Best part is, you just used begs the question in a similarly wrong manner ;-)
Yup.
The proper usage of the phrase is something like this:
"Begging the question" : To commit the fallacy of 'circular reasoning'. e.g. If one said "It's wrong for you to steal because stealing is wrong!" then one would have 'begged the question' by arguing in a circular manner -
assuming the conclusion, that stealing is wrong, in order to
prove the conclusion that stealing is wrong, thereby actually proving nothing.
In colloquial usage, "begging the question" has basically come to mean something like "raising the question", "prompting the question", "inviting the question", or "demanding an answer to the question".
The funny thing about it, though, is that the literal words themselves, "begging the question", seem to fit
much better with the colloquial usage than the original one. The colloquial usage is a natural reading of this phrase, but the original meaning - to argue in a circle - is a very unintuitive use of the phrase.