Asking
in sentence
1847 examples of Asking in a sentence
People have been
asking
this question for a long time.
We've been
asking
it here at TED already.
In which case, my mother's weekly phone calls,
asking
me if my law school entrance exam scores were still valid was something I should probably pay more attention to.
And all of you, as I start
asking
questions of Yuval, come up with your own questions, and not necessarily about the political scandal du jour, but about the broader understanding of: Where are we heading?
And in general, they have blamed globalism, global elites, for doing this to them without
asking
their permission, and that seems like a legitimate complaint.
CA: And here's a great question from Cameron Taylor on Facebook: "At the end of 'Sapiens,'" you said we should be
asking
the question, 'What do we want to want?' Well, what do you think we should want to want?" YNH: I think we should want to want to know the truth, to understand reality.
And across campus, there's truly brilliant scientists
asking
questions like, "How can I make the world a better place?"
And through these projects, I'm
asking
questions like, how do we define nature?
When we engage people across ideological divides,
asking
questions helps us map the disconnect between our differing points of view.
But
asking
questions serves another purpose; it signals to someone that they're being heard.
When my friends on Twitter stopped accusing and started
asking
questions, I almost automatically mirrored them.
And it's worth
asking
young people: who's really the more sexually experienced person?
But then I decided, what people are really
asking
when they're
asking
if a word is real, they're really asking, "Well, how many brains will this give me access to?"
Asking
for help is a strength, not a weakness.
They're still
asking
themselves: What's in it for me? ... instead of what they should be
asking
today, which is, what's in it for we?
I'm not
asking
nations to be altruistic or self-sacrificing.
I'm
asking
them to wake up and understand that we need a new form of governance, which is possible and which harmonizes those two needs, those good for our own people and those good for everybody else.
They'll see somebody
asking
for money on the sidewalk and they'll pull out their phones and look really busy, or they'll go to the museum and they'll waltz right on by the donation box.
We have to eliminate these excuses and we do that by
asking
patients to log in and verify that they've taken their medication.
And so, understanding that doesn't take fighting, it takes conversation and then asking, "What are we going to replace Trump with?" GC: But you saw fighting last night, even at the speech, because you saw the Democratic women who came and wore white to honor the suffragette movement.
OK, so the second question that you guys should be
asking
yourselves to spot bad numbers is: Can I see myself in the data?
The point of
asking
where you fit in is to get as much context as possible.
It's also worth
asking
how the survey was carried out.
But there's no way we could have come up with that technology by
asking
scientists to build better surgical probes.
But nonetheless, it's what I saw, and so I sat down to evaluate my pricing, evaluate my value, and I did that by
asking
key value questions.
I always rejoin that by
asking
if they care about their kids.
I am not
asking
you to start drawing your personal data, or to find a pen pal across the ocean.
And it's really
asking
one question: to what end?
And it all begins really with yourself
asking
this question: What is your longpath?
Asking
patients about their hopes, their fears, their goals and preferences.
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