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Tenacious Learner Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Both possible? Which and Whose

Hello teachers,
According to this sentence, 'She will drive her car tomorrow.', both of the following questions are possible, aren't they?
a) Which car will se drive?
b) Whose car will she drive?

Thanks in advance.
  

Top answer

what do you mean when blacking "her" word? Both of sentences are possible.

  • what do you mean when blacking "her" word?
  • Both of sentences are possible.
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6 Answers
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what do you mean when blacking "her" word?
Both of sentences are possible.
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Thuyzerowhat do you mean when blacking "her" word?
Hello Thuyzero,
Thanks for your reply. I mean that the question is based on the bold word.

TL
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ThuyzeroBoth of sentences are possible.
Sorry, shouldn't it be:
a) Both sentences are possible.
b) Both of the sentences are possible.

TL
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Hi,
And I think you should choose "Whose" because it will be suitable for your answer "Her".
Both of those sentences are correct.
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Thuyzerowhat do you mean when blacking "her" word?
That's simply one way some of us draw attention to a particular point. We also underline or italicize to do the same thing. It's common on internet sites.

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