更多"Why do Americans love time"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Why do Americans love time
[单项选择]Why do Americans love time[A] They think time can bring money and a lot of things.[B] They hope they can live longer.[C] They don't need to work very hard.
[单项选择]Why do Americans love time[A] They think lime can bring money and a lot of things.[B] They hope they can live longer.[C] They don't need to work very hard.
[单项选择]Why do Americans feel unhappy about Canadian softwood
A. It is sold at a subsidized price.
B. It produces hard feelings between the two countries.
C. It dominates the American softwood market.
D. Thirty percent of Canadian softwood comes into America.
[单项选择]Why do Asian Americans achieve so well academically
[单项选择]Why do Americans prefer to use nicknames when addressing one another
A. Nicknames are easy to remember.
B. Americans are a friendly people.
C. Nicknames help build a closer relationship.
D. Nicknames are convenient to use in daily lif
[单项选择]Why do Americans often greet each other by asking "How did you spend your leisure time "
A. Because they are interested in the different pastime activities.
B. Because leisure time is what makes people different from each other.
C. Because they are bored with the job they have done for the whole week.
D. Because everybody does the same thing all day long.
[单项选择]
Why do so many Americans distrust what they read in their newspapers The American Society of Newspaper Editors is trying to answer this painful question. The organization is deep into a long self-analysis known as the journalism credibility project. Sad to say, this project has turned out to be mostly low-level findings about factual errors and spelling and grammar mistakes, combined with lots of head-scratching puzzlement about what in the world those readers really want.
But the sources of distrust go way deeper. Most journalists learn to see the world through a set of standard templates patterns)into which they plug each days events. In other words, there is a conventional story line in the newsroom culture that provides a backbone and a ready-made narrative structure for otherwise confusing news.
There exists a social and cultural disconnect between journalists and their readers, which helps explain why the" standard templates" of the newsroom seem a
A. a troubled business
B. a declining industry
C. losing increasing number of readers
D. all of the above