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SMALL TALK BEFORE A MEETING This is a situation you’ve probably experienced many times

: you arrive for a meeting ten minutes early. There are several people already there. You say hello and then … What do you talk about What do you say In this situation, you need to be able to make small talk. Small talk is an informal conversation. We use the term “small talk” because it is not about exchanging information or making decisions or having a serious discussion. It’s a way to avoid uncomfortable silences and build stronger relationships. Small talk might seem to be about nothing important, but it is important in itself. Being able to make small talk will allow you to make yourself part of a group. It will set the stage for more serious types of communication.

1.Small talk is a kind of formal dialog.()

2.The term “small talk” means there are only two persons in the dialog.()

3.Small talk is a useful ice-breaker and can build stronger relationships.()

4.Small talk is not at all important. ()

5.Making small talk will allow you to be a member of a group.()

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更多“SMALL TALK BEFORE A MEETING This is a situation you’ve probably experienced many times”相关的问题

第1题

Small talk is conversation that()leads to insight into anything significant.

A、seldom

B、often

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第2题

According to the author, topics of small talk may include comments on______A.some politica

According to the author, topics of small talk may include comments on______

A.some political issues

B.one's physical condition

C.other's ways of dress

D.the traffic jam

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第3题

According to the author, small talk is often used______A.to invade other's private affairs

According to the author, small talk is often used______

A.to invade other's private affairs

B.to share a secret between intimate friends

C.to open and maintain channels of communication

D.to protect one's own privacy

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第4题

According to the author, at a big party, small talk is used with the purpose of______A.mak

According to the author, at a big party, small talk is used with the purpose of______

A.making both others and yourself feel at ease

B.excluding those you don't like from joining you

C.keeping your voice low so only your friends can hear you

D.comforting those who feel lonely

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第5题

() they reached the small village before dusk.

A.Towards the end

B.By the end

C.In the end

D.At the end

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第6题

Judge the similar meaning of the couple sentences.When exploring your career options, ta

Judge the similar meaning of the couple sentences.

When exploring your career options, talk to as many people as you can.

Have a discussion with more people around you before making your career option.

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第7题

What is recommended to stop the participants socializing with each other during the me

A.Allowing them to socialize for 5 minutes every tim

B.Including more things on the agenda for full discussion.

C.Setting more short breaks for people to exchange ideas.

D.Sparing them some time for free talk before the meetin

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第8题

Before adhesion can take place between liquid and solid,it is essential that the liquid su
rface()

A.provides some mechanical interlocking with the solid

B.exhibits a large contact angle with the solid

C.enters into some form. ofchemieal reaction with the solid

D.exhibits a small contact angle with the solid

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第9题

阅读以下对话,选择最佳答案填空,请将答案写在答题纸上。GEORGE: Good afternoon. I'm Georg

阅读以下对话,选择最佳答案填空,请将答案写在答题纸上。

GEORGE: Good afternoon. I'm George Learner.

ASST: Good afternoon, Mr. Learner. I'm Mayor Walker's assistant. The Mayor is expecting you. Please go in

GEORGE: Thank you

GEORGE: Good afternoon, Mayor Walker

MAYOR: Hello. How are you?

GEORGE: Fine, thanks. How are you?

MAYOR: Fine, thanks. What can I do for you?

GEORGE: I'm a reporter. I want to talk _________ the work people do in this town

1.A、about

B、with

C、to

D、for

MAYOR: Fine

GEORGE: How long have you been mayor of Greentown?

MAYOR: Three years.

GEORGE: How many people live in Greentown?

MAYOR: Thirteen thousand.

GEORGE: Let's talk about the work people do. What do they do?

MAYOR: They ______ in small factories. They work in small businesses.

2.A、working

B、works

C、work

D、worked

GEORGE: How many factories do you have?

MAYOR: We have five small factories.

GEORGE: What do they make?

MAYOR: Look at these pictures. See these people?

3.A、See

B、Look

C、Watch

D、Observe

GEORGE: Yes.

MAYOR: They work in the battery factory. They make batteries.

GEORGE: What do they make?

MAYOR: They work in the tire factory. They make tires.

GEORGE: What do they make?

MAYOR: They work in the glass factory. They make windows and windshields.

GEORGE: What do they _________.

4.A、do

B、produce

C、generate

D、make

MAYOR: They make bottles. And they make plastic bags. Come see the town.

GEORGE: Thank you. I'd like that.

MAYOR: Do you see those people? They work on the roads and streets.

GEORGE: I see. How many teachers do you have?

MAYOR: _________ one hundred. They teach in the schools. Look at that school.

5.A、In

B、For

C、By

D、About

GEORGE: Is it a new school?

MAYOR: Yes, it is. Twenty teachers teach in that school.

GEORGE: Is that a hospital?

MAYOR: Yes, it is. It's small. Twenty-three nurses work in the hospital.

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第10题

The law firm Patrick worked for before he died filed for bankruptcy protection a year afte
r his funeral. After his death, the firm's letterhead properly included him- Patrick S. Lanigan, 1954~1992. He was listed up in the right-hand corner, just above the paralegals. Then the rumors got started and wouldn't stop. Before long, everyone believed he had taken the money and disappeared. After three months, no one on the Gulf Coast believed that he was dead. His name came off the letterhead as the debts piled up.

The remaining partners in the law firm were still together, attached unwillingly at the hip by the bondage of mortgages and the bank notes, back when they were rolling and on the verge of serious wealth. They had been joint defendants in several unwinnable lawsuits; thus the bankruptcy. Since Patrick's departure, they had tried every possible way to divorce one another, but nothing would work. Two were raging alcoholics who drank at the office behind locked doors, but never together. The other two were in recovery, still teetering on the brink of sobriety.

He took their money. Their millions money. They had already spent long before it arrived, as only lawyers can do, money for their richly renovated office building in downtown Biloxi, money for new homes, yachts, condos in the Caribbean. The money was on the way, approved, the papers signed, orders entered; they could see it, almost touch it when their dead partner—Patrick—snatched it at the last possible second.

He was dead. They buried him on February 11, 1992. They had consoled the widow and put his rotten name on their handsome letterhead. Yet six weeks later, he somehow stole their money.

So Bogan took his share of the blame. At forty-nine, he was the oldest of the four, and, at the moment, the most stable. He was also responsible for hiring Patrick nine years earlier, and they had brawled over who was to blame. Charles Bogan, the firm's senior partner and its iron hand, had insisted the money be wired from its source into a new account offshore, and this made sense after some discussion. It was ninety million bucks, a third of which the firm would keep, and it would be impossible to hide that kind of money in Biloxi, population fifty thousand. Someone at the bank would talk. Soon everyone would know. All four vowed secrecy, even as they made plans to display as much of their new wealth as possible. There had even been talk of a firm jet, a six-seater, and for this he had received no small amount of grief.

Doug Vitrano, the litigator, had made the fateful decision to recommend Patrick as the fifth partner. The other three had agreed, and when Patrick Lanigan was added to the firm name, he had access to virtually every file in the office—Bogan, Rapley, Vitrano, Havarac, and Lanigan, Attorneys and Counselors-at-Law. A large ad in the yellow pages claimed "Specialists in Offshore Injuries." Specialists or not, like most firms they would take almost anything if the fees were lucrative. Lots of secretaries and paralegals, big overhead, and the strongest political connections on the Coast, they were all in their mid-to-late forties. Havarac had been raised by his father on a shrimp boat. His hands were still proudly calloused, and he dreamed of choking Patrick until his neck snapped. Rapley was severely depressed and seldom left his home, where he wrote briefs in a dark office in the attic.

What happened to the four remaining lawyers after Patrick's disappearance?

A.They all wanted to divorce their wives.

B.They were all heavily involved in debts.

C.They were all recovering from drinking.

D.They had bought new homes, yachts, etc.

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