Here are some examples of wh- questions in the past tense with the verb "see."
What did you see?
Where did you see the car?
When did you see the ship?
How did you see the thief?
Whom did you see? -- (or more informally) -- Who did you see?
Who saw you?
Did is the past tense of do.You can use did when:talking about the past - I did the dishes.asking past yes/no questions - Did you do the dishes?asking past 'wh-' questions - When did you do the dishes?You use did not (didn't) to make negative past sentences:I didn't do the dishes.
very generic question. but as per question. WH could be Name initials of Ring Maker or Designer.
do you want tea
They are who, what, where, when, and why. The question 'how' can be grouped into this list as well.
i dont no
+2009 Idiots
no wh is not a word
Wh- questions (those that start with question words such as Who, What, When, Where, Why...) need to be answered with specific information: A name, a fact, a period of time, a place, a reason... Who wrote Gulliver's Travels? Answer: Jonathan Swift.
nothing ... >:(wh you smoke?!!??!?!?!?
Open Questions"I KEEP six honest serving-men(They taught me all I knew);Their names are What and Why and WhenAnd How and Where and Who."Rudyard Kipling - The Elephant's ChildOpen questions leave room for a description or opinion, and are more useful in eliciting information.Open questions are often called Wh.. questions:-There are eight wh-questions - what, when, where, which, who, whom, whose and why and to this list we usually add howas they are all used to elicit particular kinds of information.You use what when you are asking for information about something.You use when to ask about the time that something happened or will happen.You use where to ask questions about place or position.You use which when you are asking for information about one of a limited number of things.You use who or whom when you are asking about someone's identity.You use whose to ask about possession.You use
yes 4.1 wh is larger than 5.33
words that end in wh