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In O'Connell's book, it's asked by Roen Horn, a long-haired young documentarian who, in late 2015, accompanied transhumanist presidential candidate Zoltan Istvan on a cross-country trip inside an RV built to look like a coffin.
It's asked its supporters not to take part in the forthcoming parliamentary elections on 2 March.
But there's a harder question that sometimes follows, especially from those who don't have good memories of English classes past: "So what do you do, exactly?" Depending on the tone in which it's asked, I try to guess what's behind this kind of question.
Usually it's asked in a tone of bewilderment verging on panic, as if the aircraft's engines were shutting down one after another at thirty-five thousand feet.
The answer, of course, is when and how it's asked.
That Southeast Asian dressing is about as thick as water and normally rolls right off anything it's asked to coat.
Similar(26)
It's asking for bother.
"It's asking for trouble," she said.
It's asking whether anything can.
"It's asking too much," Newman said.
I mean, it's asking for it, isn't it?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com