更多"A. She will ask David to talk less."的相关试题:
[单项选择]What does the woman ask the man to do
[A] She asks him to stand up.
[B] She asks him to sit down.
[C] She asks him to wait.
[单项选择]
What does she ask the company to do
A. (A) Call her today.
B. (B) Send her a check.
C. (C) Deliver the order right away.
D. (D) Charge the order to her credit card.
[单项选择]How much does the woman pay for the things she asked()
A. 75 pence.
B. 1.30 pounds.
C. 2.05 pounds.
[单项选择]When she listens to a talk, she likes to sit ______ .
[A] in front [B] at front [C] in front of
[单项选择]A. She does not like Mary’s work.
B. She thinks Mary’s CD player works very well.
C. Mary should buy a new CD player.
D. She is surprised about what the man says.
[单项选择]She doesn’t talk much, but what she says makes( ).
A. sense
B. idea
C. meaning
D. significance
[单项选择]Why did Mrs. David feel surprised after she answered the telephone [A] Because the man wanted the cinema. [B] Because she didn’t understand what the man meant. [C] Because she was wrong with her telephone.
[单项选择]A. She’ll talk to Judy about the problem.
B. She may not be available later to help the man.
C. She isn’t sure if Judy can solve the problem.
D. The man will be able to solve the problem.
[单项选择]According to the talk, what did David Sarnoff predict about radios
A. They would get smaller in size.
B. Their signals would travel further.
C. They would become less popular than television.
D. They would be common household items.
[填空题]Naomi said that she would never talk to anyone else about the matter.
discuss
Naomi promised never____________________ anyone else,
[单项选择]When young people who want to be journalists ask me what subject they should study after leaving school, I tell them: "Anything except journalism or media studies." Most veterans of my trade would say the same. It is practical advice. For obvious reasons, newspaper editors like to employ people who can bring something other than a knowledge of the media to the party that we call our work.
On The Daily Telegraph, for example, the editor of London Spy is a theologian by academic training. The obituaries editor is a philosopher. The editor of our student magazine, Juice, studied physics. As for myself, I read history, ancient and modern, at the taxpayer’s expense.
I am not sure what Charles Clarke, the Education Secretary, would make of all this. If I understand him correctly, he would think that the public money spent on teaching this huge range of disciplines to the staff of The Daily Telegraph was pretty much wasted. The only academic course of which he would wholeheartedly a
A. their falling short of the demands of economy
B. their validity as a discipline being untestified
C. their failure to meet the standards of university instruction
D. their inability to arouse the interest of students