Message from @Aavelle
Discord ID: 653659391773376512
In linguistics, a yes–no question, formally known as a polar question or a general question is a question whose expected answer is either "yes" or "no". Formally, they present an exclusive disjunction, a pair of alternatives of which only one is acceptable.
yes or no
robotic @Kiwi61Karma
we heard the 1st part....it sounded good @Kiwi61Karma
Do you like my rendition of C3PO
trying to force specifics from general
I have a question...
it is being released to Congress and the Public today...
When was it released to Barr ?
Congress would have seen all that ages ago
emotion
clouds judegement
pull them to emotion, then logic is lost
How can Berke be a witness(not under oath) insert evidence, then get to question council on said inserted evidence........corruption
Mr. "sense"enBerger
might be still under investigation those dates
Suggestibility
Yes–no questions are believed to carry some suggestibility load. For instance, in response to yes-no questions, children tend to display a compliance tendency: they comply with the structure of the question, negative or positive, by responding in the same way.
For example, if preschoolers are asked, "Is this book big?", they will tend to respond "Yes, it is". But if they are asked, "Is this book not big?" they are more likely to say, "No, it is not".[15]
Sensenbenner just told the Nadler, that the Chairman was not in order.<:rofl:508683941406965764>
According to Grimes, the answer "yes" asserts a positive answer and the answer "no" asserts a negative answer, irrespective of the form of the question.[2] However, simple "yes" or "no" word sentence answers to yes–no questions can be ambiguous in English. For example, a "yes" response to the question "You don't beat your wife?" could mean either "yes, I don't beat my wife" or "yes, I do beat my wife" depending from whether the respondent is replying with the truth-value of the situation or to the polarity used in the question. The ambiguity does not exist in languages that employ echo answers. In the Welsh language, for example, the response "ydw" ("I am") has no such ambiguity when it is used to reply to a question.[10]
Replying to
@GOPoversight
and
@RepJerryNadler
Viewing from NZ......disgraceful, but hugely entertaining
lol.. only 500 pages ...
that bureaucratie must end
13 Qs with timeline
This hearing is perfect
"Build timeline"
if october the 1st, then..., else if oct 2nd
Recommendations start on page 416.
Jordan......watch Jordan
"timeline"