Here are a couple of statements starting with the pronoun 'whose':
'Whose' is an extremely difficult word with which to begin a statement.
'Whose' is the possessive case of 'who' or 'which'; it almost always begins a question.
Make a question using whose
Yes it is. ex. of usage: Whose shirt is this?
Sure. Am I wrong? That is an example. Am I interrupting something? That is another. Well, that is not strictly true, that is starting a question with 'Am', okay a question is a type of sentence. But you cannot start a statement with 'Am', the word should be spelt I'm.
an analogical statement is a statement that compares, or makes an analogy of, something and something else
The word 'whose' is not a noun.The word 'whose' is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun 'whose' is a possessive interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces a question. The pronoun 'whose' takes the place of the noun that answers the question.The pronoun 'whose' is a possessive relative pronoun, a word that introduces a relative clause, a group of words that gives information about its antecedent.Example functions:Whose bicycle are you riding? I borrowed the bicycle from Sam.interrogative pronoun, the bicycle belonging to SamThe man whose mailbox I hit was very nice about it. relative pronoun, the mailbox belonging to the man
It means a statement.
usually
There is no second statement whose equivalence needs to be checked.
We don't know whose statement you ask about.
a
If this is for a crossword puzzle the start of the statement is "I will defend". The entire statement is "I will defend my opinion to the end of my ink."
Yes, the word 'whose' is the possessive form of the interrogative/relative pronoun "who." For example: "Whose book is that?" or "Timmy, whose pants had fallen down, was embarrassed."
A conditional statement is used to show the cause for a reaction. This is an if then type of statement. The most common word that is used to signal a conditional statement is the word if.
Kevlin-Planck
An axiom
There is no second statement whose equivalence needs to be checked.
No. A compound word is formed from two separate words. In the word statement, "state" is a separate word, but "ment" is not a separate word.
They are triangles whose three sides are equal in length and whose three interior angles are equal in measure.