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The phrase "a simple question that" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when introducing a question that is straightforward or easy to understand.
Example: "I have a simple question that I hope you can answer quickly."
Alternatives: "an easy question that" or "a straightforward question that".
Exact(41)
It was a simple question that might have occurred to anyone in the hall.
"How you drive integrated services with a disintegrated commissioning process is a simple question that cannot be put too often".
In "The Culture of Narcissism," he asked a simple question that cut deeper than Wolfe's provocation: How had the radical changes in American economic and social arrangements since the 19th century affected the individual?
It was just Short-Colomb that day last summer, reading a Facebook message, asking a simple question that would turn out to have a very complicated answer: Was she related to a woman named Mary Ellen Queen?
During training camp, the Pacers coach, Larry Brown, asked Scott a simple question that changed his life: "How did you guys do this with the Lakers?" Scott described some of Riley's plays and strategies, but then, feverish with inspiration, he rummaged through the garage for home movies from his Laker days and began drawing diagrams in a spiral notebook with an orange, basketball-like cover.
It was seen by Cecil B de Mille, who asked him a simple question that involved a rather more complicated answer: "Can you write a score for a four-hour picture?" The result was The Ten Commandments (1956) - which proved to be one of those movies where the music was a lot more thrilling than the action - and would be rerecorded by him 15 years later.
Similar(19)
The gigantic numbers obscure a simpler question that needs to be debated: How do we want to pay for healthcare?
This is a tantalizingly simple question that is awfully difficult to answer.
It's a seemingly simple question, that's surprisingly difficult to answer.
A pretty simple question that cuts to the heart of things.
I should probably explain straight away that a "thunk" is a seemingly simple question that stops you in your tracks and gets you to think about the world in a different way.
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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