This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
35026 | Who thinketh a faultless man to see? |
10613 | Yes, horrible,said Monville, coolly,"but what would you have? |
10613 | And one said, Is not this Bath- sheba, the daughter of Eliam, the wife of Uriah the Hittite? |
10613 | Are you then only a coward? |
10613 | Do they not see the abyss yawning at their feet? |
10613 | Examining Cambon, Danton broke out:"Do you believe us to be conspirators? |
10613 | When Mirabeau awoke to his predicament, he broke out in mixed wrath and scorn:"Of what are these people thinking? |
10613 | [ 41]"C''est demain qu''on me tue; n''êtes- vous donc qu''un lache?" |
59505 | How did you do that? |
59505 | How did you get in here? |
59505 | How much is it? |
59505 | How? |
59505 | Is n''t it fantastic? 59505 Is n''t this a childish way to treat a beautiful machine?" |
59505 | See? |
59505 | What will you do with me? |
59505 | Wonderful is n''t it? |
59505 | You mean you''re going to sell me another one? |
59505 | Escape? |
59505 | He must run and keep running, from the law and the Master Salesman and Serve- All, Inc. How much time did he have? |
59505 | Mansfield?" |
59505 | So what now? |
59505 | What was that modern symphony? |
59505 | What was wrong with him anyway? |
59505 | Wherever did you find it?" |
8691 | Certainly, Sir,was the quick retort,"and may I beg your honor to take the wool out of your ears? |
8691 | Are the courts to send such questions to a jury or shall the judges decide them? |
8691 | But may not a power be judicial in its nature and yet not wholly so? |
8691 | But out of what did this doctrine spring? |
8691 | But what is a suit? |
8691 | But what shall be the nature of this office, and who shall decide whether these conditions have been fulfilled and these papers filed? |
8691 | Can anything less than that be considered as due process of law? |
8691 | Can that be deemed a judicial sentence to imprisonment which is a sentence to imprisonment during the pleasure of certain administrative officials? |
8691 | Could they sue and be sued in the courts of the United States? |
8691 | How far can the courts, in dealing with these, govern their action by that of the executive? |
8691 | If so, ought not the fate to be meted out to them by judicial authority? |
8691 | Rufus Choate once said that the question at bottom was, Are you afraid to trust the people? |
8691 | What is due process of law? |
8691 | What is property? |
8691 | What serves to establish one? |
8691 | What, he asked, was this law of the land by which all things were to be tried and judged? |
8691 | Who, he asked, were the present judges of their Supreme Court? |
31504 | Again, is it single or diverse in its nature? |
31504 | Are not they the reactionaries who, despite the lessons of history, would revert to the days of a dependent, recallable, and hence timid judiciary? |
31504 | Are there any attributes of justice of which we can speak so confidently as being necessary, inherent, and self- evident? |
31504 | But what is this justice, declared to be so great a virtue, so ineffable, so supremely important? |
31504 | But who is to determine the matter? |
31504 | Do nature, society, industry, politics, each have a different criterion? |
31504 | Do we know of any state of society in human or animal life at any time, past or present, of which the contrary of Plato''s statement is true? |
31504 | Do we know or can we know anything certain about justice? |
31504 | Does earlier history or later experience point to any better equipped, more stable, more safe tribunal? |
31504 | Even if society may strive to preserve the inefficient and improvident, should it do so by hampering and restraining those wiser and more capable? |
31504 | Finally, is it a reality or, as Falstaff said of honor, is it after all"a word,""a mere scutcheon?" |
31504 | If mutable, does it change of itself or do men change it? |
31504 | Indeed, Plato represents the sage Socrates as frankly confessing his inability to answer satisfactorily the persistent question"What is justice?" |
31504 | Is it immutable, or does its nature change with changing times and conditions? |
31504 | Is it simply a quality of action or conduct, or, as stated by Ulpian, is it a disposition or state of mind? |
31504 | Is it something above and apart from the will of men, or is it simply a matter of convention among men? |
31504 | Is it the same for all men and races of men or does it differ according to classes and races? |
31504 | Is it universal or local, the same everywhere or is it different in different localities? |
31504 | Is there more than one kind of justice? |
31504 | Still again, and briefly, is justice an inexorable law like the law of gravitation or can its operation have exceptions? |
31504 | Thus interpreted, are we prepared to confute the statement? |
31504 | What do they who use those terms mean by them? |
31504 | Who is to determine what degree of restraint or liberty is necessary to secure this order and harmony, this justice? |
31504 | Who of us has ever fallen over a chair in the dark without mentally, at least, consigning it to perdition? |
41034 | A plaintiff, perhaps, will be asked:"How came the defendant to write this letter and what was its object? |
41034 | A police officer was asked:_ Q_:"Did you examine the pistol and find one undischarged cartridge only?" |
41034 | And such questions as, who is the best man for a witness action in such a court? |
41034 | Did he consider himself remiss?" |
41034 | Do you get on all right with X-- as your leader? |
41034 | Do you wish to say anything more?" |
41034 | Have you anything to say for yourself, why sentence of death should not be passed on you according to law?" |
41034 | It seemed as though the man was about to get off, when the inevitable question"Is he known?" |
41034 | Or can it be that England has seen its best days? |
41034 | The Secretary of the Newfoundland Company having been called, was asked:"Were the shares in defendant''s name formerly in the name of John Smith?" |
41034 | Then a defendant appears in person:_ Master_:"Do you owe the £26?" |
41034 | Then came the important query from the judge to the police as to whether the prisoner"is known"--was there a record of former convictions? |
41034 | Thus, in the Dhingra trial, a doctor, who was sent for after the murder, was asked:"Did the prisoner seem calm, quiet and collected?" |
41034 | Which leader is_ persona grata_ in such a court? |
41034 | [ Illustration: A JURY TRIAL] And what American lawyer would not feel that half the fun of life were gone? |
41034 | _ Judge_:"Suppose we give him a few months and allow the foreign police to apply for extradition?" |
41034 | _ Magistrate_:"Do you admit it?" |
41034 | _ Magistrate_:( To an officer with a book of records)"Is she known?" |
41034 | _ Master to defendant''s solicitor_:"Do you admit the amount?" |
41034 | _ Master_:"All parties in London?" |
41034 | _ Master_:"Any question of law?" |
41034 | _ Master_:"Documents?" |
41034 | _ Master_:"No counter claim?" |
41034 | _ Master_:"What is the defence?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Did you find two bullets similar to these in the wall?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Did you recognize his voice?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Did you see Sir Curzon Wyllie collapse?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Did you send an assistant to the defendant''s flat with a letter and was it returned to you unopened?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Had the other pistol six undischarged cartridges in it?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Then, was there an interval of some seconds and then more shots?" |
41034 | _ Q_:"Was there an order of court forbidding their transfer?" |
41034 | _ The Clerk_:"Are you defended by counsel?" |
59494 | And yours, miss? |
59494 | Are you kidding? 59494 But why out of the...?" |
59494 | Call those men? |
59494 | Do you speak that language? |
59494 | First timer? |
59494 | Fun? |
59494 | How did you like it? |
59494 | How''d you like it? |
59494 | It''s a terrific show, is n''t it? |
59494 | May I please have my ID? |
59494 | Men? |
59494 | No ID cards? |
59494 | Oh? 59494 Pretty snazzy, huh?" |
59494 | She talks just like a first timer, does n''t she? |
59494 | So, you ca n''t make up your mind? |
59494 | Then how can they be expected to get jobs? 59494 Waiting for someone, miss?" |
59494 | Was this your first time at the Show? |
59494 | Well? |
59494 | What are all these lines for? |
59494 | What are you talking about? 59494 What''s so wrong about the reformers?" |
59494 | What''s special about them? 59494 Why should n''t men be given another chance? |
59494 | Why? |
59494 | Will he... will they get new cards? |
59494 | Yeah? 59494 You do n''t wanna put the court out of business, do ya?" |
59494 | How could anyone not have an ID? |
59494 | How? |
59494 | Their ID cards were lost, were n''t they?" |
59494 | What did they find amusing in the ruin of human life? |
59494 | What kind of people were these, who laughed at the pain and humiliation of others? |
59494 | What was the purpose of the court, if not to judge? |
59494 | What...?" |
59494 | Why had she come? |
59494 | said the magistrate,"how do you plead?" |
59494 | she asked, nervously,"What did we do?" |
17041 | But do you think the driver tried to cut him off? |
17041 | Did he turn on the brake handle? 17041 Did you hear the lawyer say in a case he tried in Brooklyn he had seventeen of those experts?" |
17041 | Did you see the car hit the wagon? |
17041 | Do you believe in the United States of America? |
17041 | Do you know the officer who made the arrest? |
17041 | Gentlemen,says the judge,"have you agreed upon a verdict?" |
17041 | Gentlemen,says the judge,"how long will you take in your address?" |
17041 | Ha, Ha,thinks the lawyer"at last,""did n''t you just now say you were sitting on the fourth seat?" |
17041 | Heavens,think the jury,"are we going to have the whole case over again?" |
17041 | Is he your husband? |
17041 | My husband, your Honor? 17041 Vel, the motorman vas Irish, vot you talking about?" |
17041 | What do you say? |
17041 | What do you work at? |
17041 | What,says one juryman,"do you think those pleadings would show anything a reasonable man could understand?" |
17041 | Why should you try to scratch the man''s face? 17041 Why,"asks the juryman,"did n''t the defendant give back the goods if they were not what she wanted?" |
17041 | Why,he says,"does not the court get in an efficiency expert on this calendar evil and have it arranged on a business basis?" |
17041 | And how are the jury to frame their decision before the evidence has been presented? |
17041 | Are not the lives, property, or reputations of particular men at stake? |
17041 | Are the jury to hear a story of bitter resentment or of passion and crime, or a calm demand for the payment of a debt? |
17041 | As a juryman once said to a lawyer after the case:"Why did you excuse me when I said I knew the other lawyer? |
17041 | But in that contract case where the other side wanted something back from the plaintiff, how are they going to find a verdict for both? |
17041 | Did he forget something? |
17041 | Did he switch on the emergency?" |
17041 | Did n''t he have to hold down his job with the company?" |
17041 | Did the plaintiff during years of effort build up a business and take the defendant in as a partner only to be defrauded by him? |
17041 | Do you call that justice? |
17041 | For example, the lawyer asks,"What did you tell your wife about the accident when you got home?" |
17041 | If the plaintiff did not have a case, why did the judge let them go on? |
17041 | In the first place, jury trial is so deeply engraved in the constitutional bill of rights that one might as well ask:"Do you believe in citizenship?" |
17041 | Is he going to drive the client away from them? |
17041 | Is not the best way of knowing whether a man is telling the truth to look at him and watch him while he is talking? |
17041 | Is she not now giving someone an account of the accident? |
17041 | Of course, is that not the reason for their being there? |
17041 | Shall everything be allowed in and a photographic picture of numerous details be given to the court? |
17041 | She is asked:"At the time of the accident, where were you?" |
17041 | The customary question asked jurymen, whether, given such and such a state of facts,"Do you think you could render a fair and impartial verdict?" |
17041 | The lawyer asks again,"Did n''t you tell your wife the horses were going very fast?" |
17041 | The proper question would be:"What happened next?" |
17041 | The question is,"What kind of a cow was it you saw in the plaintiff''s garden?" |
17041 | What did he do?" |
17041 | What have they got to do with it? |
17041 | What was there that he did not remember? |
17041 | Which will you do?" |
17041 | Who are these women who are brought in a crowd together? |
17041 | Why are they there? |
17041 | Why ca n''t the witnesses tell what they know? |
17041 | Why do n''t the lawyers come over and talk to the jury like that? |
17041 | Why does n''t the lawyer ask the witness that question about what he told Smith or what he told his wife? |
17041 | Why does the judge make such absurd rulings? |
17041 | Will the case be dismissed because he forgot to tie a shoe lace or put in a pin? |
17041 | Yet what is the effect? |
17041 | Yet without counsel''s prologue what could be more dull than the naming of street numbers and dates? |