Questions that prompt one particular answer
A writer can never truly be free from bias.
poopballs
Yes. Everyone on the planet has bias. A better question would be to ask if she had a bias on a particular subject.
Questions that prompt one particular answer
i can only think of an example. "Why is America's govt. the best govt. in the world?" The bias is already there.
Of course. Your question smacks of bias and discrimination.
Your question forces me to bias my answer in your favor. Please attenuate the bias in that circuit. As a noun: To avoid a bias in the results, the survey should include a cross section of age groups. As an adjective: A bias cut fabric will give the garment more flexibility. As an adverb: If you bias cut the wood, it will add more dimension to the piece. As a verb: Revealing the witness' background could bias the testimony for the jury.
this is a bias question. in my opinion it is Michael Phelps. but he is my god.
Why did the author write this book?
Information without bias, from both sides of a question.
Itβs question wording bias
Forward bias implies that your device is sensitive to bias direction and you have selected one of them. There is also an implication that it is probably a steady bias. So forward bias generally implies a dc bias in a selected direction called forward bias in the device you are looking at. Now the question is actually put the other way round. DC bias means a steady state bias. Whether or not it is forward or reverse bias depends on whether or not the device is sensitive to the direction of bias. If it is not sensitive to that, it isn't forward bias (or reverse bias either). If it is sensitive to bias direction, then it would be in a state of either forward bias or reverse bias, and you would need more information in order to say which one. So, finally, the phrase "dc biased" is NOT the same thing as "forward biased".