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What what"
It is used to ask questions about things you don't know, such as what's
This can also be used in a definite clause,"
whathe
saidis
unbelievable" (what he says is not credible). In "whatanicedayit
is"(The weather is so nice today!) What is in it
It can also be an interjection. which, who, whose are used as components of interrogative pronouns in definite clauses, respectively, "which, who, who", which
It can refer to both people and things, who can only refer to people, whose refers to things, when is used to ask questions about time, "when", where to ask questions about places, "in**", why to ask questions about reasons, how
Ask questions about methods, methods.
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The meaning is completely different, and it is not easy to distinguish?
what (ask questions about nouns).
which one (to ask questions about nouns).
who (to ask questions to people).
how (with adjectives).
where ** (place name required).
whose (:hers,mine,his,theirs)when (in two days,next monday).
Remember, there's nothing indistinguishable about meaning, right?
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what which who where when can lead to a definite clause.
And so they can also guide other different noun clauses, and look them up on the Internet.
What also has a like, as it means.
money is to people what water is to fish
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when,,where,,what,why,,which,whose,who,how。
Special question words are words that must be present (the first at the beginning) in special question sentences, and are generally used in conjunction with special question sentences. Different from general interrogative sentences, the answer usually has time, place, person's name, **, reason, etc.
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what: "what" - things.
WHO: "who" - used for the nominative case of a person.
whom: "who" – used in the case of a person.
which: "which one those" – a thing or a person.
Whose: "Who's".
when: "when" – time.
where:"**"--Location.
why: "Why" - why.
how-how-how-way.