Questions Quotes
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I first started asking big questions when I was 12, and by big questions, I mean, 'Why are we here? What is this business? We're alive for a few short decades and then poof, we're out of here.'
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I answer the questions I want, and I don't the ones I don't.
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It's not about me, it's about my family. You don't answer questions for you, but for us. You learn to live beyond yourself.
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It's always about finding the right balance between answering some questions and raising new ones to keep your story going.
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When sermons start where people live - their questions, struggles, and concerns - and then offer a timely and helpful word from the Scriptures, people are more interested in hearing what else the Scriptures have to say.
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I think it's always interesting to make sensational stories where, if these people don't make the right choice, it actually puts marks not just on their souls but also their bodies. That means that you can visualize existential questions.
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Those who incline to very strictly utilitarian views may perhaps feel that the peculiar powers of the Analytical Engine bear upon questions of abstract and speculative science rather than upon those involving everyday and ordinary human interests.
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With the Jews, the questions are always open; we're always questioning. I love that questioning tradition.
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You gotta ask 'why' questions. 'Why did you do this?' A 'why' question you can't answer with one word.
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A psychologist said to me, there are only two important questions you have to ask yourself. What do you really feel? And, what do you really want? If you can answer those two, you probably can leave your neuroses behind you.
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I just try to stay positive and focused on the tennis, not let anything get to me, like crazy questions. But I'm tough, let me tell you, tough as nails.
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I find dates, in general, horrific. We have to sit there and ask these questions and pretend to eat a meal, and it just feels so stiff.
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An ordinary kitten will ask more questions than any five-year-old.
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Questions are a burden to others; answers are a prison for oneself.
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I'm an entertainer and I entertain people and they entertain me back by asking questions. And some of them I answer.
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Whenever I'm giving talks, I always ask people to think of the most obscure questions because I enjoy those the most. I always get the same questions: Why does Pickwick say "plock" and will there be a movie? I like the really obscure questions because there's so much in the books. There are tons and tons of references and I like when people get the little ones and ask me about them. It's good for the audience [and also] they realize there's more there.
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When people ask me silly questions about my private life, I just say, I don't discuss that.
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I have absolutely no regret about my vote against this war. The same questions remain. The cost in human lives, the cost to our budget, probably 100 billion. We could have probably brought down that statue for a lot less.
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My party trick is that I ask everybody questions. I'm just nosey.
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Questions that require answers are what keep readers going - and the place to start raising those questions is with your very first sentence.
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No one can teach, if by teaching we mean the transmission of knowledge, in any mechanical fashion, from one person to another. The most that can be done is that one person who is more knowledgeable than another can, by asking a series of questions, stimulate the other to think, and so cause him to learn for himself.
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As a kid I had all kinds of questions about how I fit it with my neighborhood and friends and other Latinos.
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There are years that ask questions and years that answer.
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I begin with the premise that behavior is an incredibly important element in medicine. People's habits, their willingness to quit smoking, their willingness to take steps to avoid transmission of HIV, are all behavioral questions.