Both sentences are correct according to the philosophy of English."Had been asked" is in the pluperfect tense, referring to a time before a time in the past. We might say "She was asked to present etc, and she had been asked several times before to present etc."
"I'm looking for a greater challenge."
When going on a perspective job interview, you need to take into consideration as to whether or not you have experience. When you are requesting an expected salary and have experience try to find a middle ground, with no experience and no degree leave the salary open to the employer.
They will lie. They will say what ever is best for THEM.
you hereby are asked
Salary in Arabic is RATIB
Yes it is, or you could say "it is expected of you" either way is fine.
The two sentences mean different things. "We are expected" means that someone is planning for us to attend whatever is going on. "We expect it" means that we are anticipating that it will occur or be present.
No; you are supposed to say: He had already asked you
Unless "mu" is the answer to the question, do not say it. When you are being asked a question in court, you are expected to answer the question fully and honestly to the best of your ability. If you say "mu" and it is not the answer to the question, you will anger the judge and risk being held in contempt of court.
what was the best thins to say to your boss if you want to increase your salary?
instead of saying when asked you could say "when I questioned" or "when I interrogated."