How do you ask a question without being suspicious?
Let’s start with how to make asking hard questions as easy as possible:
- Practise.
- Give some thought to time and place.
- Focus on one or two people only.
- Don’t beat around the bush.
- Follow up with a question.
- Say thank you.
- Give a deadline.
- Keep it concise.
Do you ask questions you don’t know the answer to?
To do that, we must know the answers. This is a powerful means of helping others bring out the best in themselves and is a subject we will dive into more later. Yet at the same time, in other contexts, I don’t like that quote. Why? Because oftentimes there are questions we don’t ask that, for our development, we should.
Which is the wrong way to ask a question?
Here are some ways people ask questions the wrong way. 1. They lead the witness. Asking a question that assumes a particular answer is easy to do when you already think you’re right and just want people to say you’re right. “Don’t you think we should go ahead and release that order?” “Do you think we should wait any longer than we already have?”
When to ask a question that assumes a particular answer?
Asking a question that assumes a particular answer is easy to do when you already think you’re right and just want people to say you’re right. “Don’t you think we should go ahead and release that order?” “Do you think we should wait any longer than we already have?” “Can anyone think of a good reason not to discipline Joe?”
What did the senior lawyer say on the show Don’t Ask a question?
I don’t remember what the show was or anything about it, except for one line. It was a senior lawyer speaking to a junior lawyer and he said, “Don’t ask a question you don’t already know the answer to.” And in the context of his line of work, I might agree.
Do you ask a question you don’t know the answer to?
And asking a question we don’t know in front of a group of people is the ultimate death for the monkey in our brain. Speaking the question aloud will help us calm our selves. It will also allow the person who asked the question to confirm you understood the question.
Which is proper, ” why Did you ask ” or ” why do you ask?
If someone asks a question and, as a reply, I ask, “Why did you ask?” or “Why do you ask?”, which one is proper in the grammatical sense? Originally Answered: If some one asked a question and as a reply of I ask back “why did you ask?” Or “why do you ask?” Which one is proper in gramatical sense? That depends on- when do you ask this question.
When do people ask questions the wrong way?
(Shoot, sometimes we don’t even listen to the answers –we’re too busy presuming we’re right.) Here are some ways people ask questions the wrong way. 1. They lead the witness. Asking a question that assumes a particular answer is easy to do when you already think you’re right and just want people to say you’re right.
Asking a question that assumes a particular answer is easy to do when you already think you’re right and just want people to say you’re right. “Don’t you think we should go ahead and release that order?” “Do you think we should wait any longer than we already have?” “Can anyone think of a good reason not to discipline Joe?”