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36 Sentences With "put questions to"

How to use put questions to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "put questions to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "put questions to". Mastering all the usages of "put questions to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"I have always told our Eastern European partners that it is correct to put questions to the courts," Mr. Gabriel said.
Lead prosecutor Kyaw Min Aung left the court building before Reuters was able to put questions to him after the hearing.
Here's mine: Not every day, but on the best ones, we get to put questions to powerful people and hold them to account.
Facebook's lead data protection regulator in Europe has confirmed it's put questions to the company about a major security breach that we reported on yesterday.
Labour's Tom Watson put questions to the secretary of state for digital, Jeremy Wright, regarding Stephen Yaxley-Lennon's use of social media for targeted harassment of journalists.
I do think it's important that a number of journalists, and ideally as many as are accredited to the White House, are able to put questions to the administration.
In an interview for the Evening Standard, Kim put questions to her younger sister about how she's finding this new chapter of her life as a mum to baby Stormi.
LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - It's normally the rowdy highlight of the British parliamentary week, a time when lawmakers pack the chamber to put questions to the Prime Minister of the day.
In three meetings with each side during the week, de Mistura quizzed the negotiators about their ideas, and they were also able to put questions to their rivals through him, one participant said.
This September, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals did so, finding that the University of Cincinnati violated an accused student's due-process rights by failing to let him put questions to the accuser through the panel.
An unprecedented international grand committee comprising 22 representatives from seven parliaments will meet in London next week to put questions to Facebook about the online fake news crisis and the social network's own string of data misuse scandals.
The meetings were held on the sixth floor of City Hall, where top city officials sat around a curved table and put questions to whichever agency head had been called to the lectern that day to defend his or her agency's performance.
A few days before the new fund was unveiled, I put questions to Speedinvest's CEO, Oliver Holle (picture right), to dig deeper into the firm's remit and investment thesis, and to learn more about how a VC hailing from Austria routinely punches above its weight.
In an interview offered to TechCrunch — which at first I was hesitant to accept until it became clear there was a legitimate news angle — I sat down with Glaenzer to discuss the events that led to his resignation and put questions to him that have persisted over the years within the London investment and technology startup community and have become ever louder following high-profile cases of alleged sexual harassment in Silicon Valley and the wider #metoo movement.
But, as she did not speak, Lupin put questions to her, to make her feel a gradual need of unbosoming herself.
Gardeners' Question Time is a long-running BBC Radio 4 programme in which amateur gardeners can put questions to a panel of experts.
Court may put questions to accused :257. Case for prosecution to be explained by Court to undefended accused :258. Procedure where accused does not understand proceedings :259. Power to postpone or adjourn proceedings :260.
The board meets in public once a quarter and members of the public can put questions to the board. The board produces and annual strategy which all the partner organisations agree to implement in their respective spheres. The details of the current strategy and future meeting dates are hosted on Norfolk County Council’s website (Health and Wellbeing Board).
Breaking Through Gridlock: The Power of Conversation in a Polarized World, Berrett-Koehler Publishers. . On September 2, 2017, while covering a pro-immigrant rally in Austin, Texas, for InfoWars, Shroyer repeatedly put questions to protesters. He started to question a teenager, Olivia Williams, about her views. She, in return, called him a "fucking idiot", leading to international coverage of the incident.
It encouraged callers to talk to each other and directed questions asked by listeners to the guests on the programme, intervening as little as possible to keep the show more of a conversation than a talk show. The show also occasionally worked as a forum for the BBC World Service's global audience to put questions to a particular guest. Previous guests included Aung San Suu Kyi, Philip Pullman and Thilo Sarrazin.
David Chidgey, who put questions to Kelly that had been provided by Gilligan. The appearance of Kelly before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee was against the advice of Tebbit, the most senior civil servant at the MoD. He had been overruled by Geoff Hoon, the Secretary of State for Defence. Kelly appeared in front of the committee on 15 July in a session that lasted over an hour.
According to the historian Julia Bush, Pott "deeply resented this apparent attempt to appropriate religious sanction to one side of the suffrage argument". Pott was prepared to directly question militant suffragettes, and would attend public meetings of the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League to put questions to the speakers. The suffragette Kate Parry Frye described Pott as "a most harsh, repellent and unpleasing woman. She began by saying we should not get sentiment from her and we did not".
In Northern Ireland Questions to the Office of the First Minister and deputy First Minister (or simply First Minister's Questions) is taken jointly by the First Minister and deputy First Minister. This power-sharing arrangement is to enable the leaders of the main unionist and nationalist parties to work together in the Executive Office. Members of the Northern Ireland Assembly are allowed half an hour to put questions to the ministers. The questions are tabled in advance by the MLAs.
In this style of debating, the same speaker shifts allegiance between "For" and "Against" the motion. It is a solo contest, unlike other debating forms. Here, the speaker is required to speak for 2 minutes "For the motion", 2 minutes "Against the motion" and finally draw up a 1-minute conclusion in which the speaker balances the debate. At the end of the fifth minute the debate will be opened to the house, in which members of the audience will put questions to the candidate which they will have to answer.
As a London Assembly Member, Jenny Jones promoted the issues of road safety, food, sustainable transport, social justice and the police and civil liberties. She was a member of the Metropolitan Police Authority, and has issued a report on traffic policing. She sat on both the MPA's Strategic and Operational Policing Committee and Civil Liberties Panel.Strategic Operational Policing Committee , part of the Metropolitan Police Authority Elsewhere she put forward a motion and has put questions to the Mayor calling for progress on women's issues, specifically in relation to violence against women and support provision.
Thornton has presented a number of programmes for BBC Radio 2 since 2002. Along with presenting, Thornton was also the writer of the radio documentary From Band to Brand in 2004, and the creator of the radio series Line of Enquiry, inviting an audience to put questions to a number of celebrities, which began in 2007. From 10 March until 28 April 2013, Thornton presented The Boots Feel Good Forum, a radio show dedicated to health and fitness, which aired on Real Radio and Smooth Radio. Since 2014, Thornton has presented Paper Cuts, a radio series for BBC Radio 2.
The show is based on the Ogiri style of rakugo, a form of traditional Japanese storytelling. The ogiri system sees a host put questions to a panel of fellow rakugo storytellers who must produce a funny or witty response. Shoten's format thus sees the host—currently Shunpūtei Shōta—pose questions to six storytellers (known as "ogiri members") seated left to right (as the audience sees them) as follows: San'yūtei Koyūza (sky-blue kimono), San'yūtei Kōraku (pink kimono), Hayashiya Kikuo (yellow kimono), Hayashiya Sanpei II (beige kimono), San'yūtei Enraku VI (purple kimono), Hayashiya Taihei (orange kimono). The rules are simple.
Eventually, in February 2010, an Ofcom Sanctions Committee ruled against Friendly TV and related broadcasters, concluding that "serious and repeated breaches" had been committed. David Wainwright attended the hearing as the representative of the broadcasters. To quote directly from the judgment of the Ofcom Sanctions Committee: In his capacity as Managing Director and Head of Compliance of the broadcasters, Wainwright made oral submissions to the Committee and the Committee then put questions to him. The Committee concluded that the breaches were serious making specific reference to explicit and graphic sex material broadcast without access restrictions after the 21:00 watershed.
After all four debaters have spoken, the debate will be opened to the floor, in which members of the audience will put questions to the teams. After the floor debate, one speaker from each team (traditionally the first speaker), will speak for 4 minutes. In these summary speeches it is typical for the speaker to answer the questions posed by the floor, as well as any questions the opposition may have put forward, before summarising his or her own key points. In the Mace format, emphasis is typically on analytical skills, entertainment, style and strength of argument.
The verdict in M'Naghten's trial provoked an outcry in the press and Parliament. Queen Victoria, who had been the target of assassination attempts, wrote to the prime minister expressing her concern at the verdict, and the House of Lords revived an ancient right to put questions to judges. Five questions relating to crimes committed by individuals with delusions were put to the 12 judges of the Court of Common Pleas. Chief Justice Tindal delivered the answers of 11 judges (Mr Justice Maule dissented in part)Report of M'Naghten's Case on the British and Irish Legal Information Institute website, accessed 17 March 2016.
The Independent gave credit to the BBC for resisting "the naïve showbiz instincts" of executives at Mentorn, who may have wanted "what Peter Hain calls a 'beanfest' for reasons well removed from the BBC's charter obligations." On 21 October, the day before the broadcast, the BBC Director- General, Mark Thompson, wrote an article for The Guardian entitled 'Keeping Nick Griffin off air is a job for parliament, not the BBC'. He said that those arguing for the BNP to be excluded from the programme were making the case for censorship, which was a matter for the government and not the BBC. He explained the BBC's decision: > Question Time is an opportunity for the British public to put questions to > politicians of every ideological hue.
It was subsequently reported in the national press that the South African National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) had pressured the SABC to cancel the series just hours before the airing of the episode on Workers Rights, as this episode was to reveal that the NUM was losing support to rival trade unions (although the SABC refuted that they came under outside pressure). Shortly after the show was canned by the SABC, it started to air on South Africa's independent 24-hour news channel, eNCA. Since moving to a new broadcaster, ten episodes have aired. After a recent episode where young South Africans were invited to put questions to leaders of political parties, one critic writing in an Afrikaans newspaper described the show as "Too much of a shouting match".
Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore's Prime Minister, opening the 6th International Institute for Strategic Studies conference, in Singapore on 1 June 2007 A crucial reason why governmental powers are separated among three branches of government – the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary – is so that the exercise of power by one branch may be checked by the other two branches. In addition to approving the Government's expenditure of public funds, Parliament exercises a check over the Cabinet through the power of MPs to question the Prime Minister and other Ministers regarding the Government's policies and decisions. MPs may put questions to Ministers relating to affairs within their official functions, or bills, motions or other public matters connected with the business of Parliament for which they are responsible. Questions may also be put to other MPs relating to matters that they are responsible for.S.O. 19.
A major assessment of the Learning Communities program was led by Allan Luke and published in 2013.Luke, A., Cazden, C., Coopes, R., et al (2013) A Summative Evaluation of the Stronger Smarter Learning Communities Project : Vol 1 and Vol 2. Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane The report described the operations and analysed the effects of the Stronger Smarter Learning Communities, addressed major issues facing Indigenous education by collecting and analysing new data, and provided a large scale picture of what is occurring in classroom pedagogy for Indigenous students. Regarding educational and attendance outcomes the report said: In the article Chris Sarra stretches the gap on credibility Janet Albrechtsen of The Australian wrote regarding the report: After this newspaper put questions to Sarra as to why there was no link to the report, a link was added with a summary of the findings.
In February 2011, Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi admitted for the first time that he lied about his story regarding Iraq's secret biological weapons program.Chulov, Martin and Pidd, Helen (2011-02-15) Defector admits to WMD lies that triggered Iraq war, The Guardian He also admitted to being shocked that his false story was used as a justification for the Iraq War but proud that the fabrications helped topple Saddam Hussein. According to the Danish film The Man Who Lied the World Into War, after he was found by the document makers and they put questions to the chief security and spy services of his new home country, he lost his "work" (in a company found and described by the document makers as a cover with his position of "marketing specialist") and "salary with flat". Then, when he had to get back to the social one-room flat with social security help-salary, he phoned the documentary staff proposing an interview for the €40,000.
An early suggestion proposed during the feasibility study was to name the new institution after Dame Anita Roddick, a long-time supporter of the school, who had recently died. This suggestion was never taken up by Woodard Schools, who opted for the name 'The Littlehampton Academy'. The feasibility study saw much opposition to the academy proposals becoming evident, with the National Union of Teachers (NUT) openly opposing the plans, stating that they were "not impressed" by Woodard's lack of detailed discussions on the proposals, and the number of issues which they claim the school's senior management team refuses to address.West Sussex Teachers' Association Weblog - Action Against Academies The main consultation event was held on 13 March 2008, and was open to parents, staff, students and wider members of the community, who could put questions to a panel that included the headteacher, chairman of the school governors, a West Sussex County Council representative, head of the consultation process and representatives from the Woodard Trust.

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