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37 Sentences With "you're joking"

How to use you're joking in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "you're joking" and check conjugation/comparative form for "you're joking". Mastering all the usages of "you're joking" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" D.C. Examiner's T. Becket Adams replied , "You're joking, right?
If they know you're joking, they might think you're downright childish.
You're joking," he said in disbelief, as Sykes joked: "Little bit racist!
JEFF UBBEN: They won't, but – KELLY EVANS: You-- I don't think you're joking.
"I know you're joking, but it actually is quite sexy," Sanders quipped back.
"What you're joking around with is a persona, not a person," Bunney tells The Verge.
Whether it's infertility, miscarriages, still births - so many awful situations and you're joking about it!
MS: OK I know you're joking of course right although people are semi-worried about that prospect.
He later recounted in "Surely You're Joking": Then I began to think, 'How can I turn this all off?
Instead of taking action to combat the gun violence epidemic in America, you're joking with Putin about getting rid of journalists?
Now there's a whole range of tools, images, and punctuation to make it clear that you're joking, or that you're being playful.
Alexa isn't terribly funny because the technology doesn't understand humor or tone, and can't understand when you're joking versus asking a genuine question.
If you liked Richard Feynman's autobiographical "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman" but thought it was rather self-indulgent, this book will prompt similar reactions.
But the president, theoretically, has the most power of anyone in the world, unless you're joking about God; that's the only way to punch up.
The public met him in his 1985 book Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman, in which he regaled the reader with anecdotes of a colorful and well-enjoyed life.
It's hard to do things in between takes—you know how much waiting around there is on sets, usually you're joking around and having conversations with people like normal human beings would do.
"You're joking, right?" was the best I could come up with, but then I was thinking of the other scrawl of graffiti on the wall in the men's room, just above the liberal-pussies sentiment.
" In his book "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman," he recalled, "I'd sit in one of the booths and work a little physics on the paper place mats with the scalloped edges, and sometimes I'd draw one of the dancing girls or one of the customers, just to practice.
"It's funny to think of all the things we were told to do back then because now you're thinking, 'Oh God, if somebody told my daughter to do that, she'd be like, I really hope you're joking,&apos" she said of the differences between now and 20 years ago.
Paula could hardly believe her luck, asking the singer, "You're joking right?" and writing the next morning, "Woke up trying to figure out if last night was a dream or real life…" Lorde explained she had wanted to ask Paula in the store that morning but was too shy and said the invite was to celebrate Paula's new job at the store.
Its surprise success led to a sequel entitled What Do You Care What Other People Think?, also taken from Leighton's taped conversations. Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! became a national bestseller.
The problem is now commonly associated with theoretical physicist Richard Feynman, who mentions it in his bestselling memoirs Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! The problem did not originate with Feynman, nor did he publish a solution to it.
Shenar started playing with a boys’ team in Kiryat Gat, but was barred from playing upon reaching 12.'Barbie doll? You're joking'. Uri Talshir, 19 October 2009, Haaretz At the age of 15 she had joined the newly formed Hapoel Ashkelon, and moved shortly afterwards to ASA Tel Aviv University.
The Smith v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County case brought forward a debate about scientific fact being presented in textbooks. In his book, Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, the late physics Nobel Prize laureate Richard P. Feynman described his experiences as a member of a committee that evaluated science textbooks.
In the 1960s, Feynman began thinking of writing an autobiography, and he began granting interviews to historians. In the 1980s, working with Ralph Leighton (Robert Leighton's son), he recorded chapters on audio tape that Ralph transcribed. The book was published in 1985 as Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and became a best-seller.
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! is an edited collection of reminiscences by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman. The book, released in 1985, covers a variety of instances in Feynman's life. Some are lighthearted in tone, such as his fascination with safe-cracking, fondness for topless bars, and ventures into art and samba music.
He noted the use of the words, 'howay, hadaway, kets, and sentences with phrases in them like 'pass the bullets man...,' 'who's nicked me ket?,' 'hadaway and shite.' He noted how 'howay' meant many things like, 'come here', 'fuck off', 'I don't believe you', 'you're joking.' He noted how all the teammates spoke in plurals, how 'us' replaced 'me.
"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!": Adventures of a Curious Character is an edited collection of reminiscences by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman. The book, released in 1985, covers a variety of instances in Feynman's life. The anecdotes in the book are based on recorded audio conversations that Feynman had with his close friend and drumming partner Ralph Leighton.
This universal absorber theory is mentioned in the chapter titled "Monster Minds" in Feynman's autobiographical work Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and in Vol. II of the Feynman Lectures on Physics. It led to the formulation of a framework of quantum mechanics using a Lagrangian and action as starting points, rather than a Hamiltonian, namely the formulation using Feynman path integrals, which proved useful in Feynman's earliest calculations in quantum electrodynamics and quantum field theory in general.
This part of the book was dramatized on the screen as The Challenger Disaster, a TV movie by BBC/Science Channel. The book is much more loosely organized than the earlier Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! It contains short stories, letters, photographs, and a few of the sketches that Feynman created in later life when he had learned to draw from an artist friend, Jirayr Zorthian. Of note is the story of his first wife, Arline, who was diagnosed with tuberculosis.
A few days later, Judkins was asked to do a voice test by talking about his idea for the Alpine Ironman. He made up a story as he went along, including that Peter Hillary would be competing, and that the first prize would be a trip around the world. When the radio station told him that they wanted to broadcast this recording, Judkins was dumbfounded: "You're joking." They didn't, and Judkins went to Christchurch to find a sponsor, and organised the event within five weeks.
"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" Part 4, Chapter: "You Just _Ask_ Them?", by Richard Feynman (1985).In the aftermath of #MeToo, which names in science should be replaced? by Jane C. Hu (Quartz, Sep 19, 2018)Male scientists, don't harass young female colleagues, by Meg Urry (CNN.com, posted 2014-08-09T16:57:06Z, updated 12:57 PM EDT, Sat August 9, 2014)Lawrence Krauss and the Legacy of Harassment in Science: The theoretical physicist isn’t the first celebrity scientist to be accused of sexual misconduct, but he is the first to face consequences.
The oil drop experiment: The history of published results for this experiment is an example given in Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, in which each new publication slowly and quietly drifted more and more away from the initial (erroneous) values given by Robert Millikan toward the correct value, rather than all having a random distribution from the start around what is now believed to be the correct result. This slow drift in the chronological history of results is unnatural and suggests that nobody wanted to contradict the previous one, instead submitting only concordant results for publication.
Differentiation under the integral sign is mentioned in the late physicist Richard Feynman's best-selling memoir Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! in the chapter "A Different Box of Tools". He describes learning it, while in high school, from an old text, Advanced Calculus (1926), by Frederick S. Woods (who was a professor of mathematics in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology). The technique was not often taught when Feynman later received his formal education in calculus, but using this technique, Feynman was able to solve otherwise difficult integration problems upon his arrival at graduate school at Princeton University: > One thing I never did learn was contour integration.
Richard Feynman delivering the 1974 California Institute of Technology commencement address, where he introduced the term "cargo cult science". Feynman adapted the speech into the final chapter of his book Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!. He based the phrase on a concept in anthropology, the cargo cult, which describes how some pre-industrialized cultures interpreted technologically sophisticated visitors as religious or supernatural figures who brought boons of cargo. Later, in an effort to call for a second visit the natives would develop and engage in complex religious rituals, mirroring the previously observed behavior of the visitors manipulating their machines but without understanding the true nature of those tasks.
Set in June, 1986, fewer than two years before Feynman's death, in Feynman's office at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, the play follows Feynman through a day of his life. As the real Feynman does in his books What Do You Care What Other People Think? and Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, the stage character talks directly to the audience; we learn from this and from phone calls with off-stage characters that Feynman is to appear that night playing his bongo drums in a student production of the musical South Pacific, that he is expecting a delegation from the Russian Republic of Tuva, which Feynman is whimsically determined to visit (as detailed in Ralph Leighton's book, Tuva or Bust!), and that he is eager to make his views known in the final report of the Rogers Commission charged with the Challenger disaster.
In 1966, Feynman turned down an offer from the editor of Physics Teacher to discuss the problem in print and objected to it being called "Feynman's problem," pointing instead to the discussion of it in Mach's textbook. The sprinkler problem attracted a great deal of attention after the incident was mentioned in Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, a book of autobiographical reminiscences published in 1985. Feynman neither explained his understanding of the relevant physics, nor did he describe the results of the experiment. In an article written shortly after Feynman's death in 1988, John Wheeler, who had been his doctoral advisor at Princeton, revealed that the experiment at the cyclotron had shown “a little tremor as the pressure was first applied [...] but as the flow continued there was no reaction.” The sprinkler incident is also discussed in James Gleick's biography of Feynman, Genius, published in 1992, where Gleick claims that a sprinkler will not turn at all if made to suck in fluid.

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