词汇 | whose |
释义 | whose pronoun, determiner uk /huːz/ us /huːz/ B1 used especially in questions when asking about which person owns or is responsible for something: 谁的 Whose is this bag?这是谁的包? Whose bag is this?这个包是谁的? Whose are these shoes. I didn't know whose money it was. Do you know whose car that is? Linguistics: question words & expressions amirite blaze devil extent how about...?idiom how, what, why, etc. on earth...idiom in God's/heaven's nameidiom question tag trick what the blazes...?idiom what's something in aid of?idiom what's that (all) about (then)?idiom what's the score?idiom when whenever where wherefore which why world GrammarQuestions: interrogative pronouns (what, who) We use interrogative pronouns to ask questions. They are: who, which, whom, what and whose. These are also known as wh-words. Questions using these are called wh-questions: … Interrogative pronouns: uses We use who and whom on their own: … Relative pronouns Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses. The most common relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, that. The relative pronoun we use depends on what we are referring to and the type of relative clause. … Relative pronoun: whose We usually use whose as a relative pronoun to indicate possession by people and animals. In more formal styles we can also use it for things. … No relative pronoun In informal styles, we often leave out the relative pronoun. We only do this in defining relative clauses, and when the relative pronoun is the object of the verb. We don’t leave out the relative pronoun when it is the subject of the verb nor in non-defining relative clauses: … Relative pronouns: typical errors We can’t use that instead of who, whom or which in non-defining relative clauses: … Whole Whole is a determiner. We use whole before nouns and after other determiners (my, the, a/an, their) to talk about quantity. We use it to describe the completeness of something: … Whose Whose is a wh-word. We use whose to ask questions and to introduce relative clauses. … Whose as a question word We use whose to ask a question about possession: … Whose in relative clauses We use whose to introduce a relative clause indicating possession by people, animals and things: … whose determiner uk /huːz/ us /huːz/ B1 used for adding information about a person or thing just mentioned: (用于附加所提及的人或物的信息) Cohen, whose short film won awards, was chosen to direct the movie .科恩,就是那个短片获奖的人,被选中导演这部电影。 There was a picture in the paper of a man whose leg had been blown off.报纸上有一张照片,照片中那个男人的腿被炸掉了。 They meet in an old house, whose basement has been converted into a chapel.他们在一所旧房子里见面,那所房子的地下室已经被改建成了一个小礼拜堂。 Fraud detectives are investigating the company, three of whose senior executives have already been arrested.反诈骗侦探正在调查那家公司,该公司的3名高级管理人员已被拘捕。 The scheme is designed to help children whose parents have fallen on hard times. It's an Australian company whose logo features a red kangaroo.这是一家澳大利亚公司,其标志是一只红色袋鼠。 It's very difficult to integrate yourself into a society whose culture is so different from your own.让自己融入一个文化上完全不同的社会是非常困难的。 There's no profit to be gained from endlessly discussing whose fault it was.没完没了地讨论谁是谁非是徒劳无益的。 You can't sit on the fence any longer - you have decide whose side you're on. Linguistics: relative forms howsoever or that what whatever whence whenever where whereby whereof wheresoever wherever which whichever whom whomever whosoever wot GrammarRelative pronouns Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses. The most common relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, that. The relative pronoun we use depends on what we are referring to and the type of relative clause. … Relative pronoun: whose We usually use whose as a relative pronoun to indicate possession by people and animals. In more formal styles we can also use it for things. … No relative pronoun In informal styles, we often leave out the relative pronoun. We only do this in defining relative clauses, and when the relative pronoun is the object of the verb. We don’t leave out the relative pronoun when it is the subject of the verb nor in non-defining relative clauses: … Relative pronouns: typical errors We can’t use that instead of who, whom or which in non-defining relative clauses: … Whole Whole is a determiner. We use whole before nouns and after other determiners (my, the, a/an, their) to talk about quantity. We use it to describe the completeness of something: … Whose Whose is a wh-word. We use whose to ask questions and to introduce relative clauses. … Whose as a question word We use whose to ask a question about possession: … Whose in relative clauses We use whose to introduce a relative clause indicating possession by people, animals and things: … whose | American Dictionarywhose pronoun us/huz/ used to ask which person owns or is responsible for something, or to say who is responsible for something: Whose bag is this? I don’t care whose fault it is. Sometimes whose refers to a thing, not a person: That’s the house whose kitchen is painted purple. |
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