interviewing 面试
Interviewing \In"ter*view`ing\, n.
The act or custom of holding an interview or interviews.
An article on interviewing in the ``Nation'' of January
28, 1869, . . . was the first formal notice of the
practice under that name. --The
American.
- At the same time, U.S. soldiers in Kuwait began interviewing Iraqi soldiers to try to identify those responsible for alleged atrocities.
- To develop a custom course, a team of business school professors typically spends weeks interviewing company officials.
- However, he did say bilingual officers were interviewing him to find out his intentions.
- In August, Justice Department lawyers began informally interviewing petroleum industry executives to seek explanations for the steep rise in gasoline prices since Iraq invaded Kuwait Aug. 2.
- Its slogan: "You create your own reality." Chandler, 56, an award-winning religion writer for the Los Angeles Times, took an eight-months leave for researching the movement, interviewing both its critics and fervent followers.
- The psychologist, Art Norman, spent 90 to 100 hours interviewing Bundy over 15 months in 1986 and 1987 while working on Bundy's first appeal of his death sentences.
- It was just too primitive." The others stayed on, interviewing and photographing people in the area for the first edition of Tales.
- Producer David Hoffman first learned of Emeline while interviewing Nettie Mitchell, an elderly woman known as a storyteller, in 1974 for an unrelated Bicenntennial project.
- The FBI is conducting a background check and the American Bar Association's judicial screening committee is interviewing lawyers to assess Boudin's qualifications.
- She said the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem was in contact with members of Kayed's family and was interviewing witnesses in an attempt to determine what happened last Saturday.
- So he began gathering data himself, interviewing colleagues, students, even the campus police.
- Two hours into the daylong event, the reporters begin interviewing each other.
- At least I had their interviewing gift of seven toothbrushes to console me.
- A typical project involves interviewing in four languages and a nationwide survey would require 18 languages.
- As a trial lawyer, she said, she gathered facts by interviewing witnesses and then delivered those facts clearly to a judge or jury.
- After reviewing more than 45,000 documents and interviewing 120 current and former General Dynamics officials, the department said, lower-level and senior prosecutors agreed unanimously to close the investigation.
- At Brown University, consultant Pamela Rowland-Morin begins working with students on interviewing skills during pre-med studies.
- Before interviewing Brennan, the young reporters carefully researched his 34-year tenure on the bench.
- The poll's margin of error was not disclosed, nor was the method of interviewing.
- While interviewing, she asked Mr. Drake if she would hit roadblocks because she is a black woman.
- But Mr. McKay's investigators are still interviewing witnesses and wrapping up loose ends of their grand jury inquiry, according to sources familiar with the investigation.
- Hetherington and Chambers will spend a year investigating evidence and interviewing people with information in Britain and abroad, including the Soviet Union.
- The gray-haired jurist said neither the White House nor the Justice Department, in interviewing him for the Supreme Court post, has asked for his views on issues such as abortion.
- NBC's Tom Brokaw, interviewing a Panama City resident by phone for "Today," asked if a TV station there was describing what was going on.
- Members of the group, led by NTSB investigators, are interviewing hospitalized passengers in Sioux City and will send questionnaires to other survivors, Lopatkiewicz said.
- We're still interviewing witnesses," said Police Lt.
- After interviewing the girl at school, Cain said he petitioned the Allegan County Probate Court to have the children removed.
- The magazine developed its rankings after interviewing faculty members and deans across the country since last fall.
- Rachael Ann White was taken Friday when her grandmother left the room while interviewing a woman for a babysitting job.
- He set out to find fellow sufferers and ended up spending months interviewing tax collectors, tax officials and tax "victims."