Forbes: The Power Of Trust: Why ‘Can I Trust You?’ Should Be Your Next Interview Question
The Power Of Trust: Why ‘Can I Trust You?’ Should Be Your Next Interview Question
Indiana Daily Student: Frontnode.com and the Question of Trust: How Responsible Bitcoin Onramps Shape Long-Term Adoption
Frontnode.com and the Question of Trust: How Responsible Bitcoin Onramps Shape Long-Term Adoption
PNJ.com (Pensacola) on MSN: Three employee engagement survey questions that help measure trust | Studer
TechCrunch: Time to trust: Questions cybersecurity customers ask and how to answer them
Trust is fundamentally about a sense of safety, familiarity and assurance that “everything will be fine.” Faith is built as we address our doubts and the questions that make us wonder if we can rely ...
Time to trust: Questions cybersecurity customers ask and how to answer them
Becker's Hospital Review: Answering Tough Questions Can Calm Fears and Build Trust in Chaotic Times
Answering Tough Questions Can Calm Fears and Build Trust in Chaotic Times
The word "on" fits better meaning "on the subject of question 1". The word "in" fits better meaning "occurring in question 1", or in its answer, if that is what is meant. The comments would be understood with either "on" or "in", though. Since you've invited rewording, these might work: For question 1, you repeated the example as a sentence.
prepositions - on question 1 or in question 1 - English Language ...
I have a question on the grade you awarded me. I have a question on metaphysics. I'm having real trouble figuring out why on doesn't work in your example sentence. D (related) has a wider meaning: it indicates questions that have something to do with the course. In particular, related includes questions about the subject matter of the course.