Sentences with phrase «asked reader question»

And that led to another frequently asked reader question, wasn't that location inconvenient for a microwave?
I asked readers the question, «What is the ONE mistake leaders make more frequently than others?»
In May 2017, we asked our readers questions about their views on dating and marriage, hoping to explore some of the trends Segal highlights in his book.
We asked readers the question: «Looking back on your experience as an educator, if you could share one piece of advice with your peers, what would it be?»
Our annual Teacher survey asked readers the question: «Looking back on your experience as an educator, if you could share one piece of advice with your peers, what would it be?»
Do this by asking your readers a question, or by simply asking your readers to comment.
Recently, Joystiq, a popular gaming blog, asked their readers the question «Do you leave your game console on standby?»
For example, if you are involved in estate planning you might ask your readers a question like whether they think getting their will prepared is scary or comforting.

Not exact matches

But one thing that has always helped me is that when I'm sitting down to write an article, I start by asking myself one question «How can I help my readers today?».
Readers of a plan can't always capture your passion for the business nor can they ask questions when you finish.
It should also be written in such a way that the reader can easily follow along without asking questions.
Because he kept on being asked the same question from readers about how they could replicate his success, he decided to teach a course — on you guessed it, Udemy.com.
The reader who likes this question asks it first, and most candidates say «excellent» or «strong» or something positive.
The reader that submitted this question likes to ask it last so the person being interviewed leaves on a positive note.
(At this point, Denton mentions how the Kinja platform allows for question - and - answer style interviews between journalists and readers, much like Reddit's «Ask Me Anything» feature).
At the end of your post, the last sentence should ask readers to add their thoughts, insights, opinions, experiences and questions in the comments.
Ask Encore: Retirement columnist Glenn Ruffenach also answers a reader's question on charitable contributions and IRAs.
Feel free to ask questions as we strive to have an ego - free atmosphere where readers bounce ideas off each other and contribute their own DD.
Reader question: «We have been asked to write a letter of explanation for our mortgage lender's underwriter, regarding a bank overdraft fee.
That's a question Angel and I get asked by readers and coaching clients on a daily basis.
After the Equifax data breach in early September, readers asked one question repeatedly that had no good answer: Was there any way to punish the company?
I ASK MY READERS TO PONDER THE QUESTION (AGAIN): Who guarantees the balance sheet of the European Central Bank?
Newsletter Comments Policy Please note that it is my personal policy to identify readers who respond to questions I ask in my newsletters.
These are some of the most frequently asked questions we receive from our readers, on the subject of mortgage underwriting.
One friend told me recently that, when he asked a question about parenting on Facebook, he received close to a hundred comments from concerned readers.
the question that the reader is supposed to ask himself is «What inspired truth is intended by this story?
But there was one question I asked last weekend that scores of readers griped about:
Meanwhile, over on Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed blog, RJS caused quite a stir by asking readers to respond to a letter from a seminary student who researched the science behind an old earth and evolutionary theory, found it to be sound, and now wrestles with the question, What is the basis for calling the Bible true?
The question he asked himself, his students and his readers is the same today: «Who is Jesus Christ for us today?»
For instance, there are the hermeneutical questions of whether the image of Christ emerging through the glasses of Islamic mysticism is what the Bible or Biblical authors «intended»; If the purpose of the crystallization of the supposed authorial intention or purpose is to connect the ancient and the present «viewpoints» or the worldviews, one may ask if such a possibility of a pure state of intention possible to extract at all, or is it not that the reader often always creates» at least some elements of the supposed «intentions».
The question being asked by women is whether the Decade will invite «the churches and the ecumenical movement to discover and nurture an enriched understanding of the very nature and mission of the church... growing from and supporting a new community, embodying the visions of all persons...,» as the Readers Group describe it in their interim report.
What meaning is intended here, is the question the reader should ask.
We saw this play out in the comment section earlier this week when an open, inquisitive reader asked a question of LGBT readers that included the phrase «gay lifestyle.»
The reader may ask at this point, «What are these questions
A reader recently asked me this question: «What if you incorrectly identify something as demonic?»
In Steven Furtick's book, Crash the Chatterbox he encourages his readers to ask two questions when facing fears.
The rest of this chapter will show briefly how historical study of the Bible proceeds and the kinds of questions it leads the Bible and its readers to ask one another.
When the reader asks this kind of question, he begins to see that in writing to the Galatians Paul rejected the ultimate adequacy of every form of religious achievement, not simply that of Judaism.
The Pope called for thoughtful reflection and said: «there is an urgent need for reliable information, with verified data and news, which does not aim to amaze and excite, but rather to make readers develop a healthy critical sense, enabling them to ask themselves appropriate questions and reach justified conclusions.»
As with our «Ask a...» series, it helps if you «like» your favorite questions, so we know what is of most interest to our readers.
Moreover, this book does not mount the ramparts to defend the Bible against the onslaughts of the modern world; nor does the writer feel guilty for asking, even pressing, a modern reader's questions.
The question that has to be asked, however, is whether Spinoza intended the readers of chapter 14 (especially those who lived in the years before the publication of the Ethics) to understand that he is here speaking Spinozistically, and that the universal religion he outlines and seeks to propagate is intertwined with propositions that are not true but that are nevertheless useful for maintaining «the piety of the masses.
To help the reader understand the background of the following commentaries, we asked Robert P. George of Princeton University for a brief summary of the 1996 - 97 cases related to questions of morality and religion.
The postmodern trickery is not designed, as in Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, to cast doubt on the Church's understanding of the world, or even on the very nature of truth itself, but to tease the reader into asking the right questions, into becoming a pilgrim.
That may well be the case but, as anyone with even a passing familiarity with the story will attest, Shelley's monster was designed to provoke empathy among readers and get people asking questions about who was the real monster.
Editor's Note: Since the following story appeared in the January / February print issue of CT, we've received questions from readers asking what they or their pastors should do about their sermons.
Hi Ella, I tried it in the Vitamix and I thought i'd let you know how it went in case another reader asked the same question.
I get many questions from readers asking me what toaster oven I recommend or which ramekins to buy and I can tell you that purchased my toaster oven and the ramekins I use from Amazon.
Some readers have asked questions about how to cook if using frozen wings, but I've made them with fresh wings every time, myself.
I'm always surprised when readers ask me these sorts of basic questions and I realize that I haven't ever answered them on the blog!
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