WHOSE that lady? By 'Morgan in 6th grade
example: "Whose is this?"
example: "Whose is this?"
you use whose in a sentence when you mash who and is it is who plus is equals whose.but is does not have an e.
Whose mess is that!
Whose book is this?
THIS WORD IS GOOD FOR THE WORD ARGOT:I was shoved into a taxi by a porter whose argot I couldn't understand.I HOPE THIS HELPED YOU:)
I don't know whose question it was. Did you see whose car that was?
I'm not sure whose shoes these are.
Yes, this is an interrogative sentence. It is asking for the speaker's opinion on whose story they believe.
who's asking this question? who's curious? It's a contraction of 'who is', as It's is a contraction of 'it is'
It is the topic sentence.
Who's to blame? "Who's" is a conjunction meaning "who is?" So, if you want to construct a sentence using "who's," try to say "who is" and see if the sentence still makes sense. Whose towel was left on the locker room's floor? "Whose" is the possessive of "who"; denoting ownership, e.g., whose towel, whose car, whose newspaper.