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The phrase "to make questions" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to the act of creating questions, typically for the purpose of giving an exam or quiz. For example: "The teacher gave the students 10 minutes to make questions for the upcoming test."
Exact(11)
Details accumulate sufficiently to explain character and plot, while throwing us so off-guard as to make questions of narrative moot... Wilson and Gyllenhaal are tasked with showing us how the slightest shift in emphasis can alter a line's meaning.
The choice helps Mr Davis with his urgent political problem of a $24 billion state-budget deficit, but is a lamentable deal for California.Mr Simon and his fellow financier-turned-politician, Peter Camejo, the Green Party candidate, are trying to make questions like that and others about California's roads, schools and hospitals the core of the election debate.
Nevertheless, although it is usual to make questions about the age as a demographic information, this is just treated as a data to be drawn as an item of the survey.
Changing questionnaire structure to make questions chronologic does not substantially affect the answers given, but may make a questionnaire more acceptable and easier to complete and speed up returns.
So on Friday federal prosecutors in El Chapo's trial in Brooklyn, which is entering its fifth week, filed a motion that asks Judge Brian Cogan to make "questions or evidence" about Fast and Furious "completely off limits" to the defense.
Where necessary to make questions psychiatric specific, we replaced the word "medical" with "psychiatric".
Similar(48)
Adjustments: To make question 6 appear less self promoting, ' accomplished' was changed into ' done' (yet left unchanged in question 5 due to insufficient data), and ' most proud of' was changed into 'most happy with'.
As a practical matter, only the servicing firms are in a position to agree to modifications, making questions about their legal authority critical.
Try to make the questions harder than the actual test questions.
By presenting questions as 'real life' scenarios, we hoped to make the questions as realistic as possible.
Adjustments: The terms ' specific', ' particular' and ' would want' (questions 3, 7, and 9) were removed from the Danish version to make these questions less formal and less complex.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com