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.
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
The correct sentences is: A. Who's going to the movie tonight?The form "who's" is a contraction, a shortened form of "who is".The form "whose" is a possessive form, as in "Whose coat is this?"The form "whos" is not a word without the apostrophe.
Whos car is this, deinitely
whose son is richard kennedy
Guinevere
Harriet Tubman Was the one whos nickname was moses and also helped nore than 300 slaves escape using the undergroundrailroad
we should write the address of the person to whom we are sending
A celebrety whos name starts with a v is Vanessa Hudgens
On whose album did Lil Boosie make his debut?
if you mean the person whos dying...its flacks girlfriend jessica angell
"whos" is not a word. "who's" and "whose" are homophones -- they sound identical. they are not homonyms, synonym, nor antonyms. "who's" is a contraction for "who is" or sometimes "who has" as in the examples "who's at my door?" and "who's eaten my cake?" "whose" is a possessive form of "who" -- "it was mark whose dog got into our garbage" or "whose dog is this in my garbage?" "who's" works similarly to "what's" in most sentences, one refering to people and the other to things. "whose" is the possessive of "who," just like "my" is the possessive of "i/me" and "your" is the possessive of "you."
A cylinder whose height is 3cm and whose diameter is 24cm has a surface area of 1130.97cm2