Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions, representing the thing we don't know. The interrogative pronouns are who, whom, what, which, and the possessive pronoun whose (an interrogative possessive pronoun).
The pronoun 'who' is both a relative pronoun and an interrogative pronoun, depending on use.Examples:The person who called will call back later. (relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause)Who would like some ice cream? (interrogative pronoun, introduces a question)
The word "that" is not an interrogative pronoun; it is a relative pronoun that introduces restrictive clauses in a sentence. Interrogative pronouns, such as "who," "what," "which," and "whom," are used to ask questions.
An interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question. The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose. Examples: Who is our new math teacher? To whom should I give my completed form? What would you like for dinner? Which hat looks best with this outfit? Whose bicycle was left in the driveway?
Yes, "what" can function as an interrogative pronoun when used to ask questions about specific information or choices. For example, "What is your favorite color?" or "What would you like to eat for dinner?"
The pronoun 'who' is a subjective form of interrogative pronoun and relative pronoun.An interrogative pronoun is introduces a question. The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun for the person that is the answer to the question. The interrogative pronoun 'who' functions as the subject of the question.A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause, a group of words that has a subject and a verb, but is not a complete sentence. A relative clause gives information about the antecedent (information that relates to the antecedent). The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the antecedent as the subject of the clause.Examples:Who gave you the flowers? (interrogative pronoun)My neighbor who has a garden gave me the flowers. (relative pronoun)
The pronoun 'who' is both a relative pronoun and an interrogative pronoun, depending on use.Examples:The person who called will call back later. (relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause)Who would like some ice cream? (interrogative pronoun, introduces a question)
The interrogative pronoun is which.
The pronoun in the sentence is which, an interrogative pronoun.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question. The antecedent of an interrogative pronoun is usually the answer to the question.The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.
The pronoun in the sentence is 'what' an interrogative pronoun, a pronoun that introduces a question.The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.The antecedent to an interrogative is often the answer to the question, which in this case, the pronoun and the antecedent are the same word.
The interrogative pronoun is who.The antecedent(s) for an interrogative pronoun is usually the answer to the question.Note: Another pronoun in the sentence is 'our', a possessive adjective used to describe the noun 'senators'.
The correct interrogative pronoun is 'who' as the subject of the sentence. The interrogative pronoun 'whom' is the objective form. To use the objective form, the sentence should read:At whom did you laugh? (the pronoun 'whom' is the object of the preposition 'at')To use the pronoun 'who' as the subject:Who did you laugh at?
Interrogative pronoun comes before a verb while interrogative adjective comes before a noun. Eg WHO wrote the novel rockbound? (Interrogative pronoun) WHAT book are you reading? (Interrogative adjective)
The interrogative pronoun is "who", a word that introduces a question. The interrogative pronoun "who" takes the place of the noun (or nouns) that is the answer to the question.
The word "that" is not an interrogative pronoun; it is a relative pronoun that introduces restrictive clauses in a sentence. Interrogative pronouns, such as "who," "what," "which," and "whom," are used to ask questions.
No, the word 'whoever' is a relative pronoun, an interrogative pronoun, and a conjunction.Examples:Each citizen has these rights whoever you are. (relative pronoun)Whoever would pay that much for shoes? (interrogative pronoun)The trophy goes to whoever wins the tournament. (conjunction)
An interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question. The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose. Examples: Who is our new math teacher? To whom should I give my completed form? What would you like for dinner? Which hat looks best with this outfit? Whose bicycle was left in the driveway?
Yes, "what" can function as an interrogative pronoun when used to ask questions about specific information or choices. For example, "What is your favorite color?" or "What would you like to eat for dinner?"