Definition of 'whose'
pronunciation note: Usually pronounced (huz
) for meanings
[sense 2] and ,
[sense 3].
1. relative pronoun
You use whose at the beginning of a relative clause where you mention something that belongs to
or is associated with the person or thing mentioned in the previous clause.
2. question word
3. determiner
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
English Easy Learning GrammarInterrogative pronounsThe interrogative pronouns who, whom, and whose are used only for reference to people.
The interrogative pronouns which and what are used for reference ... Read more
English Easy Learning GrammarRelative clausesRelative clauses tell us more about nouns. They function rather like adjectives, and
are found as postmodifiers in a noun phrase. The noun that is modified ... Read more
English Easy Learning GrammarRelative pronounsThe relative pronouns are the words who, whom, which, and that.
person thing
subject
object who or that
whom or that which or that
which or that ... Read more
person thing
subject
object who or that
whom or that which or that
which or that ... Read more
Video: pronunciation of
whose
Word Frequency
whose in American English
pronoun
1.
that or those belonging to whom
used without a following noun whose is this? whose will look best?
possessive pronominal adjective
2.
of, belonging to, made by, or done by whom or which
whose book is lost? a song whose popularity endures
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Word Frequency
whose in British English
determiner
1.
a.
I told him whose fault it was
whose car is this?
2.
of whom; belonging to whom; of which; belonging to which: used as a
relative pronoun
a house whose windows are broken
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word origin
Old English hwæs, genitive of hwā who and hwæt whatExamples of 'whose' in a sentence
whose
These examples have been automatically selected and may contain sensitive content.
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whose
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In other languages
whose
British English: whose
/huːz/ DETERMINER
You use whose to ask who something belongs to.
Whose bag is this?
- American English: whose
- Arabic: لـِمَنْ
- Brazilian Portuguese: de quem
- Chinese: 谁的
- Croatian: čiji
- Czech: čí
- Danish: hvis
- Dutch: van wie
- European Spanish: de quién
- Finnish: kenen
- French: à qui
- German: dessen
- Greek: τίνος
- Italian: di chi
- Japanese: 誰の
- Korean: 누구의
- Norwegian: hvem sin
- Polish: czyj
- European Portuguese: de quem
- Romanian: al cui
- Russian: чей
- Spanish: cuyo
- Swedish: vars
- Thai: ของผู้ใด
- Turkish: ki onun
- Ukrainian: чий
- Vietnamese: của ai
British English: whose
/huːz/ PRONOUN
You use whose to explain who something belongs to.
He shouted at the driver whose car was blocking the street.
- American English: whose
- Arabic: الَّذِي
- Brazilian Portuguese: cujo
- Chinese: 谁的
- Croatian: čije
- Czech: čí
- Danish: hvis
- Dutch: van wie
- European Spanish: cuyo
- Finnish: kenen
- French: dont
- German: wessen
- Greek: του οποίου
- Italian: di chi
- Japanese: 誰のもの
- Korean: 누구의 것
- Norwegian: hvem sin
- Polish: czyj
- European Portuguese: cujo
- Romanian: al căruia
- Russian: чей
- Spanish: de quién
- Swedish: vars
- Thai: ของใคร
- Turkish: kimin
- Ukrainian: чий
- Vietnamese: của ai
Nearby words of
whose
Source
Definition of whose from the
Collins English Dictionary
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