Whose
Whose is a wh-word. We use whose to ask questions and to introduce relative clauses.
Whose as a question word
We use whose to ask a question about possession:
- Whose birthday is it today?
- Whose house was used in the film ‘Gosford Park’?
- Whose are these gloves?
We use whose in indirect questions:
- Juliet wondered whose the sports car was.
warning
Don’t confuse whose and who’s. Who’s means who is:
- Whose book is this? (Who does this book belong to?)
- Who’s driving us home? (Who is driving us home?)
Whose in relative clauses
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.
- This is the book whose title I couldn’t remember.
Typical error
We don’t use whose when we mean who’s (who is)
- Who’s there?
- Not:
Whose there? - Whose little brother is he?
- Not:
Who’s little brother is he?
See also
- Relative clauses
- Questions: interrogative pronouns (what, who)
- Indirect speech: reporting questions
- Relative pronoun: whose