Questions
in sentence
3998 examples of Questions in a sentence
So we decided that OkCupid should ask users questions, stuff like, "Do you want to have kids one day?"
And big stuff like, "Do you believe in God?" Now, a lot of the
questions
are good for matching like with like, that is, when both people answer the same way.
Some
questions
tell you more about a person than others.
Your match percentage with B is based on
questions
you've both answered.
Let's call that set of common
questions "
s."
As a very simple example, we use a small set "s" with just two
questions
in common, and compute a match from that.
Here are our two example
questions.
To do this, the algorithm multiplies your scores, then takes the nth root, where "n" is the number of
questions.
Because s, which is the number of
questions
in this sample, is only 2, we have: match percentage equals the square root of 98 percent times 91 percent.
After adding a little correction for margin of error, in the case where we have a small number of questions, like we do in this example, we're good to go.
When you want to answer
questions
like this, you need to ask, well, what might this mean to your brain?
I'm going to show you three examples of the work we've done to try to answer those
questions.
For these types of questions, we need cameras.
Despite implicit and explicit
questions
of my right to be in an elite space, I'm proud to report that when I graduated, I was the first black woman to earn a PhD in astrophysics in Yale's then 312-year history.
As with many of the thinkers we just met, sometimes our wildest guesses lead to wonderful and humbling answers and propel us toward even more perplexing
questions.
JF: But I mean, we ask
questions
like that of our women friends, and men don't.
Again, the current legal framework stays silent on hypothetical
questions
and countless others because there are no easy answers, and there are only two ways to make progress on these questions: peace or new laws.
The next few years may tell us whether we'll be able to continue to increase our understanding of nature, or whether maybe for the first time in the history of science, we could be facing
questions
that we cannot answer, not because we don't have the brains or technology, but because the laws of physics themselves forbid it.
Bruno Giussani: Harry, even if you just said the science may not have some answers, I would like to ask you a couple of questions, and the first is: building something like the LHC is a generational project.
BG: Let me try to bring up three questions, playing a bit devil's advocate.
But I think the
questions
are very present in the minds of many people in Europe right now, The first, of course, is about numbers.
For answers to these questions, it starts with individuals, and I think peer-to-peer security is the answer.
Every two years, our patient and dedicated research staff calls up our men and asks them if we can send them yet one more set of
questions
about their lives.
Here are some
questions
and methods I've used to help build the worlds in which those books take place.
Then I brainstorm answers to
questions
that draw out the details of my fictional world.
So, spend some time living in those tasks and the answers to those questions, and you're well on your way to building your own fictional world.
And what kind of conflict is likely to emerge?" Answer those questions, and you have your story.
You think about it for a minute, and you suddenly have a bunch of other
questions
like: What is a computer?
But these are
questions
that people spend their entire lifetime trying to answer, not in a single TED Talk.
Or that Gertrude Stein is more of a computer than William Blake? (Laughter) These are
questions
I've been asking myself for around two years now, and I don't have any answers.
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