Asking
in sentence
1847 examples of Asking in a sentence
We started
asking
ourselves questions.
Like, we put out, one that got a lot of publicity was
asking
for a better condom.
I remember
asking
her what she thought of those early works.
So I got a Fulbright scholarship to just travel around Africa for a year
asking
people why they were building fractals, which is a great job if you can get it.
So some of these things, I'd wander around the streets of Dakar
asking
people, "What's the algorithm?
OK, thank you. (Applause) So as you can see, we have this device that can monitor so many physiological signals for you, and what is really interesting about this device is that it does all this without any wearables, without
asking
the person to change his behavior or to wear anything or charge anything special.
Because the device understands space, it will ask you to prove, by doing certain movements, that you have access to the space and you are the person who you are
asking
the device to monitor.
I remember one day coming home from a birthday party where I was the only black kid invited, and instead of
asking
me the normal motherly questions like, "Did you have fun?" or "How was the cake?" my mother looked at me and she said, "How did they treat you?"
Now I know people will say, but that doesn't add up to a lot, but I'm actually
asking
you to do something really simple: observe your environment, at work, at school, at home.
I'm
asking
you to look at the people around you purposefully and intentionally.
And it's because of those words that I stand here right now full of passion,
asking
you to be brave for the kids who are dreaming those dreams today.
So right now, what I'm
asking
you to do, I'm
asking
you to show courage.
I'm
asking
you to be bold.
As business leaders, I'm
asking
you not to leave anything on the table.
As citizens, I'm
asking
you not to leave any child behind.
I'm
asking
you not to be color blind, but to be color brave, so that every child knows that their future matters and their dreams are possible.
And I've tried, I've met them a few times, tried
asking
them, and they aren't revealing anything.
This is me in 1984, in case you were wondering how I was doing, thank you for
asking.
One way of
asking
them the question is like this: "Others in similar circumstances have thought about ending their life; have you had these thoughts?"
And that is, that when they analyzed the Diet Pepsi data, they were
asking
the wrong question.
What we're
asking
and looking for is, are there a very few set of individuals who are actually walking around with the risk that normally would cause a disease, but something in them, something hidden in them is actually protective and keeping them from exhibiting those symptoms?
And so we started
asking
people such as Hakon at the Children's Hospital in Philadelphia.
In order for us to get this project to work, we need individuals to step up in a different role and to be engaged, to realize this dream, this open crowd-sourced project, to find those unexpected heroes, to evolve from the current concepts of resources and constraints, to design those preventive therapies, and to extend it beyond childhood diseases, to go all the way up to ways that we could look at Alzheimer's or Parkinson's, we're going to need us to be looking inside ourselves and asking, "What are our roles?
We think about "thank you for your service," and people say, "So what does 'thank you for your service' mean to you?" Well, "Thank you for your service" means to me, it means acknowledging our stories,
asking
us who we are, understanding the strength that so many people, so many people who we serve with, have, and why that service means so much.
So my colleague Dr. Michael Hole and I started
asking
moms about money.
The zero date also gave me a chance to see how they responded to me
asking
them out.
Now I want to end, with
asking
you again.
So you start
asking
yourself questions.
Even the most critical people out there tend not to be very critical about dictionaries, not distinguishing among them and not
asking
a whole lot of questions about who edited them.
So what I'm
asking
today is that you envision a world where men and women aren't held hostage to their pasts, where misdeeds and mistakes don't define you for the rest of your life.
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