English, asked by AshishAtkan, 2 months ago

Fill in the gaps with a question word from the jars ​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by rupinder00074
16

Answer:

1. how

2. what

3. who

4.which

5.where

6.what

7.where

8.what

9. which

10.where

11.how.

12.how

13.where

14.when

15.how

16.when

17.where

18.how

19.what

20.which

21.how

22.why

23.how

24.how

Answered by ChhutiMistry1
14

Answer:

1. Why is your mom in bed? She has a bad headache.

2. What time does she finish work? At five 'o clock.

3. Who is younger, your sister or you? My sister.

4. Whose school bag is the red one? Martin's.

5. Where did you keep your money? In the bank.

6. What does she do in the evening? She watches TV.

7. Where are you meeting your girlfriend? At the pub.

8. What do you think about Sonia's boyfriend? He is handsome.

9. Where floor is the classroom on? On the second floor.

10. Where were you born? In Spain.

11. How tall is your father?

12. How much did you pay for that mobile phone?

13. Where is she spending her summer holiday? In Ibiza.

14. When did your brother get married? Last week.

15. Who you flying to San Francisco with? My parents.

16. How often do you send postcards? Never.

17. Where do you usually park your car? In the car park.

18. How did you pay the electricity bill? By credit card.

19. What would you like to drink? Some beer, please.

20. Which coat do you prefer, the black or the green one?

21. How far is the shopping centre?

22. What have you been doing lately?

23. How many friend has she got? Not many.

24. How much does she weigh?

Explanation:

Wh-questions begin with what, when, where, who, whom, which, whose, why and how. We use them to invite information. A wh-question is employed for seeking content information relating to persons, things, facts, time, place, reason, manner, etc. Wh-questions differ counting on the kind of content information sought. an issue is an utterance which typically functions as a request for information, which is predicted to be provided in the form of an answer. The Latin 'quaestionem', from the verb 'quaerere' aiming to seek, examine or investigate, and Anglo-French 'questium', meaning doubt or interrogation, are the foremost likely origins of our word question.

#SPJ2

Similar questions