Level: intermediate
The interrogative determiners are which and what.
which is a specific determiner
Here are three books. Which book do you think is the most interesting?
They have four boys. Which boy is the oldest?
I can’t remember which house Janet lives in.
Which restaurant did you go to?
what is a general determiner
What food do you like?
I don’t know what job she does.
- Interrogative determiners 1
- Interrogative determiners 2
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Could you please clarify the following
1. Do you say "What is your favourite restaurant? (because there can be many possible answers) or which is your favourite restaurant? (because it is limitied with a choice of city or country restaurants?
2. Is it right to ask "What is your favourite book" and "Which is your favourite Dickens' book?" Can these determiners be used interchangeably in these questions?
3. Can one ask "Which size are you looking for" talking about a limited number of sizes that are available in the store?
Hello howtosay_,
1. Both 'what' and 'which' are possible here. It depends on what you are thinking of when you ask the question. If you've been talking about several different restaurants and want to know the one of those that your friend likes best, you'd say 'which' because the set of restaurants you're talking about it is clear. In most other cases, you'd use 'what'. You could even already have been talking about restaurants in various places, but if there's not a clear group that you're referring to, then 'what' would be the best option.
2. Yes, both of these are correct. The 'what' question is much more open and 'which' works well when talking about a specific group of books, such as those Dickens wrote. Even so, if you haven't been talking about Dickens books in some detail already, people would often say 'What is your favourite Dickens book?'. Their choice of 'what' here reflects the fact that a specific group hasn't been discussed.
3. It would make sense to 'which' here, and it's not wrong to use it, but most often people say 'what'. In general, we use 'what' far more often than 'which'.
Hope this helps.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello, Kirk. Thank you very much!!!
Hello Maahir,
Yes, I understand. There are many cases in an exercise where it's possible to use both 'which' and 'what' because the full context or speaker's intentions aren't completely clear, and this is a good example. When A asks the question here, they seem to be thinking of the Beatles albums that were released in the sixties. Since this is quite a specific set of albums which A seems to be familiar with, they say 'which'.
But it could also be that A is not so familiar with these albums and isn't thinking of them as a specific set of albums. And in that case, 'what' would also work here.
Since this question follows on from the previous one, we designated 'which' as the correct answer, but in a more general or other context, 'what' is also possible.
I hope that makes sense.
Best wishes,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Timmy Ferrer,
I think in this case you could use either and it really wouldn't make very much difference. You'd certainly use which if the choice of country had been limited in some way (such as by someone identifying which continent the person is from), but even if there is no indication you could use which.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi IreneK,
As you say, these are abstract concepts rather than particular items, and so no article is used.
It's sometimes helpful to consider how the sentence would change if articles were used.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Diego Feital
We're happy to help you with specific questions. Could you please tell us a little more about what you don't understand?
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Akong,
Off the top of my head, I can't think of any adjectives that can be used as a verb without some kind of change in form. Usually some kind of suffix or prefix is added, e.g. the adjective 'white' + '-en' = 'to whiten'.
'naked' can't be used as a verb in standard English so that sentence is not grammatical. In 2, 'met' is only a verb (the verb 'meet' in the past simple) and is not an adjective. I don't see how you could use it as an adjective, but if you have something specific in mind, please let us know.
By the way, could you please ask your questions on a relevant page? For example, since this one is about verbs and adjectives, it would make more sense somewhere in one of those sections instead of here. Thanks in advance for your cooperation with this.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Akong,
We're happy to comment on our own material and explanations but we can't explain to you what someone else was thinking when they wrote something. There are interrogative determiners (I think this is what you mean, rather than 'integrative') which are used before nouns to ask questions (e.g. Which book do you want?).
You can find a useful categorisation of determiners on the relevant wikipedia page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determiner
I think if you want an explanation of this person's categorisation then you should contact them. It would not be appropriate for us to speak for that person.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello jenneec,
'Whose' can be a pronoun (when it is not followed by a noun) or a possessive determiner (when it is followed by a noun). It can be used to form a question but it can also be used in other ways.
Best wishes,
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi jenneec,
Yes, when it precedes a noun in a question it is a possessive interrogative determiner.
Best wishes,
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team