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Перевод: interview
[существительное] встреча ; беседа ; интервью; собеседование при приеме на работу; деловое свидание; [глагол] интервьюировать; иметь беседу
Тезаурус:
- Of course these headings cover more than one question and it may not always be clear to you how the interviewer is constructing the interview.
- Sir Anthony Barrowclough was told that police had wanted to interview Mrs Elizabeth Barlow in 1981 over the collapse of a stockbroking firm which had links with another investment company, Farrington Stead, a similar operation to Barlow Clowes.
- On July 23, Mancunian freelance journalist Steven Kingston visited the Rough Trade offices to interview Morrissey.
- Guidelines were given as to the type of person suitable for interview and the names provided were a representative sample.
- If the purpose of your interview is to raise finance, then your case will be helped immeasurably if you go into the interview with a clear and well-documented proposition.
- I had Bob Maxwell in the interview suite, and he was furious.
- Clients are charged for the amount of time they take up, including the length of the interview and any telephone calls.
- A CAB interview with scant attention to emotional problems is generally lengthy because forms are complex; because benefit calculations take a long time; because contacting the Department of Social Security on the telephone takes even longer and calculating an equitable distribution of debt repayments longer still.
- Viewers nave enough to suppose that the interview is a means by which the electors might arrive at the truth would prefer the tried and trusted methods of the Brothers Dimbleby.
- All through the first part of the interview - the crazy part, when she had been talking about seeing her son in the house - Hank had been telling the straight truth.
- The interview, in Moscow last month, is to be published in Izvestia.
- Mrs Howard had an interview with the Brewers her prospective employers last night, but I to not wish to be writing about that.
- John Madge made a useful distinction between various sorts of people who may be the subject for the sociologist's interview.
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