in universities.
D. to cope with the vast mount of correspondence they received.