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- Which is more natural? Whose is that car? or Whose car is that?
Whose wife dancing is that? or Whose dancing wife is that? Notice how the first form is slightly more derogatory, if you are speaking to the owner of the car about his poor parking or choice of color you might get away with saying it that way (and maybe not)
- Is it Whose fault is that? OR Whos fault is that??
3 I don't know who's whose fault was that! Hitler or Stalin? First off, you need the possessive pronoun of who in front of the noun fault; that's whose, not who's Who's is the contraction of who is or who has Second, the sentence is not in the interrogative So there should be no sign of interrogation (?) The sentence should be rewritten as
- Which is the correct version whos side or whoses side?
The title asks about two incorrect options: “whose’s” with an apostrophe-s is no more correct here than “who’s”
- Whose car is this red one? vs whose red car is this?
Whose big dog is that? The dog's size is important to the speaker for some reason that goes beyond identifying which dog the speaker is referring to So unless the car's redness is significant, it would be a little odd to ask Whose red car is this? Whose car is this red one? or Whose is the red car? are simpler
- whose name or whose the name? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
2 " Whose the name " is absolutely wrong! " Whose " is a possessive that means " belongs to, is associated with or is a part of " " Whose " cannot be followed by an article This is the tree whose leaves turned blue somehow I am the man whose name is known to everyone
- word usage - Whose mistake was it or Whose fault was it? - English . . .
Merriam-Webster gives the example Don't worry about it It was an honest mistake So, whether "Whose fault is it?" or "Whose mistake is it?" fits better, will probably depend on how much guilt you'd like to imply As a side note, because the action probably is in the past, "Whose mistake was this?" or "Who did this mistake?" would sound more
- Answering lt;Whose is this book? gt; with lt;One of my friends gt;
2 Let's say I am in a library and there is a book on the desk beside mine If someone who works at the library or someone else studying at the library comes up to me and asks, "Do you know whose this book is" or "Whose is this book," can I answer saying either of these: One of my friends' It's one of my friends'
- word choice - Which is correct a car which or a car whose . . .
Which of the sentence is correct grammatically below? I have bought a car which left door is broken I have bought a car whose left door is broken
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