INVOLVE vs ASK: NOUN
- N/A
- An act or instance of asking.
- Something asked or asked for; a request.
- An eft; newt.
- A water newt.
- A newt.
- A lizard.
INVOLVE vs ASK: VERB
- Engage as a participant
- Make complex or intricate or complicated
- Occupy or engage the interest of
- Wrap
- Have as a necessary feature or consequence; entail
- Require as useful, just, or proper
- Contain as a part
- Have as a necessary feature
- Status: involved
- Connect closely and often incriminatingly
- Require as useful, just, or proper
- Require or ask for as a price or condition
- Address a question to and expect an answer from
- Direct or put; seek an answer to
- Inquire about
- To approach someone to do something.
- To look for an answer to a question by speaking.
- Consider obligatory; request and expect
- Make a request or demand for something to somebody
INVOLVE vs ASK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To make inquiry; seek information.
- To publish, as marriage banns.
- To invite.
- To expect or demand.
- To require or call for as a price or condition.
- To make a request for. Often used with an infinitive or clause.
- To make a request of.
- To seek an answer to.
- To put a question to.
- To make a request.
- To seek information about.
- To request or petition; -- usually followed by for.
- To make inquiry, or seek by request; -- sometimes followed by after.
INVOLVE vs ASK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To engage as a participant; embroil.
- To show to be a participant; connect or implicate.
- To engage (oneself) in a love affair.
- To cause to burn; spread to:
- To envelop, infold, entangle, or embarrass.
- To occupy or engage the interest of.
- To wrap; envelop.
- To wind or coil about.
- To relate to or affect.
- To roll or fold up; to wind round; to entwine.
- To envelop completely; to surround; to cover; to hide; to involve in darkness or obscurity.
- To complicate or make intricate, as in grammatical structure.
- To connect with something as a natural or logical consequence or effect; to include necessarily; to imply.
- To engage thoroughly; to occupy, employ, or absorb.
- To raise to any assigned power; to multiply, as a quantity, into itself a given number of times.
- To take in; to gather in; to mingle confusedly; to blend or merge.
- To request; to seek to obtain by words; to petition; to solicit; -- often with of, in the sense of from, before the person addressed.
- To require, demand, claim, or expect, whether by way of remuneration or return, or as a matter of necessity; as, what price do you ask?
- To interrogate or inquire of or concerning; to put a question to or about; to question.
- To publish in church for marriage; -- said of both the banns and the persons.
INVOLVE vs ASK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- In arithmetic and algebra, to raise to any assigned power; multiply, as a quantity, into itself a given number of times: as, a quantity involved to the third or fourth power.
- To bring into a common relation or connection; hence, to include as a necessary or logical consequence; imply; comprise.
- To entwine; entangle; implicate; bring into entanglement or complication, literally or figuratively: as, an involved problem; to involve a nation in war; to be involved in debt.
- To roll or fold in or wrap up so as to conceal; envelop on all sides; cover completely; infold; specifically, in zoology, to encircle completely: as, a mark involving a joint; wings involving the body.
- To inquire or make inquiry; put a question: often followed by after or about, formerly also by of.
- And Ask, Inquire, Question, Interrogate. Ask is here also the generic word; it is simple and informal. Inquire may be used in the endeavor to be civil, or it may express a more minute examination into facts: as, to inquire (into, as to) the causes of discontent. To question in this sense implies the asking of a series of questions, it being supposed that the truth is hard to get at, through ignorance, reluctance, etc., in the person questioned. Interrogate is essentially the same as question, but more formal: as, to question a child or servant about his conduct; to interrogate a witness, an applicant for office, etc. Questioning or interrogation might be resented where asking, asking a question, or inquiring would meet with a friendly response.
- To invite: as, to ask guests to a wedding or entertainment.
- To inquire concerning; seek to be informed about: as, to ask the way; to ask a question.
- To interrogate or inquire of; put a question to.
- To require as necessary or useful; demand; exact.
- To solicit from; request of: with a personal object, and with or without for before the thing desired: as, I ask you a great favor; to ask one for a drink of water.
- To demand, expect, or claim: with for: as, what price do you ask, or ask for it?
- To request; seek by words to obtain; petition for: commonly with of, in the sense of from, before the person to whom the request is made.
- Make a date
- Direct or put
- Seek an answer to
- Consider obligatory
- To request or petition: with for before the thing requested: as, ask for bread.
- Request and expect
- (idiom) (it/trouble) To persist in an action despite the likelihood that it will result in difficulty or punishment.
INVOLVE vs ASK: RELATED WORDS
- Constitute, Encompass, Consist, Include, Entail, Demand, Call for, Ask, Need, Regard, Take, Imply, Affect, Require, Necessitate
- Want, Beg, Know, Tell, Involve, Necessitate, Call for, Demand, Pose, Enquire, Require, Take, Need, Expect, Inquire
INVOLVE vs ASK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Equate, Mean, Relate, Pertain, Include, Demand, Call for, Ask, Need, Regard, Take, Imply, Affect, Require, Necessitate
- Question, Want, Beg, Know, Tell, Involve, Necessitate, Call for, Demand, Pose, Require, Take, Need, Expect, Inquire
INVOLVE vs ASK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Highmark, and does not involve any other party.
- The context may also explicitly involve a Mission.
- How do presenters involve audiences in meaningful ways?
- All of which involve parents and community support.
- To involve in clients relationship and business development.
- DCC may involve more than one business area.
- GSB Wealth Management is a registered investment adviser and makes investment recommendations that involve products that involve investment risks, including possible loss of principal.
- It may involve a trial, and it may involve lengthy settlement meetings.
- The last four fields involve the prices and the end two lines involve further seller details.
- To the extent that narcoticscases involve dealer defendants and dangerous drugs, they do not involve victimlesscrimes.
- How can you ask for more than that?
- To ask any question about your annuity statement.
- Landlords may ask for unilateral waivers of subrogation.
- An email ask should be a last resort.
- For example, ask only the boys to respond or ask students sitting in the middle row to respond.
- You must be a United Policyholders member to view Ask an Expert Answers and to Ask An Expert.
- Some national censuses ask people about their religion, but they do not directly ask whether people have converted to their present faith.
- Employers must still think about privacy and confidentiality in what they ask and how they ask it.
- It has been a good resource for many to ask questions, voice concerns and ask each other for advice.
- Pretty much; they ask a few questions but really what would they know to ask?
INVOLVE vs ASK: QUESTIONS
- Does tidal locking always involve synchronous rotation?
- Does process capability involve special cause variation?
- Does friendship involve any requirement of partiality?
- What does the teaching assistant apprenticeship involve?
- What does a countryside worker apprenticeship involve?
- What does research involve in concrete engineering?
- How to involve employees and encouraging initiative?
- Which substantive procedures frequently involve nonrepresentative selection?
- What does central configuration management involve?
- Does quantitative research involve deductive emphasis?
- Do companies still ask for transcripts after graduation?
- Should you ask questions when buying blood diamonds?
- What happened to ask Mantik Intikam Turkish series?
- What questions does Kamaswami ask Siddhartha about fasting?
- What questions should you ask a potential employer?
- What questions should I Ask my fertility specialist?
- How to ask the right questions to ask your sweetheart?
- Is it correct to ask for assistance or ask for help?
- Why do people ask one word replies when I ask questions?
- Can my employer ask someone else to ask me health questions?