The British in World War I
the British
gandhiji's
The Whig Party (whose final collapse was the result of the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 - since Southern Whigs joined the Democrats in supporting it, but Northern Whigs opposed it)
Napoleon.
The armies of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Menelik II
Alexander the great
The British in World War I
As opposed to the other parent whose a danger to them? It fully depends on the circumstances.
There are 3 whose sum is 45 whose sum is 57 whose sum is 69 whose sum is 711 whose sum is 813 whose sum is 915 whose sum is 1017 whose sum is 1119 whose sum is 1219 whose sum is 1317 whose sum is 1415 whose sum is 1513 whose sum is 1611 whose sum is 179 whose sum is 187 whose sum is 195 whose sum is 203 whose sum is 211 whose sum is 22.
attilla the hun
Deciduous; as 'opposed to' the coniferous [evergreen] conifers.
After many years of warfare it was the warrior-king Menes(c3000BCE) whose armies finally defeated the armies of the southern nomes or city states
example: "Whose is this?"
In the name of Almighty Allah whose Bounties are Unbounded, Whose Mercy is Unlimited, Whose Blessings are Uncountable, Whose Provisions are Un-ending, Whose Benevolence is Everlasting, Whose Being is Eternal, Whose Love is our Life, Whose Worship is our Iman.
No because "whose's" is not a word recognized in the English language. It is either used as "whose" or "whose is".