Yes.
As one word, it is spelled "whatever".
It depends how you are trying to use if your intended meaning is whatever or changing the subject then it is one word. But if you are talking about different ways it is two words.
The meaning for the word 'incent' is "provide an incentive to someone for something. In other words, incent means to give something to someone to convince them to do whatever one needs to do.
The word successful is an adjective. It means to have accomplished whatever was previously proposed.
No. "Whatever" is a word in its own rite in English, as in "I can't let you do whatever you want". However the use of "whatever" on its own as a reply to someone in the modern day you don't care about something (but you actually do and don't care to show it).
As one word, it is spelled "whatever".
It's not one word but it also can be I don't care or who cares.
whatever is the matter with you??
The word whatever is a determiner, an interjection, and a pronoun.
" You can have whatever you want"
ME
It depends how you are trying to use if your intended meaning is whatever or changing the subject then it is one word. But if you are talking about different ways it is two words.
The word is honorable.
Whatever is the correct way to say the word.
Clapping whilst saying the word out loud is an easy way of determining how many syllables a word has and where they're divided. The word "whatever" has three syllables. What-ev-er.
"Who" is one English equivalent of the Italian word chi.Specifically, the word functions as a pronoun. It includes among its translations "he who, one who, she who, someone who." Whatever the meaning, the pronunciation remains "kee" in Italian.
i have done whatever u gave me to do