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Interrogative pronouns.

A. The Dependent Genitive. | The use of the definite article with class nouns. | The use of articles with class nouns modified by attributes. | USE OF ARTICLES WITH PROPER NOUNS | Names of months and days. | The use of articles with nouns in apposition. | Ways of expressing the meaning of the English articles in Russian. | The use of articles with the names of meals. | Few, a few, the few; little, a little, the little. | OMISSION OF THE ARTICLE |


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  1. Affirmative Interrogative Negative
  2. Combine the following pairs or groups of sentences, using relative pronouns.
  3. Conjunctive(who, what, which, whose)and relative(who, which, that, whose)pronouns.
  4. Defining pronouns.
  5. Demonstrative pronouns.
  6. Ex 5.8 Make the following interrogative and negative.
  7. Ex. 14. Make these sentences negative and interrogative.

1. Interrogative pronouns are used in inquiry, to form special questions. They are: who, whose, what, which.

The interrogative pronoun who has the category of case: the nominative case is who, the objective case whom.

Who refers to human beings:

 

Slipping her hand under his arm, she said: “ Who was that?” “He picked up

my handkerchief. We talked about pictures.” (Galsworthy)

 

What when not attributive usually refers to things but it may be applied to persons when one inquires about their occupation.

 

What are you looking for, Tess?” the doctor called. “Hairpins,” she replied...

(London)

What was he?” “A painter.” (Galsworthy)

Which has a selective meaning: it corresponds to the Russian ‘который из’ (an individual of the group). It may refer to persons and things.

 

The boys clasped each other suddenly in an agony of fright. “ Which of us

does he mean?” gasped Huckleberry. (Twain)

Which side of the bed do you like, Mum? (Galsworthy)

 

The questions Who is he? What is he? Which is he? differ in their meaning. The first question inquires about the name or parentage of some person. The second question inquires about the occupation of the person spoken about. The third question inquires about some particular person out of a definite group of persons.

2. In the sentence interrogative pronouns may have different functions — those of subject, predicative, object, and attribute:

 

Who, do you think, has been to see you, Dad? She couldn’t wait! Guess.

(Galsworthy) (SUBJECT)

What ’s been happening, then?” he said sharply. (Eliot) (SUBJECT)

“No, who ’s he?” “Oh, he’s a Polish Jew.” (Aldington) (PREDICATIVE)

What are you, Mr. Mont, if I may ask?” “I, sir? I was going to be a painter.”

(Galsworthy) (PREDICATIVE)

What was her father?” “Heron was his name, a Professor, so they tell me.”

(Galsworthy) (PREDICATIVE)

“He says he’s married,” said Winifred. “ Whom to, for goodness’ sake?”

(Galsworthy) (OBJECT)

Who do you mean?” I said. (Dn Maurier) (OBJECT)1

 

1 There is a tendency in Modern English to use who, instead of whom, as an object:

Z. If it doesn’t matter who anybody marries, then it doesn’t matter who I

marry and it doesn’t matter who you marry.

A. Whom, not who.

Z. Oh, speak English: you’re not on the telephone now. (Shaw)

 

What did you see in Clensofantrim?” “Nothing but beauty, darling.”

(Galsworthy) (OBJECT)

What sort of a quarrel?” he heard Fleur say. (Galsworthy) (ATTRIBUTE)

Whose pain can have been like mine? Whose injury is like mine? (Eliot)

(ATTRIBUTE)

Which day is it that Dorloote Mill is to be sold? (Eliot) (ATTRIBUTE)

 


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