Wh- Question Words (Hard) — Which vs What, Whose
B1-B2 Level
At advanced levels, wh- question words require understanding subtle differences
that change meaning. The distinction between which and what depends on whether
the set of options is defined: 'Which university did you apply to?' implies a known shortlist,
while 'What university would you recommend?' keeps the options open. Similarly, 'whose' and
'who's' sound identical but serve completely different purposes — 'Whose idea was this?' asks
about possession, while 'Who's coming tonight?' is short for 'who is.'
At B1-B2 level, you also need to handle wh- words in formal and academic contexts. 'To whom should I address this letter?' uses 'whom' as a formal object pronoun — in everyday English, most speakers say 'Who should I address this letter to?' instead. Another challenge is choosing between 'how come' (informal, statement word order: 'How come you're late?') and 'why' (standard, question word order: 'Why are you late?'). Both ask about reasons, but 'how come' is too informal for writing and examinations.
At B1-B2 level, you also need to handle wh- words in formal and academic contexts. 'To whom should I address this letter?' uses 'whom' as a formal object pronoun — in everyday English, most speakers say 'Who should I address this letter to?' instead. Another challenge is choosing between 'how come' (informal, statement word order: 'How come you're late?') and 'why' (standard, question word order: 'Why are you late?'). Both ask about reasons, but 'how come' is too informal for writing and examinations.
Quick Rule
which + noun (defined set) | what + noun (open set) | whose + noun (possession) | whom (formal object) | how come + statement order (informal why)
- 1.Which hotel did you book — the Grand or the Riverside? (which — choosing from a known set)
- 2.To whom should I send the application? (whom — formal object pronoun)
- 3.How come she didn't tell us about the change? (how come — informal why, negative, no word order change)
- 4.What kind of music do they listen to? (what — open-ended, no set of options)
- 5.Whose responsibility is it to lock up at night? (whose — asking about possession of a duty)
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