Example sentence - The children tried to determine whose lunch was left on the bus.
I just want to know who's asking about whose laptop this is.
Whose book is this?
'Who's' is a contraction for 'who is' or 'who has', while 'whose' is a possessive pronoun indicating ownership or relationship. Use 'who's' when you can replace it with 'who is' or 'who has', and use 'whose' to indicate possession or relationship.
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
cheerful chap whose good humor is as ample as his proportions.
Whose mess is that!
I just want to know who's asking about whose laptop this is.
Whose book is this?
I'm not sure whose shoes these are.
I am not writing a sentence using that word.
"Who's there?", I asked when I heard a knock on my door.Warning: do not confuse 'who's ' with ' whose'."Who's" is short for " who is"."Whose' means "belonging to whom". Example: Whose coat is this?
'Who's' is a contraction for 'who is' or 'who has', while 'whose' is a possessive pronoun indicating ownership or relationship. Use 'who's' when you can replace it with 'who is' or 'who has', and use 'whose' to indicate possession or relationship.
a sentence using the word endotracheal
This is a sentence using the word aviator.
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
I am saying a sentence using the word collagen.
this is a sentence using the word armchair.