YUP... same as every other D&D game ever...DM describes the environment. Players describe what they want to do. DM narrates the results. Repeat.
but you can understand them. You can use the same analytical mind that has scoured the rules for the one true way to read them, and understand in context what they want/Questions are not actions.
yes you CAN adjudicate it, you choose not to.I can't adjudicate a question without assuming or establishing what the character is doing. None of this suggests players must do anything other than say what they want to do and hope to accomplish.
It's not about accepting or not accepting it. It's not enough for me to adjudicate that action fairly without making undue assumptions or asking questions of the player. What if the desk drawer is trapped? Shall I just say the character opens the drawer and sets it off? Shall I ask them questions about whether they open the drawers? All of that is dispensed with if the player is reasonably specific.
lol, cause "I search the desk" is hard for you to understand, but anyone should trust your reading of the rules...