Whose is possessive, who is not.
ex.
Who did that?
Whose rollerskates are these?
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 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.
Sure! Here is a sentence that includes both words: "Who's the person whose car is parked in the driveway?" In this sentence, "who's" is a contraction of "who is," while "whose" is used to indicate possession.
Use "which" with a comma before it if the information it provides is non-essential, meaning the sentence still makes sense without it. Use "that" without a comma if the information is essential to the sentence's meaning. Example: "I bought a car, which was blue." (non-essential, use a comma) "I like cars that are fast." (essential, no comma)
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 book is this?
The scheduled fight was Giovanni vs. Cartel.
I don't know whose question it was. Did you see whose car that was?
Marbury vs, Madison was a famous American legal case in 1803.
Whose been RIFFLING through my stuff?
'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.
Sure! Here is a sentence that includes both words: "Who's the person whose car is parked in the driveway?" In this sentence, "who's" is a contraction of "who is," while "whose" is used to indicate possession.
I would like to know who's asking about whose books these are.
when you use DR. it needs to have a name after such as DR. Davis. doctor is used just describing a doctor such as this sentence- I have to go see my doctor today.