"Whoever put a frog in my desk better come out and tell me now." Mrs. Suzie said menacingly.
like that
No, "whoever" is not one word. It is a compound word made up of "who" and "ever."
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
"what does the word enfeebled means?" dumb whoever answered that.
you make a sentence then you add the word control group you are such a retard whoever asked that question
The word whomever is a pronoun. It is the formal usage of whoever.
use the word demon in a sentence a very stupid sentence whoever wrote that this a better one the demon was locked up forever
What iis 'fot'? If a typo...the word for...anwer is whoever they most recently captured
The word whoever is used when you don't know a specific person to name, and it does not matter to know who. Whoever made the mess in the kitchen better clean it up! I think whoever wrote this story must have experienced hunger too. I gave a "Happy Card" to whoever I passed on the sidewalk.
No, the word 'whoever' is a relative pronoun, an interrogative pronoun, and a conjunction.Examples:Each citizen has these rights whoever you are. (relative pronoun)Whoever would pay that much for shoes? (interrogative pronoun)The trophy goes to whoever wins the tournament. (conjunction)
This is one word, whoever, meaning an individual being referenced.
You are stupid. Whoever questioned this.