whopper
Some words that end with "wh" are wherewith, wherewithal, and whow!
They are who, what, where, when, and why. The question 'how' can be grouped into this list as well.
Wh- questions (those that start with question words such as Who, What, When, Where, Why...) need to be answered with specific information: A name, a fact, a period of time, a place, a reason... Who wrote Gulliver's Travels? Answer: Jonathan Swift.
An announcement with "wh" questions is one that informs the audience of an upcoming event or piece of news while also prompting further information by using words like who, what, where, when, why, and how. This type of announcement is designed to engage the audience by encouraging them to seek more details and participate in the conversation.
what words end in consonant
words that end in wh
Some words that end with "wh" are wherewith, wherewithal, and whow!
which
There is one Old English word it is "Slowh"
I am going to suggest Cthulhuwh. It's not a real word, but then, I don't think there are any real words that end in wh.
There are no English words currently in use that end with the letters -wh.However, the word slowh (meaning 'slay') was used by Chaucer (1343-1400), but this word is now obsolete.(See Related links below)
most of the questions start with a wh because there are the five w's and most of them start with a wh
They are who, what, where, when, and why. The question 'how' can be grouped into this list as well.
There is no word that ends in the letter 'wh' recorded online (net) or in print (dictionary). Except, acronyms.
Std. or straight-through Ethernet cable, by 568b specs, is Or/Wh, Or, Gr/Wh, Bl, Bl/Wh, Gr, Br/Wh,Br. Both ends. Crossover is standard on one end, but Gr/Wh, Gr, Or/Wh, Bl, Bl/Wh, Or, Br/Wh, Br. You are crossing your transmit pair with your receive pair. Some sources would have you cross the other two pairs, as well, but it's not necessary. Or = Orange, Wh = White, Bl = Blue, Gr = Green, Br = Brown.
In linguistics, words like why, where, when and how are usually called wh-words. The words what, which, who, whom, and whose are a subtype of wh-words called interrogative pronouns.
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