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"Question two, Stewart: why do you write novels?" The implied question was: why bother wasting your time writing novels, Stewart?
Before the next season, in 1975, Sport magazine put Harris on its cover with the headline "Will James Harris Be The First __* To Play Quarterback In The Super Bowl?" In a footnote, the cover specified, "*Los Angeles Ram," but the implied question was clear: Would Harris be the first black quarterback in the championship game?
Before the next season, in 1975, Sport magazine put Harris on its cover with the headline "Will James Harris Be The First ______* To Play Quarterback In The Super Bowl?" In a footnote, the cover specified, "*Los Angeles Ram," but the implied question was clear: Would Harris be the first black quarterback in the championship game?
"In every case, the implied question was, 'How and when are you going to cut them?' That, apparently, is what 'the economy' means to Very Serious People in a presidential race".
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Her implied question was "should artists, many of whom are still struggling, be forced to underwrite a marketing promotion for the company with the world's highest market capitalization?" That was her "what".
Clooney may or may not have intended the third in this chain of implied questions: are these opinionated Rottweilers simply Murrow's heirs?
Jill Lepore's article about Rachel Carson, ending as it does with the implied question "What if?," has been troubling me all day (A Critic at Large, March 26th).
That was the implied question behind Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson's address to the Conservative Political Action Conference last week, as the former two-term New Mexico governor rattled off his various athletic accomplishments -- a lousy strategy if you're crafting a Tinder profile, but it certainly made for an attention-grabbing stump speech. .
The other — of less historical importance but of more immediate concern to NPR's management — is the implied question of how a mainstream news organization stays competitive and relevant during a time of layoffs, cutbacks and general panic about the future of the business.
In any case, it is a fair conjecture that Timon's implied answer to the question was 'no'; accepting things by hypothesis is equivalent to accepting them without grounds, and this is a highly dubious procedure.
Hinckfuss's implied answer to this question is that yes, a pail of water might implement a human program, and therefore any arbitrary computation, at least for a short time.
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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