Is my repeated asking of
rhetorical questions getting annoying?
Not exact matches
Don't
get me wrong, I don't mean that to be
rhetorical or even a provocative
question.
And the answer to that
rhetorical question, of course, is that nonbank companies generally don't
get bailed out when the whole thing blows up.
Often this tension was felt to have been so painful that one or another heretic sought to suppress either the Hebrew or the Hellenic element, as with the efforts of the second «century Marcion to
get the Church to excise the Old Testament from the Christian Bible, or, from the opposite side, the sneering
rhetorical question from the puritanical pen of the early «third «century Tertullian, «What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?»
Consider the post, 5 Cool Things No One Ever Told You About Nighttime Breastfeeding, which claims that the number 1 coolest thing about nighttime breastfeeding is «breastfeeding moms actually
get MORE sleep than their formula - feeding counterparts,» and concludes with the
rhetorical question: «Did you ever think, when you hear your baby rouse at 2:00 am, that they are actually giving you the gift of MORE sleep...?»
These days, we
get Henry Porter writing about how he refused to eat in a curry house that happened to be within the same postcode as a CCTV camera, and stormed out in high dudgeon, scattering onion bhajis and asking outraged
rhetorical questions about whether Magna Carta had died in vain in his wake.
For instance, in the 4th paragraph, the editorial asks a
rhetorical question: What has human right
got to do with the dress code adopted by organisations?
Rhetorical question: when you're planning your price promotions, would you rather put all your eggs in one basket or try to
get every last bit of exposure possible?
He's a great resource for learning all about literary agents — what they do, how to
get them, how not to annoy them and inadvertently sabotage your writing career with an ill - fated
rhetorical question.
Not surprisingly my
rhetorical question on the value of leatherback turtles — to nature and / or the human subset of nature —
got under the skin of some of my favorite scientists.
Perhaps a direct
question to them, instead of a
rhetorical question to Amac, would
get you to an answer — if that's really your purpose.
I will make one response, in the form of
rhetorical questions, specific to your interesting historical narative because you say you understand statistics: what confidence can one
get about a global temperature record from sampling a single locality (Dartmoor uplands)?
I took it as a
rhetorical question designed to
get you to think about how loss - insurers in a competitive market can be profitable in a world full of loss.