Friday, January 3, 2020

Wh- Words in English Definition and Examples

In  English grammar, a  wh- word is one  of the function words used to begin a wh- question: what, who, whom, whose, which, when, where, why, and how.  Wh- words can appear in both direct questions and indirect questions, and they  are used to begin  wh-clauses.  In most varieties of English, the wh- words are used as relative pronouns.  Wh- words are also known as interrogatives, question words, wh- pronouns, and fused relatives. List of Wh- Words by Parts of Speech Linguists Mark Lester and Larry Beason  say that wh- words are  unique among flag words in that they belong to different parts of speech. They cite the following examples as the most common wh- words classified by parts of speech. (Note that many of  wh- words can be compounded with -ever.) Nouns what, whateverwho, whoeverwhom, whomever Adjectives whosewhich, whichever Adverbs when, wheneverwhere, whereverwhyhow, however While  how and however dont actually  begin with wh-, Lester and Beason say that these two  words should be treated as  honorary members of the wh- family. Wh- Ever  Words Theres a separate class of  words that resemble  wh- words because theyre constructed from  wh-  words  with the addition of the suffix -ever. These include:  whoever, whichever, wherever, whenever, and however. Nominal relative clauses and universal conditional clauses  begin with such  wh-  words, for example:  Wherever you go, youre sure to have a good time. Wh- Words in Noun Clauses Wh-  words  that are  the nouns  inside a  noun clause  can function in any of the standard four noun roles:  subject, object of verb, object of preposition, and predicate nominative. Wh- words that are adverbs function in the standard adverb roles of denoting time, place, manner, and reason. Lester cites the following examples, noting that all the noun clauses play the same external role of subject of the verb in the main sentence. Wh- words used as nouns inside wh- clauses: Subject: Whoever finishes first wins the prize.Object of verb: Whatever I said must have been a mistake.Object of preposition: What they agreed to is okay with me.Predicate nominative: Who they were is still unknown. Wh- words used as adverbs inside wh- clauses: Adverb of time: When you called was not a good time for me.Adverb of place: Where you work is very important.Adverb of manner: How you use your leisure time tells a lot about you.Adverb of reason:  Why they said that remains a complete mystery to us. It is important to understand that noun clauses beginning with wh- words that are adverbs are just as much noun clauses as noun clauses beginning with wh- words that are nouns, Lester explains.   Wh- Words Indicating Movement From the earliest days, transformational grammarians postulated that a wh- interrogative sentence is derived by a movement rule from a deep structure resembling that of the corresponding declarative. So, for example, and disregarding the inversion and the appearance of a form of do, a sentence like What did Bertie give—to Catherine? would be derived from a deep structure of the form Bertie gave wh- to Catherine (the dash in the derived sentence indicates the site from which the wh- word has been extracted). Wh- movement can also extract wh- words from within embedded sentences, and apparently from an unlimited depth: What did Albert say Bertie gave—to Catherine?, What did Zeno declare that Albert had said that Bertie gave–to Catherine?  and so forth. The rule is, however, not entirely unconstrained. For example, if the constituent sentence is itself interrogative, then extraction cannot take place: Albert asked whether Bertie gave a book to Catherine, but not * What did Albert ask whether Bertie gave—to Catherine?—From Generative Grammar by  E. Keith Brown Sources Lester, Mark; Beason, Larry. The McGraw-Hill Handbook of English Grammar and Usage. McGraw-Hill. 2005Leech,  Geoffrey N.  A Glossary of English Grammar. Edinburgh University Press. 2006Lester, Mark. McGraw-Hills Essential ESL Grammar. McGraw-Hill. 2008Brown,  E. Keith.  Generative Grammar. The Linguistics Encyclopedia, Second Edition. Editor: Malmkjaer,  Kirsten.  Ã¢â‚¬â€¹ Routledge. 2002

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