Apedia

Person Thing Belongs Questions Car I Performance This?'—'It's

query
You use w____ in questions to ask about the person or thing that something belongs to or is associated with.You use whose in questions to ask about the person or thing that something belongs to or is associated with.
Whose was the better performance?
'Whose is this?'—'It's mine.'
'It wasn't your fault, John.'—'Whose, then?'
Whose car were they in?
Whose daughter is she?
word whose
full-definition
pronoun
You use whose at the beginning of a relative clause where you mention something that belongs to or is associated with the person or thing mentioned in the previous clause.
I saw a man shouting at a driver whose car was blocking the street.
...a speedboat, whose fifteen-strong crew claimed to belong to the Italian navy.
...tourists whose vacations included an unexpected adventure.
You use whose in questions to ask about the person or thing that something belongs to or is associated with.
Whose was the better performance?
'Whose is this?'—'It's mine.'
'It wasn't your fault, John.'—'Whose, then?'
Whose car were they in?
Whose daughter is she?
determiner
You use whose after certain words, especially verbs and adjectives, to introduce a clause where you talk about the person or thing that something belongs to or is associated with.
I'm wondering whose mother she is then.
I can't remember whose idea it was for us to meet again.
I wondered whose the coat was.
That kind of person likes to spend money, it doesn't matter whose it is.
cefr-level A2

Tags: oxford5k::cefr-level:a2

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