The phrase is "sixty-four thousand dollar question," and it came from a Fifties TV show in which it was the most valuable and presumably the most difficult question.
To ask a question with the intent to obtain an answer.
It means to have a question and to figure it out to solve the question.
The text in the brackets must be a question.
The three numbers do not mean anything in the context of the question. Without appropriately identified values, the question cannot be answered.The three numbers do not mean anything in the context of the question. Without appropriately identified values, the question cannot be answered.The three numbers do not mean anything in the context of the question. Without appropriately identified values, the question cannot be answered.The three numbers do not mean anything in the context of the question. Without appropriately identified values, the question cannot be answered.
Yes
The question has no mean. The list of numbers at the end of it has a mean of 2 .
I have a question
I have a question
rhetorical question
I have a question.
This is the question what doesn't it mean?
Your question makes no sense. If you are asking "What does docent mean?" see the related question.
To ask a question with the intent to obtain an answer.
the question mark?? it means its a question......
Answer this question…mean constructed
Question, fool.
It means to have a question and to figure it out to solve the question.