mr开头的英语句子
Mr Kibaki will find it hard now to remain aloof from the process.
Mr Summers had prominently called for "significant, speedy and sustained" fiscal stimulus.
Mr Harper points out that Canada is holding back-to-back summits—doubling the cost, he says.
Mr Mak's travels start in the capitals that glittered so brightly in the early 1900s: Paris, Berlin, Vienna, st Petersburg, London.
Mr Nkunda has so far failed to launch his widely expected attack on Goma.
Mr Bewley also found that psychological resistance to pay cuts melts when the employer's survival is at stake.
Mr Obama gave warning to Asian exporters that they must stand on their own feet in the future rather than feeding off us markets.
Mr McCain, in contrast, fumbled when he mishandled his response to the economic turmoil of the past few weeks.
Mr Murdoch built Fox News from the ground up.
Mr Putin's promises, Ivan has now concluded, are "just paper and words".
Mr Clarke hopes to do more of it.
Mr Clarke is thinking of restricting IPPs to more serious offences.
Mr Howard's predecessor as home secretary was none other than Mr Clarke.
Mr Linton walked to a window on the other side of the room that overlooked the court. He unfastened it and leant out.
Mr. Chesler said foreign military aid was prolonging the war.
Mr.Smith is an old friend of mine.
Mr. White was the brains behind the scheme.
Mr Rapp, backed by some 32, 000 pages of evidence and the testimony of 139 victims, feels he has a strong case.
Mr Rapp, backed by some 32,000 pages of evidence and the testimony of 139 victims, feels he has a strong case.
Mr Holbrooke is respected, though not always liked (some consider him to be domineering).
Mr White did not say anything, but walked out of the living-room and went to his study.
Mr Obama's calm and collected response to the turmoil on Wall Street contrasted sharply with Mr McCain's grandstanding.
Mr Bush's Allies abroad may be forgiven for taking some pleasure in his humiliation.
Mrs. White prefers to some voluntary work in a local hospital, rather than do nothing all day long.
Mr. Liang is a generous man.
Mr Green is always on his high horse. In fact, he is good for nothing.
Mr Lee is one of the very few modest, unassertive personalities in the company.
Mr Green is always on his high horse.
Mr Cooley, from horseback, told them not to sit around too long, but to get on with mopping up the fire.
Mr Benioff had his lucrative epiphany while on sabbatical—swimming with dolphins, he says.
Mr Camus' experience managing the Franco-German rivalries at EADS and Airbus may help him steer Alcatel-Lucent away from its similar difficulties to become a proper global company.
Mr. Robinson has developed the reputation of a ruthless cost-cutter.
Mr. Hasan said his cousin became more devout after his parents died in 1998 and 2001.
Mr Studzinski is a devout Roman Catholic.
Mr. Pell huddled in a corner with his notebook on his knees.
Mr Giambiagi points out that the number of pensioners will grow by about 4% a year for the next ten years.
Mr. Katsav was to serve no jail time, but would receive a one-year suspended sentence, and he agreed to pay compensation to two women.
Mr. Dawkins gave his hat a ferocious cock, after delivering this sentiment, and looked at Master Bates, as if to denote that he would feel obliged by his saying anything to the contrary.
MR. BLAKE: This is Miss Sophie Dupont.
Mr. Gill said the city could penalize the company if it did not complete the work on schedule.
Mrs. Gill asked Paul what he thought was funny about a young mother putting her head inside an oven.
Mr Steinmeier barely has a chance to oust Ms Merkel as chancellor.
Mr Orban is trying to oust the governor of the National Bank of Hungary, Andras Simor.
Mr. Brinckerhoff was formerly a software developer at Microsoft.
Mr Kenneth was perplexed to pronounce of what disorder the master died.
Mr. Bryan also referred me to a book by the American journalist Anthony Scaduto.
Mr Pearson lived in a substantial castle in the suburb.
Mr. Mahoney 17)oriented us by pointing out the North Star, the Big and Little Dippers and the constellation Orion, all visible to the naked eye, of course.
Mrs. Johnson lost the runoff by 63 to 37 percent to Marion Crank, a state legislator from Foreman in southwest Arkansas, who had the courthouse crowd and the Faubus machine behind him.