Which of these would be considered rude in a Chinese office
A: Maintaining eye contact and looking away every now and then.
B: Standing one or two feet away from the person you are talking to
C: Politely disagreeing with someone’s point of view in a meeting.
D: Looking very quickly or not at all at a business card.
A: Maintaining eye contact and looking away every now and then.
B: Standing one or two feet away from the person you are talking to
C: Politely disagreeing with someone’s point of view in a meeting.
D: Looking very quickly or not at all at a business card.
举一反三
- Which of these would NOT be considered rude in an office? A: Maintaining eye contact and looking away every now and then B: Standing one or two feet away from the person you are talking to C: Disagreeing with someone's point of view in a meeting D: Looking very quickly or not at all at a business card
- You're talking with a group of four people. Do you make eye contact with ...? A: just the person to whom you're speaking at the moment. B: each of the four, moving your eye contact from one to another. C: no one particular person (not looking directly into anyone's eye.
- —Would you mind my little sister while I am away? —Of course not. A: looking for B: looking at C: looking after D: looking forward to
- While direct eye contact is important to American, it is considered rude in Japan, because it is invading someone's space.
- 26. When I am away business, I contact my office every day by email. A: with B: of C: on D: to