Words matter. These are the best Answers Quotes from famous people such as Mark V. Hurd, Ann Beattie, Ben Zobrist, Gurjeet Singh, Ari Melber, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I go all over the place. I do like the ability to go around the company at different levels to find the people that have the actual answers to the question.
I don’t write about things that I have the answers to or things that are very close to home. It just wouldn’t be any adventure. It wouldn’t have any vitality.
I knew all the right Bible answers and the Sunday school answers.
The answers to today’s most important scientific, business, and social problems lie in data.
I feel like I’m totally me, and I feel like the show reflects my intensity, my vibe, and my search for evidence and answers.
You don’t have to have all the answers all the time. But the best thing to know is what you don’t know.
It’s weird: you do a TED talk on something, and people think that you suddenly have a lot of answers around the topic.
I’m not going to be perfect on the field, I’m not going to be perfect in my postgame answers or any media session.
I think one of the most consistent answers for any of the girls when they’re asked ‘who do you want to wrestle’ is Beth Phoenix – but that was never really the case for me, as far as an opponent or dream opponent. For me, that was always Molly Holly, Lita and Awesome Kong/Kharma.
Everywhere you turn, there are lists and statistics. Any business, any sport, any hobby – we will try to categorize who is the best at some component of that endeavor. It’s part human nature and part technology, since we have been conditioned to have access to answers and trivial problems at our fingertips.
I was brought up in a home environment where I was taught to think critically and was encouraged to seek answers to questions about my faith.
I moved into this neighborhood, and I was walking on this beach with my kids, and we came across a sign that said, ‘Water’s polluted, no swimming.’ And I didn’t have any answers.
We’d like to have immediate answers to all of our questions. I think medicine in particular. I found it frustrating as a physician sometimes to not be able to tell someone exactly why something was happening to them. There are still so many mysteries in medicine.
I would really hate it if I could call up Kafka or Hemingway or Salinger and any question I could throw at them they would have an answer. That’s the magic when you read or hear something wonderful – there’s no one that has all the answers.
And what I wanted to do was, I wanted to explore problems and areas where we didn’t have answers. In fact, where we didn’t even know the right questions to ask.
See, I have no journalism in my background, so I wasn’t practised at research or writing non-fiction, nor at handling the truth in a journalistic way. Journalists know when to call a halt and write something, but I kept on looking for answers.
Being religious means asking passionately the question of the meaning of our existence and being willing to receive answers, even if the answers hurt.
I do not think we are ever going to be able to, for a long time, get the kind of quality of school personnel that we need in our schools, especially in the areas of science and math. One of the answers to that problem is to use more educational technology.
The great thing about The Clash of course is that they keep searching for answers beyond that.
We have a world that is searching for answers, that is searching for a way back to spirituality.
Women tell stories; men want answers. Guys get impatient when we drone on forever; we get frustrated when they tune out.
Novelists can ask – they can ask for anything – but their books are their answers in advance.
While our amplified knowledge of genetics – and the increasing precision of the field – does make it tempting to take on celebrity cases, retro-genetics can’t always provide clear answers.
The wise man doesn’t give the right answers, he poses the right questions.
I think kids want the same thing from a book that adults want – a fast-paced story, characters worth caring about, humor, surprises, and mystery. A good book always keeps you asking questions, and makes you keep turning pages so you can find out the answers.
If you ask questions that interest you, you’ll get answers that interest your audience.
Unlike so many other conservative politicians, Paul Ryan doesn’t duck from answering questions about the reality of our entitlement problem. Ryan doesn’t only provide answers to how we solve the Social Security/Medicare Ponzi scheme on TV shows; he puts forward actual, workable plans: Paul Ryan’s Roadmap.
When I’m by myself asking the questions that many of us do at some point in our lives, I look to the stars knowing that the answers are somewhere out there waiting to be discovered.
Thanks to my reading, I have never been caught flat-footed by any situation, never at a loss for how any problem has been addressed… It doesn’t give me all the answers, but it lights what is often a dark path ahead.
Having gone through so many of the personal things I’ve gone through, its about creating an (online) space for girls to be heard. I don’t profess to have all the answers. But Ask Elizabeth is a space where girls are not alone.
Life is made up of constant calls to action, and we seldom have time for more than hastily contrived answers.
Blockchain should be used to address opportunities and problems that lack easier answers.
An expert knows all the answers – if you ask the right questions.
Questions are a burden to others; answers are a prison for oneself.
It seems to me that in literature, books have always been answers to other books.
Great novels are maps of complication, leading nowhere in particular, taking stances only provisionally and obliquely, happy to be tangled and to lack as many answers as the people they seek to depict.
If you come in with all of the answers, you might create something that’s very beautiful and powerful, but I think it will also seem sterile if you don’t leave room for people to have their own reactions to it.
Knowing lots of answers but being a millisecond slow on the buzzer is indeed very frustrating.
As the eldest son of an Alabama sharecropper family, I was constantly troubled by a collage of North American southern behaviors and notions in reference to the inhumanity of people. There were questions that I did not know how to ask but could, in my young, unsophisticated way, articulate a series of answers.
I love people that are question marks. I love people that don’t have answers and are just trying to cope with it. I love people that just don’t tick boxes. There is a grace in them I can’t really find elsewhere.
My dad and I actually don’t speak anymore. It’s still something that I’m trying to figure out and I definitely don’t have all of the answers to.
I’m kind of old-fashioned, so I think the guy should always be the one to call. The girl just answers… Or doesn’t answer.
Throughout his presidency, my grandfather made it clear that he alone could fix nothing; that he alone had no answers. He had the courage to plainly admit America’s shortcomings, to then lay out bold plans to address those problems and to ask his fellow Americans for help in solving them.
I love computers. I think it’s a miracle that you can type ‘coffee stain’ into a search engine and get a page of answers, but I don’t like the viciousness of the Internet. It gives public voice to quite mad people.
I don’t have all answers, but as far as viewing my body… I’m in a place where I can look at my stretch marks and say, ‘Oh, hey, stretch marks!’ and I’m over it.
If you ask three people what it means to be Christian, you will get three different answers. Some feel being baptized is sufficient. Others feel you must accept the Bible as immutable historical fact. Still others require a belief that all those who do not accept Christ as their personal savior are doomed to hell.
Benchmark has got a lot of playability. You can sit with your family and friends, and you’ll all have an opinion about what the answer is. What’s amazing is when some of the answers are revealed, it creates even more discussion.
I tried reaching out to my daughter via her family members but they couldn’t get me access or straight answers. I know she will come and find me when the time is right.
If you struggle with putting things into perspective, just ask yourself two simple questions: What’s the worst thing that could happen as a result of this? Will this matter in five years? Your answers should put a stop to cataclysmic thinking.
Most decisions are not binary, and there are usually better answers waiting to be found if you do the analysis and involve the right people.
The mind when it has an old experience will add that data into its current experience, and it keeps coming up with wrong answers.
I don’t pretend we have all the answers. But the questions are certainly worth thinking about.
‘The Wizard of Oz’ is my favourite. It explains what life on this planet is about. Although Dorothy reaches Oz, she finds she had what she needed to go back to Kansas all along, but the Good Witch tells her that she had to learn it for herself. All of the answers to the meaning of life are there.
I don’t have any answers as to whether the Internet is a good or a bad thing, but it’s certainly an important thing for the novel because novels are so much about communication, and when communication changes, the novel has to change.