Who's is a conjunction, so it should be used when making a sentence using the phrase "who is". The term "whose" is using the word who in the possessive tense.
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.
One should always capitalize names in sentences.
No, there should not be two periods when "am" is at the end of a sentence. Only one period is needed to end the sentence.
One example of a sentence using "should" is: "You should wear a coat in cold weather to stay warm."
A relative pronoun relates to a noun or a pronoun in the sentence.The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.Example sentences:My brother, who attends the university, will be home for the holiday.The person to whom you give the completed application is the personnel manager.The man, whose car I hit, was very nice about it.
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.
"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."
NO ONE
Harriet Tubman Was the one whos nickname was moses and also helped nore than 300 slaves escape using the undergroundrailroad
One should always capitalize names in sentences.
It should go on your neighbors insurance, he's the one whos responsible for the damage.
No, there should not be two periods when "am" is at the end of a sentence. Only one period is needed to end the sentence.
In place of "I," the pronoun "one" can be used in the sentence.
The pronoun "one" can be used instead of "we" in the sentence.
Yes it should be capitalized.
One example of a sentence using "should" is: "You should wear a coat in cold weather to stay warm."
One sentence should have at least 5 words.