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      • If a word communicates something that someone or something can do, it’s a verb. Nouns are words that refer to a person (Noah Webster), place (Springfield), or thing (book), or also to an animal (dog), a quality (softness), an idea (justice), or an action (singing).
      www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/what-is-the-difference-between-a-verb-and-a-noun
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  2. We use whose to introduce a relative clause indicating possession by people, animals and things: John works with that other chap whose name I can’t remember. Shirley has a 17-year-old daughter whose ambition is to be a photographer.

    • English (US)

      Whose - English Grammar Today - a reference to written and...

  3. We usually use whose as a relative pronoun to indicate possession by people and animals. In more formal styles we can also use it for things. We use whose before nouns instead of a possessive expression (my, your, his, her, its, our, their, x’s) in defining and non-defining clauses: He’s marrying a girl whose family don’t seem to like him.

  4. ‘ that ’ … is used for things, animals, and people: “The car that crashed into the house is completely damaged.” ‘ whose ’ … is a possessive relative pronoun and refers to persons as well as things and animals: “My friend Sandra, whose brothers live in Australia, is going to visit me.”

  5. How to Use 'Who's' Much like it’s and its, who’s and whose are two words that are confused very frequently. Let’s start by breaking it down simply: Who’s is a contraction of who is or who has. It can be found at the beginning of a question: Who’s [=who is] at the door? Who’s [=who has] got the remote?

    • Who
    • Which
    • That
    • Whose
    • Whom
    • What

    We can use who when the subject of the relative clause is a person: We don't tend to use whofor animals, though it may be used for pets.

    If the subject of the relative clause is a thing then we use which but not who. Itis also used for animals:

    That can be used instead of who or which in defining relative clauses, but not non-defining relative clauses. Remind yourself of the difference between defining and non-defining relative clausesif you are not sure. In the examples we looked at above, they are all defining relative clauses, and so thatcan also be used:

    We use whose to refer to possession. Whatever follows the relative pronoun whose will belong to the noun preceding whose: Unlike who, whosecan also be used for animals and things:

    Whom is used instead of who when the relative pronoun is the object of the relative clause instead of the subject. It will be replacing him, her, them, orus. The subject is the person or thing doing something, and the objectis having something done to it: 1. I (subject)like (verb) him (object) Below, the first example shows you again how we use who...

    What is used to mean 'the thing(s) that' or 'that which'. Unlike the other relative pronouns discussed above, it does not refer to a noun that comes before it: Now test yourself in this relative pronoun quiz.

  6. whose and whom. We use whose as the possessive form of who: This is George, whose brother went to school with me. We sometimes use whom as the object of a verb or preposition: This is George, whom you met at our house last year. (whom is the object of met) This is George’s brother, with whom I went to school. (whom is the object of with)

  7. The relative pronouns in English grammar are who, whom, whose, which and that. Who, whom, whose and that are for people and animals and which, whose and that are for things. Learn about English relative pronouns with Lingolia’s online grammar rules and free interactive exercises.

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