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The phrase "a message that asks" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when describing a type of communication that seeks information or a response from the recipient.
Example: "She sent a message that asks for clarification on the project requirements."
Alternatives: "a request for information" or "a query that seeks".
Exact(2)
As you can see in the screenshot above, when the user clicks the new Pin It button on a webpage with a number of images, they're shown a message that asks them to "Choose a Pin to Save," then they click on the one they want to share.
Type 1 is a message that asks for no response (one-way).
Similar(58)
As people walked into the lobby of the church in Tomball, they passed by a whiteboard with a message that asked attendees to express their thoughts to Wakefield.
It sends a message that asking for consent is what one should do when engaging in a sexual encounter, even though the intimacy of such encounters and the inevitable he-said-she-said (or pick your pronouns!) nature of any disputes that may arise render these policies fairly toothless.
Click "ok" on the popup message that asks if you want to submit the quiz.
Any message that asks for your password is never real (all legitimate websites have automated password reset programs).
Someone soon realized that the code could be broken by the tricky bifid cipher, and the result was a legible message that asked the recipient to meet at a certain location.
But beyond that policy, she put forth a unifying message that asked Americans to acknowledge the systemic barriers against minorities.
But he did not rule out a marketing message that asked Americans to at least try the cars built by the company that they own as taxpayers.
We could not see the hand written ink at that point, but saw a printed message that asked the reader to contact the German consulate when they found the note". When they saw the date they thought it was "too far-fetched" to be real, Mr Illman said - but they researched the bottle online and took it to experts at the Western Australian Museum.
But I stumbled over the e-mail message that asked, "Are you suggesting separate subway cars for blacks and whites?" As with the subject of race, a columnist can never run out of words on sex.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com