When the pronouns who, whom, whose, which, and that are used to introduce dependent clauses they are relative pronouns.When the pronouns who, whom, whose, and which are used to introduce a question, they are interrogative pronouns.
Just say hi First, you should introduce yourself. Or have a friend of yours introduce you.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a pronoun. It can be used (like who) to introduce adjective clauses.
Relative pronouns
i donβt know
The 'introductory' pronoun is 'who', which introduces the relative clause 'who died for you'.Relative pronouns are used to introduce relative clauses; they are: who, whom, whose, which, that.
Bichat was to introduce into biology.
i need to know where the first drive up window restaurant was and the first to have flouresent lighting and who the first was to introduce the onion rings to the world.
to answer that I would need to know whom you are referring to please
the first country to introduce cellular phones was japan
The pronouns 'who' and 'whom' are both interrogative pronouns (they introduce a question), and a relative pronoun (they introduce a relative clause). The pronoun 'who' is the subjective form, the pronoun 'whom' is the objective form. Example sentences:Interrogative: Who is your lab partner?Relative: The woman who was driving the car was not injured.Interrogative: To whom shall I give my completed application?Relative: The customer for whom we made the cakewill pick it up at three.
When did Microsoft introduce its first graphical interface for PC?