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The phrase "asked in the next" is not correct and lacks clarity in written English.
It may be intended to refer to something that will be asked in a subsequent part of a conversation or text.
Example: "The questions will be asked in the next section of the report."
Alternatives: "in the following" or "in the upcoming".
Exact(3)
"As the video shows, he and the lawyer were laughing at his answer, and, when asked in the next question if the situations were comparable, Tom said, "Oh, come on," meaning of course not,'" the attorney states.
All winning teams make their own luck to a great extent, and the question that will be asked in the next few days – and perhaps in the next few months as Rio looms – is whether Great Britain have finally run out of good fortune and whether the winning dynamic that has impelled them since 1999 has dissipated.
Regarding conditions in the Old Courthouse, Mr. Tripp said the county Legislature would be asked in the next two or three months to approve the hiring of a consultant to determine the scope of the work that needs to be done there.
Similar(57)
Verizon Communications may ask in the next few weeks for New Jersey's endorsement of its plan to sell long-distance service in the state, an executive said yesterday.
The result of the previous case will help to bring out the questions we need to ask in the next case.
While the significance of nuclear localization of CBS is not known, it is pertinent to ask if the next enzyme in the pathway, CSE, is subjected to sumoylation and therefore also has the potential to relocate to the nucleus under some conditions.
For the asker, this creates friction, and they don't ask in the network the next time around.
Participants also were asked if in the next 20 years, the health-related impacts of climate change would be serious in their jurisdiction, in the United States, and globally (see Supplemental Material, Table 3).
It is a question that Joe Torre will most likely ask Knoblauch in the next few days.
It's hard to keep in the mood with a 2-year-old asking questions in the next seat, and harder still to follow a plot line with a 6-month-old howling in the row behind.
Yet, that "before the war" hangs in the air as he asks Edith, in the next scene, "Why don't you have breakfast in bed?" "Because I'm not married," she answers.
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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