meaning of the sentences

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Ksenia

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1 A You've never been there, have you?
B Actually, I have. I went last year.
A So that was a situation at the end of the year.
B Sorry, could you just run through the figures for the last quater again?
A So what do you think?
B Well, I can't say I'm totally enthusiastic about the idea.
A They didn't ask a single question after my presentation.
B No, they didn't, surprisingly I wonder why.
A I thought he handled the negotiation very well.
B Yes, it's obviously not the first time he's done something like that.

2 More worrying still is that it's only a month away.

1 How do you think if they didn't ask a single question does it mean that this presentation was sucessful or not?
2 It means that only one month left or one month has already passed?
 
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No, they didn't. I wonder why.

1. Did they just not say anything? Or did they just not ask any questions? I don't know enough to know if the presentation was successful, but there is some doubt.

2. "Only a month away" means there is just one month to go. Just one month left.
 
No, they didn't, surprisingly I wonder why.

If you want to use 'surprisingly' you should place it in front of 'they didn't'. As it stands it means that what is surprising is your wondering why.
 
This dialogue is taken from "Business Result" (Oxford), that's why I can't change the word order.
 
Perhaps you (or Oxford's editor) missed a period (full stop) in No, they didn't, surprisingly. I wonder why.
 
Note that I l left "surprisingly" out of my suggestion. The surprise is implied.

(When I posted that I did not, of course, know where the dialogue came from, but knowing the source makes the goof more surprising.)
 
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