Asking
in sentence
1847 examples of Asking in a sentence
There's not a country in the world that now is not
asking
whether we can afford what doctors do.
I got interested in this when the World Health Organization came to my team
asking
if we could help with a project to reduce deaths in surgery.
Which means we have been
asking
the wrong question.
Kepler was
asking
the wrong question.
So from that perspective, maybe we will always be
asking
questions and never be able to fully answer them.
This is all I'm
asking
for, really, in human decision making, is the consideration of these three things.
I'm not
asking
for the complete primacy of one over the other.
So what we're doing is
asking
the surgeon to perform the task, and we record the motions of the robot.
First, listen closely to the person
asking
you a question.
So instead, I'm
asking
you to do your homework, write your own Choice D using supporting detail.
They're
asking
you, they're
asking
all of us, to get involved.
And that bias is that we're asking: Is this or that "still" ethical?
We're
asking
things like: Is this Oxfam donation form, where the regular monthly donation is the preset default, and people, maybe without intending it, are encouraged or nudged into giving a regular donation instead of a one-time donation, is that "still' permissible?
And if you look into the designed environment around us with that kind of lens, asking, "What is the vision of the good life that our products, our design, present to us?", then you often get the shivers, because of how little we expect of each other, of how little we actually seem to expect of our life, and what the good life looks like.
Because ultimately, how can you ask yourselves and how can you find an answer on what vision of the good life you want to convey and create with your designs without
asking
the question: What vision of the good life do you yourself want to live?
I mean, that would be a bit like
asking
Chris Columbus in 1491, "Hey Chris, you know, what happens if it turns out that there's a continent between here and Japan, where you're sailing to, what will be the consequences for humanity if that turns out to be the case?"
We are still
asking
the question.
And what we found was, as we progressed in our research, was, that we were
asking
really the wrong question.
And then, when they had a final project, they actually went to Kickstarter and they were
asking
for 100,000 dollars to make a few of them to sell.
That said, I don't wish to be seen as regretting the life I could have had if I'd not been mentally ill, nor am I
asking
anyone for their pity.
Others reacted in
asking
you for help, and some people hide from you.
The next chapter begins with first of all,
asking
ourselves this fundamental question, "Whom do we want to help in Africa?"
So this is our footage of the launch, based on, basically, taking notes,
asking
people what they thought, and then the combination of all the different shots and all the different things put together created their sort of collective consciousness of what they remembered it looked like, but not what it really looked like.
And I'm going to share my music with you, but I hope that I'm going to do so in a way that tells a story, tells a story about how I used boredom as a catalyst for creativity and invention, and how boredom actually forced me to change the fundamental question that I was
asking
in my discipline, and how boredom also, in a sense, pushed me towards taking on roles beyond the sort of most traditional, narrow definition of a composer.
I'm not
asking
them to copy exactly.
And it is normal for kids to come into the library to tell me or our guard, Sterling, that someone is outside using, which typically means finding someone injecting on our front steps, benches or near the building, then
asking
them to move along because kids see them.
For a while prior to that incident, we had been
asking
for a sharps container for the restroom, and after that, the library administration quickly approved installing one along with hiring bathroom monitors.
So we invented, without asking, of course, the Incredible Edible Green Route.
We started with four, and we've now got 64 on, and the result of that was that people were then going into shops
asking
for a local Todmorden egg, and the result of that was, some farmers upped the amount of flocks they got of free range birds, and then they went on to meat birds, and although these are really, really small steps, that increasing local economic confidence is starting to play out in a number of ways, and we now have farmers doing cheese and they've upped their flocks and rare breed pigs, they're doing pasties and pies and things that they would have never done before.
And today I'm
asking
the question: Is life really that complex?
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