Dragaera

duh!

Tue Feb 1 07:31:32 PST 2005

 Okay, someone check me if I'm wrong--I also like it when someone
corrects my English errors (one of many reasons I so adore Pamela), but
I've always used that phrase in this sense:

"Bush was elected primarily by the backing of such industries as oil and
major finance, which begs the question of who is served by the war in
Iraq."  In other words, "begs the question" means something like,
"raises the question and simultaneously answers it."  Is this correct,
or am I asking the poor phrase to do too much work?