强硬英语怎么说
- Mr. Skiba says whatever you do, don't be too pushy.
- Sometimes it is hard and blunt.
- By that test, the West let down the Bahrainis: sterner talk from Mr Obama may have deterred their attackers.
- Be strong — your reputation may depend upon it.
- Some people thought Lincoln would withdraw the proclamation at the last minute. They did not believe he would sign a measure that was so extreme.
- To date, the bondholders have been tough negotiators, complaining that they are being unfairly treated.
- He brushed off questions about when he would call elections to resolve a deadlocked parliament, snapping at one reporter: 'I get to decide when.'
- But they have made little headway, and there are concerns that positions on both sides are hardening.
- The government warned that police would take tougher measures to contain the trouble.
- Around the same time, Rio Tinto, BHP and Vale took a tougher line in the iron ore negotiations.
- France also sounds tougher on Russia and China, as well as on Iran.
- That is a forceful measure, never used before, and Mr Ozawa threatens an upper-house censure.
- A money market tough to tighten.
- He is a bit of a tough character and she is rather selfish.
- Zhong had stronger words for the Oriental Morning Post.
- There is no need for males - a waste of space, as hard-line feminists and evolutionists agree.
- But gone are the days when US policy hardball could force others to yield.
- Arthur Levine, the head of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, has been a vituperative critic of teacher education programs for years.
- They oftenproject an image of being outspoken and tough.
- This aptly summarizes the hard stance taken by web development purists.
- She exerted an iron hold on the culture, preferring Beethoven's Sixth Symphony to his triumphalist Fifth, disliking Respighi's "Pines of Rome".
- The government took a hard line on the strike.
- Some nations have signaled they are willing to adopt a tougher approach.
- Given the results of the vote, is this the end of the road for the hardliners in Congress?
- Pessimists, especially hawks in the PP, think the vote could encourage a buoyant ETA to harden its line.