mr开头的英语句子
Mr. Porter's book was an instant hit.
Mrs. Bierce wears thick bifocal lenses.
Mr Polman bats away the perennial suggestion that the company might make more money if it separated its food and household personal care arms.
Mr. Ackerman advises travelers to limit their air travel to carriers from industrialized countries because they tend to have the most thorough security standards.
Mr. Ackerman, please excuse Tyler. He was with me. Barack Obama.
Mr Neuland came up with the design after doing field research on the city's often-maligned bus and train system.
Mr. Ying is well-known for his portrayal of a prison guard in the film "The Last Emperor."
Mrs. Zuckerman does not fraternize widely.
Mr. Pearson was thought a suitable successor.
Mr. Olsen has always avoided anointing any successor.
Mr Sumner's data make that look overdue.
Mr. Zhang Dahai , Manager of Financial Affairs, is a China-registered public accountant experienced in financial management.
Mr Grummage silenced my objections with an upraised hand.
Mrs. Roding's husband deserted her years ago.
Mr Cain's polling Numbers are starting to slide.
Mr. White teaches first grade in south Georgia.
Mrs. Thatcher shook her head feebly and turned paler than ever.
Mr Bernanke is willing to try almost anything.
Mr Ferris insists that "The Unnamed" is not a work of magical realism, but of "realist magic".
Mr McCain is a war hero who endured years of torture in Vietnam.
Mrs. Haines stood nearby, holding scissors to cut a ribbon.
Mr. Green holds two books in his hand.
Mr Cameron would be Britain's poshest prime minister since Alec Douglas-Home in the early 1960s.
Mr. Dambar had loaded his plate with lasagne.
Mr. Sesemann eagerly hurried to encounter his beloved child.
Mr. Sutherland may have the clout needed to push the two trading giants into a deal.
Mr. Craven looked quite startled.
Mr Erdogan's authoritarian bent and his quarrels with the secular press did not help.
Mr. Smith doesn't like all that empty talk between Susan and Joan, which he thinks will definitely get them nowhere.
Mr Netanyahu's inflexibility over the settlers may have got him out of a political jam; it also militates against the peace that would guarantee the Jewish state's long-term survival.
Mr. Murakami said Japan, having experienced the trauma of radiation, should have turned away from nuclear power.
Mr Funke says they have committed more than 100 murders since 1990.
Mrs. Sowerby was laughing a low comfortable laugh long before he had finished his last sentence.
Mr Netanyahu has been increasingly irritated by Mr Lieberman's ideas.
Mr Reagan brings with him some heavy ideological baggage.
Mr Mamet's vehemence commands a certain admiration.
Mr Robb resigned his position last month.
Mr Saleh, a past master at balancing the tribes and dispensing patronage, seems determined not to be hustled out of office after nearly 33 years.
Mr. Baker would take command of the campaign.
Mr Reed, an improbably clear-skinned 49, went through his own self-cleansing in 2006, when he was trounced in a race for lieutenant-governor of Georgia.
Mr. Murong said he had abandoned two novels-in-progress that he suspected would never get published.
Mr Bush asserted a right to hold them indefinitely.
Mr. Wakeham dismissed the reports as speculation.
Mr. Crisp asks, " What are those boys doing?"
Mr Greenspan was half right.
Mrs. Madrigal picked up a towel and began drying dishes next to her daughter.
Mr. Norris said he was hopeful that his request would elicit a positive response.
Mr Marchionne understands the concern, but rejects it.
Mr Combet firmly rejects a delay.
Mr Brown strives to be fair-minded.