One example is, "Where is the man that you saw on the stairs?"
Which is an interrogative adjective. Interrogative adjectives ask a question - which, what, whose.
No, rude is an adjective.
all of the above are questions you might ask
The pronoun 'what' is an interrogative pronoun (introduces a question) and a relative pronoun (introduces a relative clause); for example:Question: What is your name?Relative clause: You can do what you want.The word 'what' is also and adjective: What movie did you see?The word 'what' is an interjection: What! That's a lot of money.
Yes, it is. It is an adjective form of the verb compete and the noun competition.
"What" can function as an interrogative pronoun, used to ask for specific information, or as a relative pronoun, connecting a clause to a noun. It can also be an adverb, modifying a verb or adjective.
There is no word 'scince' in English. Ask your question again and check the spelling.
Elecent is not a word in English. Check the spelling and ask your question again.
This is a conditional clause. It sets up a condition ("if you ask her") upon which another action depends.
The wherefore clause is where you ask the court for the relief you are seeking.
A main clause = it is independent, i.e. it does not depend on any other sentence. A subordinate clause = a sentence depending on/subordinated to a another sentence, either a main clause or another subordinate clause. (you ask the main clause a question and you answer with the subordinate). e.g. "Can you tell me/ (the main clause) when the book was written?" ( the subordinate clause = a Direct Object). or "This is the book/ that I told you about". (the second clause is an Attributive or a Relative Clause). or If she had know this, / she wouldn't have trusted him." (the first sentence is an If Clause or a Conditional).
An adjective doesn't ask anything. It describes a noun.