Interrogative Pronoun
Interrogative Pronoun
An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun used to ask a question. For example, the word who is an
interrogative pronoun in the sentence Who are you? Like most other pronouns, interrogative
pronouns replace nouns in sentences. In the case of interrogative pronouns, they typically replace
whatever or whoever the answer to the question is. For example:
What is a pineapple? A pineapple is a fruit.
Who built this shed? Carl built this shed.
Usually, an interrogative pronoun is the first word in an interrogative sentence, which always
ends in a question mark. A sentence that is using an interrogative pronoun to ask an indirect
question may not end in a question mark:
I wonder who will come tomorrow.
She asked us what we wanted for lunch.
The five most commonly used interrogative pronouns are who, whom, whose, what, and which.
Less commonly, longer forms of these words ending in -ever are also used: whoever, whomever,
whosever, whatever, and whichever. As interrogative pronouns, these variants may be used for
emphasis or to express surprise. All of these pronouns can act as singular or plural words
depending on what they are referring to.
Who and whom
Who and whom are used to ask questions where the answer is expected to be a person. Who is
used as a subject, and whom is used as an object.
Whose
What is used to ask a question where the answer is expected to be an object or abstract concept.
Which
Which is used to ask questions where there are multiple choices or possibilities as to what the
answer could be.