单词 | Speaker |
例句 | 1. The conference rose to applaud the speaker. 2. The students assailed the speaker with questions. 3. He inclined towards the speaker to hear more clearly. 4. Our first speaker tonight is Mr. White. 5. The speaker laughed away his fears. 6. The keynote speaker was Robert Venturi, the architect. 7. She was a brilliant public speaker. 8. The speaker stood in full view of the crowd. 9. Are you a Japanese speaker? 9. is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words. 10. It gives me great pleasure to welcome our speaker. 11. The speaker was boring everybody. 12. A huge throng had gathered round the speaker. 13. With a smile the speaker, to bear the responsibility. 14. He is a good English speaker. 15. She's a good public speaker. 16. The speaker gave a nervous cough. 17. Angry crowds converged on the speaker. 18. The audience rose bodily to cheer the speaker. 19. The speaker argued against the plan. 20. The speaker paused for breath. 21. The crowed pelted stones at the speaker. 22. Is there a Japanese speaker here? 23. The crowd pelted bad eggs at the speaker. 24. The speaker likes to have an attentive audience. 25. The speaker worked the crowd up into a frenzy. 26. They jeered the speaker. 27. The speaker can extemporize on any of a number of subjects. 28. The speaker tried hard to impress the audience but left them cold. 29. The speaker gesticulated by raising his arms, pounding the desk, and stamping his foot. 30. I need hardly say what a pleasure it is to introduce our speaker. 1. The conference rose to applaud the speaker. 2. The keynote speaker was Robert Venturi, the architect. 3. She was a brilliant public speaker. 4. Are you a Japanese speaker? 5. A huge throng had gathered round the speaker. 6. He is a good English speaker. 7. She's a good public speaker. 8. The speaker gave a nervous cough. 9. Is there a Japanese speaker here? 9. is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words. 10. The speaker likes to have an attentive audience. 11. I need hardly say what a pleasure it is to introduce our speaker. 12. It gives me great pleasure to introduce our guest speaker. 13. It is my pleasure, nay privilege, to introduce tonight's guest speaker. 14. The Society has an interesting talk by a visiting speaker every month. 15. The people at the back of the hall jeered the speaker. 16. Sir David Bellamy was a guest speaker at the conference. 17. The speaker got a very hostile reception from the audience. 18. There was a little cluster of admirers round the guest speaker. 19. Both the speaker and his speech were drowned out by the disapproval of the crowd. 20. The speaker pictured the suffering of the poor vividly. 21. The speaker was cheered to the echo. 22. The angry crowd howled the speaker off the platform. 23. I'd like to propose a motion, Mr. Speaker. 24. The speaker leveled his remarks at the headmaster. 25. It is not polite to interrupt a speaker with frequent questions. 26. The speaker soon whipped the crowd into a fever of excitement. 27. Sensing the interest of the audience, the speaker warmed to his topic. 28. The speaker advocated a less austere observance of the sabbath. 29. It's my great pleasure to introduce tonight's speaker, Professor Lewis. 30. The speaker interrupted himself in the midst of his speech. 31. I want to get near to the speaker, I can't hear what he's saying from the back. 32. It gives me great pleasure to introduce our guest speaker. 33. It is my pleasure, nay privilege, to introduce tonight's guest speaker. 34. The Society has an interesting talk by a visiting speaker every month. 35. The secret service agents hustled the speaker out of the amphitheater. 36. The people at the back of the hall jeered the speaker. 37. Sir David Bellamy was a guest speaker at the conference. 38. The speaker lit into the government for its tax bill. 39. A good speaker can whip the crowd into a fever of excitement. 40. To be both a speaker of words and a doer of deeds. 41. The crowd began to trail away when the speaker continued for over an hour. 42. The speaker got a very hostile reception from the audience. 43. There was a little cluster of admirers round the guest speaker. 44. Both the speaker and his speech were drowned out by the disapproval of the crowd. 45. Our speaker today needs no introduction . 46. The speaker pictured the suffering of the poor vividly. 47. What is the speaker drivelling about now? 48. The speaker lashed the young people into violent action. 49. The speaker carried the audience with him. 50. The crowd was hooting and jeering at the speaker. 51. The speaker ended by suggesting some topics for discussion. 52. The wire led to a speaker. 53. The speaker was cheered to the echo. 54. Two MPs were censured by the Speaker. 55. The audience laughed the speaker down. 56. The speaker discoursed knowledgeably on a variety of subjects. 57. The angry crowd howled the speaker off the platform. 58. He's a fluent Russian speaker. 59. The crowd shouted the speaker down. 60. The speaker ground on, oblivious of his listeners' boredom. 31. I should like to echo the words of the previous speaker. 32. The speaker advocated a less austere observance of the Sabbath. 61. The speaker thundered against his opponents. 62. Clarity of diction is vital for a public speaker. 63. There was a ripple of applause for the speaker. 64. A speaker conveys information through tone and body language. 65. He was not a good speaker. 66. The speaker was roughly handled by the mob. 67. The audience shouted the speaker down. 68. The speaker was groaned down by the audience. 69. She was a good speaker and an excellent debater. 69. is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words. 70. The speaker held on for a full hour. 71. The audience coughed down the tedious speaker. 72. The speaker lashed out against the government. 73. 'Order! Order!' shouted the Speaker. 74. First I'll introduce the speaker sitting on my left. 75. Mr. Speaker, our message to the president is simple. 76. Each speaker is allotted ten minutes. 77. He is a very witty speaker. 78. The speaker really socked it to them! 79. The speaker handled his subject concisely. 80. The speaker was completely thrown by theinterruption. 81. Ben felt his hackles rise as the speaker continued. 82. 'Madam Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,' began the speaker. 83. She's a confident, self-possessed public speaker. 84. She's a very impressive public speaker. 85. The speaker is drivelling about the sagging economy. 86. The speaker lost his thread halfway through the talk. 87. The speaker faced his opponent down. 88. Angry questioners flocked round the speaker after the meeting. 89. The case was forcibly put by the speaker. 90. The speaker lost himself in verbiage. 91. He proposed a vote of thanks to the speaker. 92. She listened to the speaker with rapt attention. 93. May I introduce our speaker for this evening? 94. He directed his remarks to the speaker. 95. The speaker was completely thrown off by the interruption. 96. I'd like to propose a motion, Mr. Speaker. 97. The speaker expounded his views to the public. 98. The speaker accompanied his speech with gestures. 99. The chairman chopped the speaker off in mid-sentence. 99. 100. They took the side of the speaker. 101. The speaker lashed into Liberal government. 102. The speaker tried to rouse the masses. 103. He's an excellent speaker who always draws a crowd. 104. Martin Luther King was a very charismatic speaker. 105. The speaker was lashing the crowd. 106. The speaker brought the crowd to fever pitch. 107. Bill Gates is booked as the keynote speaker . 108. She is a confident and self-possessed public speaker. 109. The speaker worked his new book into his talk. 110. He was a grotesquely inappropriate choice of speaker. 111. This kind of speaker box was handcrafted. 112. Reeves will succeed Segal as Speaker of the House. 113. Dr Gerald Jeffers is the guest speaker. 114. I give you our speaker for today. 115. The speaker treated the subject very fully. 116. I have much pleasure in introducing our speaker. 117. It gives me great pleasure to introduce tonight's speaker. 118. He's renowned as a brilliant speaker. 119. The speaker hammered at his opponent's ideas. 120. Here the speaker paused to have a drink. 121. The president addressed the students on the speaker. 122. The speaker was given a warm welcome / reception. 123. The speaker lashed at the government for its inaction. 124. The speaker tiraded against the government's policies. 125. The speaker strung together a series of jokes. 126. It's not polite to howl down a speaker. 127. A tinny voice issued from a speaker. 128. I've a query to put to the last speaker. 129. They hurled abuse and insults at the speaker. 130. The speaker was clamoured down by the audience. 131. The speaker tilted at the government's policies. 132. Most of the audience seemed ill-disposed towards the speaker. 133. A public speaker needs a voice that carries . 134. The speaker leveled his remarks at the headmaster. 135. I'd like to put a question to the speaker. 136. The speaker gave an interesting presentation on urban transport. 137. The speaker prefaced her remarks with a joke. 138. The speaker had got confused(),() and started contradicting himself. 139. The speaker thundered against the government's policy. 140. Pay attention to the body language of the speaker. 141. She came back at the speaker with some questions. 142. The speaker faces his opponent down. 143. The speaker was now warming to her theme. 144. He is a fluent speaker of Hebrew. 145. The speaker had great powers of utterance. 146. The speaker drove home his point. 147. He earned/established/gained/acquired a reputation as an entertaining speaker. 148. The speaker was completely nonplussed by the question. 149. He was a notoriously verbose after-dinner speaker. 150. There's no sound coming out of the right-hand speaker. 151. Conversation flowed freely when the speaker invited discussion. 152. The speaker soon won his audience. 153. The speaker announced the establishment of a new college. 154. The speaker often referred to his notes. 155. Listen to the speaker and record what he says. 156. The speaker kept wandering off/away from the point. 157. The speaker said he would endeavor to illustrate. 158. I looked around to see who the speaker was. 159. The angry audience shouted the speaker down. 160. They've found out where the other speaker plugs in. 161. We couldn't hear the speaker at the back of the hall because her voice doesn't carry very well. 162. The audience are now invited to put questions to the speaker. 163. I turned and saw the speaker at the back of the room. 164. She was an excellent speaker, but I found her choice of topic strange. 165. The speaker tried to drill in his point but the crowd were not interested. 166. She prefaced her remarks with a few words of welcome to the guest speaker. 167. In his opening salvo the speaker fiercely attacked the Government's record on health care. 168. The sonorous voice of the speaker echoed round the room. 169. It is part of the chairman's duty to keep each speaker to the point to avoid wasting time. 170. The speaker took far too long working around to his main point. 171. You cannot assume that a speaker of English is ipso facto qualified to teach English. 172. The speaker attempted to rouse the crowd with a cry for action. 173. The speaker made full use of his arsenal of invective. 174. The speaker shall limit himself to several aspects of the subject. 175. It is not polite to interrupt a speaker with frequent questions. 176. I wish the speaker would confine himself to the subject. 177. He served for eight years as Speaker of the House of Representatives. 178. She came back at the speaker with some sharp questions. 179. Your question seems to have unnerved the speaker; he's been floundering about ever since you spoke. 180. The speaker soon whipped the crowd up until they were ready to march. 181. The final speaker overran by at least half an hour. 182. Don't interrupt the speaker now; he will answer questions later. 183. There was a tight group of people around the speaker. 184. He has a good ear for accents and can usually tell where a speaker comes from. 185. I'm sure you'll all join me in thanking today's speaker. 186. The speaker got off one or two very amusing jokes. 187. The speaker dwelt on a particular point in the argument. 188. A good speaker is able to anticipate an audience's needs and concerns. 189. Have any of the audience had questions for our speaker? 189. 190. She is a confident and practised speaker who always impresses her audience. 191. The speaker began moralizing on the right way for people to behave, and his listeners soon lost interest. 192. The meeting was disrupted by a group of protesters who shouted and threw fruit at the speaker. 193. The speaker failed to put his ideas over clearly enough so that some misunderstanding arose. 194. Unfortunately, I had to leave just as the speaker was warming to his theme. 195. He was a speaker who could really whip up a crowd. 196. Speaker after speaker mounted/took the platform to denounce the policy. 197. The speaker started with a description of her journey to China. 198. The audience tuned out when the speaker began his long-winded speech. 199. The speaker closed with a word of thanks to the chairman. 200. The speaker has been warned to excite violence in the crowd. 201. The speaker is really telling a pack of lies to the audience. 202. Billy Graham is a speaker who can be sure of playing to a full house . 203. The speaker soon whipped the crowd into a fever of excitement. 204. You have to be a fairly good speaker to hold an audience's attention/interest. 205. The first speaker began to talk, very fast and rather loudly. 206. Sensing the interest of the audience, the speaker warmed to his topic. 207. The crowd fired questions at the speaker for over an hour. 208. The crowd hissed at the speaker when he said taxes should be increased. 209. She was a skilful speaker who knew how to work a crowd . 210. The speaker fired the crowd into marching to Parliament with their de-mands. 211. The speaker illustrated his talk with readings from the books that he had mentioned. 212. Please join with me in thanking our guest speaker tonight. 213. A small crowd gathered round the speaker to hear what he had to say. 214. The last speaker gave me the opening I was waiting for. 215. The speaker hammered at his opponent's ideas with flying colours. 216. The speaker was holding forth on the collapse of modern society. 217. The chairman ruled that the question was out of order/ruled the speaker out of order. 218. The speaker had obviously struck a chord with his audience. 219. The coughs of the people made it impossible to hear the speaker. 220. The speaker stopped in midstream, coughed,() then started up again. 221. After the lecture Jack edged up to the speaker and asked him for his autograph. 222. The audience pelted the speaker with questions until the chairman had to stop them,for there was no more time. 223. The speaker advocated a less austere observance of the sabbath. 224. The speaker hammered his point home with examples that the listeners could not deny. 225. People hooted at the speaker when he began to explain his policy. 226. The speaker was rather hesitant and had to be prompted occasionally by the chairman. 227. It's my great pleasure to introduce tonight's speaker, Professor Lewis. 228. The speaker was so nervous that he could hardly get out more than a sentence. 229. The speaker started his speech by letting off a joke. 230. The speaker really drove his message home, repeating his main point several times. 231. Paul looked through his green glasses peevishly when the other speaker brought down the house with applause. 232. The speaker was just winding up when the door was flung open. 233. And so, without further ado, let me introduce tonight's speaker. 234. The speaker seems to be fairly apprised of the situation in the Far East. 235. The speaker emphasized that much of South Africa's importance lay in its mineral wealth. 236. This government's policies, said the speaker, have been tried and found wanting. 237. All eyes were on the speaker, and nobody noticed me slip into the hall. 238. The speaker interrupted himself in the midst of his speech. 239. The speaker pinned philosophy down and made it talk sense. 240. All right, now I'd like to introduce our first speaker. 241. The people were whipped up into a frenzy by the speaker. 242. The retort raised a cheer in support of the speaker. 243. Her English accent is so good, you would think she was a native speaker. 244. A small crowd gathered around the speaker to hear what he had to say. 245. The evening started badly when the speaker failed to turn up. 246. The sonorous voice of the speaker echoed round the hall. 247. Half the crowd turned off when the speaker began talking about pop music. 248. The speaker roamed freely over the events of the past week. 249. You have to hand it to him; he is a good speaker. 249. Wish you will love and make progress everyday! 250. A government speaker intimated to the reporters that they would expect a statement shortly. 251. Having fired away all his best points, the speaker had no argument left. 252. She isn't a practiced public speaker, but she faced her audience as if to the manner born. 253. He speaks English well enough to pass for a native speaker. 254. I'd like to put a question to the first speaker. 255. When the next speaker produced all those facts, he knocked the bottom out of my arguments. 256. The students enjoyed the speaker so much that the clapping continued for a long time. 257. The speaker appealed more to the feelings of her audience than to their reason. 258. The article implied that the pilot was responsible for the accident. If you infer something from what a speaker or writer says, you come to the conclusion that this is what he or she means:I inferred from the article that the pilot was responsible for the accident. 259. The government speaker complained that the newspapers had misquoted him. 260. It sounds odd to the ears of an ordinary English speaker. 261. 'The last bastions of privilege are crumbling,' announced the speaker. 262. The audience cried the speaker down as soon as he started on a third digression. 263. I'm sure you will all wish to join me in thanking our speaker tonight. 264. We mustn't catch the speaker up by so many questions. 265. The speaker appealed to our emotions rather than to our minds. 266. She isn't a practised public speaker, but she faced her audience as to the manner born. 267. The speaker raised his voice so as to be heard. 268. I should like to echo the words of the previous speaker. 269. You must break your bad habit of interrupting a speaker. 270. The speaker was received with a mixture of applause and hisses. 271. The speaker was applauded as he tore apart the prime minister's policies. 272. The talk was about educational opportunities for adults, and the speaker also touched upon sources of finance. 273. The speaker answered most questions well, except one that he tripped over because he didn't have the necessary facts. 274. In conclusion, I would like to thank our guest speaker. 275. The speaker advocated a less austere observance of the Sabbath.sentence dictionary 276. The speaker sidestepped the question by saying that it would take him too long to answer it. 277. There's a small crowd round the speaker, but you try to edge your way in. 278. The speaker was shouted down by a group of protesters. 279. The chairperson extended a warm welcome to the guest speaker. 280. They were more concerned with how the other women had dressed than in what the speaker was saying. 281. The speaker gave us a humorous joke which suddenly clicked with us and we all laughed. 282. The speaker has to ad - lib his speech when his papers suddenly blow off the podium. 283. The speaker seems to have no original ideas; his speech was full of platitudes. 284. The speaker showed good judgement in his choice of topic. 285. The audience is now invited to put questions to the speaker. 286. And now I'd like to introduce our next speaker, Mrs Thompson. 287. He was an interesting speaker, if not always politically correct in his views. 288. The speaker came into the hall carrying a sheaf of notes. 289. The next speaker tried to make himself heard, but the crowd roared him down. 290. He was such a clever speaker that he always ate up the opposition. 291. The speaker was regrettably indisposed. |
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