vs.

    question 对比 inquire
    分析 词典对比 组词对比
  • Ask】 , 【Question】 , 【Interrogate】 , 【Query】 , 【Inquire】 , 【Catechize】 , Quiz and 【 Examine】 mean to address a person in an attempt to elicit information.

    Ask】 is the general or colorless term for putting a 【question】 .

    • ask】 and you will find
    • ask】 the price of an article
    • ask】 your brother if he will join us
    • none of them understood how to 【ask】 the 【question】 which they were trying to answer
      Ellis

    Question】 usually suggests asking one 【question】 after another as in teaching or in searching out the ramifications of a topic.

    • question】 a suspect at length
    • Socrates preferred questioning his disciples to lecturing them

    Interrogate】 stresses formal or systematic questioning.

    • they examined many witnesses . . . whom they interrogated, not only upon the express words of the statute, but upon all . . . collateral or presumptive circumstances
      Burnet

    Query】 usually strongly implies a desire for authoritative information or the resolution of a doubt.

    • should not one 【query】 whether he had not those proofs in his hands antecedent to the cabinet?
      Walpole

    It is specifically so used by proofreaders.

    • do not 【query】 a misspelled word in ordinary text . . . . Never 【query】 style to the author
      Manual of Style

    Inquire】 has for its fundamental implication a search for the facts or the truth; only when it distinctly implies in addition to such an intention the asking of a 【question】 or questions does it come into comparison with the other words of this group.

    • inquire】 the best route to New York City
    • inquire】 when the public library would be open
    • it was soon evident that this was the ruddleman who had inquired for her
      Hardy

    Catechize】 adds to 【interrogate】 the suggestion of an aim to elicit a certain kind of answer. Often the answers expected are definite statements of doctrine already phrased in a catechism (a book supplying questions and answers concerning the doctrines of a church).

    • catechize】 a candidate for the ministry

    In extended use, however, there is often the implication of a desire to lead the person who is questioned into making answers that are selfcondemnatory or that will reveal his weaknesses.

    • it was their policy to 【catechize】 every candidate for a doctor’s degree at the beginning of his advanced studies.

    Quiz】 implies an informal but often thoroughgoing interrogation (as of a class) to determine how well a series of lectures has been understood or (as of a murder suspect) to determine the facts of the case.

    Examine implies interrogation or catechizing for the purpose of drawing answers that indicate how much or how little a person knows (as from students when their fitness for promotion is to be decided, from candidates for a position when it is necessary to determine the extent of their preparation and the adequacy of their training, from those giving testimony in a trial, or when the lawyers on each side try to elicit information of value to their clients).

    • the students in this course are examined at the end of the year
    • no candidate for a civil service position is considered until he has been examined with all other candidates and given a satisfactory rating
    • it took the whole day to examine and to cross-examine the principal witness

  • Ask】 , 【Question】 , 【Interrogate】 , 【Query】 , 【Inquire】 , 【Catechize】 , Quiz and 【 Examine】 mean to address a person in an attempt to elicit information.

    Ask】 is the general or colorless term for putting a 【question】 .

    • ask】 and you will find
    • ask】 the price of an article
    • ask】 your brother if he will join us
    • none of them understood how to 【ask】 the 【question】 which they were trying to answer
      Ellis

    Question】 usually suggests asking one 【question】 after another as in teaching or in searching out the ramifications of a topic.

    • question】 a suspect at length
    • Socrates preferred questioning his disciples to lecturing them

    Interrogate】 stresses formal or systematic questioning.

    • they examined many witnesses . . . whom they interrogated, not only upon the express words of the statute, but upon all . . . collateral or presumptive circumstances
      Burnet

    Query】 usually strongly implies a desire for authoritative information or the resolution of a doubt.

    • should not one 【query】 whether he had not those proofs in his hands antecedent to the cabinet?
      Walpole

    It is specifically so used by proofreaders.

    • do not 【query】 a misspelled word in ordinary text . . . . Never 【query】 style to the author
      Manual of Style

    Inquire】 has for its fundamental implication a search for the facts or the truth; only when it distinctly implies in addition to such an intention the asking of a 【question】 or questions does it come into comparison with the other words of this group.

    • inquire】 the best route to New York City
    • inquire】 when the public library would be open
    • it was soon evident that this was the ruddleman who had inquired for her
      Hardy

    Catechize】 adds to 【interrogate】 the suggestion of an aim to elicit a certain kind of answer. Often the answers expected are definite statements of doctrine already phrased in a catechism (a book supplying questions and answers concerning the doctrines of a church).

    • catechize】 a candidate for the ministry

    In extended use, however, there is often the implication of a desire to lead the person who is questioned into making answers that are selfcondemnatory or that will reveal his weaknesses.

    • it was their policy to 【catechize】 every candidate for a doctor’s degree at the beginning of his advanced studies.

    Quiz】 implies an informal but often thoroughgoing interrogation (as of a class) to determine how well a series of lectures has been understood or (as of a murder suspect) to determine the facts of the case.

    Examine implies interrogation or catechizing for the purpose of drawing answers that indicate how much or how little a person knows (as from students when their fitness for promotion is to be decided, from candidates for a position when it is necessary to determine the extent of their preparation and the adequacy of their training, from those giving testimony in a trial, or when the lawyers on each side try to elicit information of value to their clients).

    • the students in this course are examined at the end of the year
    • no candidate for a civil service position is considered until he has been examined with all other candidates and given a satisfactory rating
    • it took the whole day to examine and to cross-examine the principal witness

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