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Interrogative word

An interrogative word or question word is a function word used to ask a question, such as what, which, when, where, who, whom, whose, why, whether and how. They are sometimes called wh-words, because in English most of them start with wh- (compare Five Ws). They may be used in both direct questions (Where is he going?) and in indirect questions (I wonder where he is going). In English and various other languages the same forms are also used as relative pronouns in certain relative clauses (The country where he was born) and certain adverb clauses (I go where he goes). It can also be used as a modal, since question words are more likely to appear in modal sentences, like (Why was he walking?)

A particular type of interrogative word is the interrogative particle, which serves to convert a statement into a yes–no question, without having any other meaning. Examples include est-ce que in French, ли li in Russian, czy in Polish, чи chy in Ukrainian, ĉu in Esperanto, āyā آیا in Persian, কি ki in Bengali, / ma in Mandarin Chinese, /mi in Turkish, pa in Ladin, ka in Japanese, kka in Korean, ko/kö[1] in Finnish and (да) ли (da) li in Serbo-Croatian. "Is it true that..." would be a similar construct in English. Such particles contrast with other interrogative words, which form what are called wh-questions rather than yes–no questions.

For more information about the grammatical rules for forming questions in various languages, see Interrogative.

In English

Interrogative words in English can serve as interrogative determiners, interrogative pronouns, or interrogative adverbs. Certain pronominal adverbs may also be used as interrogative words, such as whereby or wherefore.

Interrogative determiner

The interrogative words which, what, and whose are interrogative determiners when used to prompt the specification of a presented noun or noun phrase such as in the question Which farm is the largest? where the interrogative determiner which prompts specification of the noun farm. In the question Whose gorgeous, pink painting is that?, whose is the interrogative, personal, possessive determiner prompting a specification for the possessor of the noun phrase gorgeous pink painting.

Interrogative pronoun

The interrogative words who, whom, whose, what, and which are interrogative pronouns when used in the place of a noun or noun phrase. In the question Who is the leader?, the interrogative word who is a interrogative pronoun because it stands in the place of the noun or noun phrase the question prompts (e.g. the king or the woman with the crown). Similarly, in the question Which leads to the city center? the interrogative word which is an interrogative pronoun because it stands in the place of a noun or noun phrase (e.g. the road to the north or the river to your east). Note, which is an interrogative pronoun, not an interrogative determiner, because there is no noun or noun phrase present to serve as a determiner for. Consequently, in the question Which leads to the city center? the word which is an interrogative pronoun; when in the question Which road leads to the city center? the word which is an interrogative determiner for the noun road.

Interrogative adverb

The interrogative words where, when, how, why, whether, whatsoever, and the more archaic whither and whence are interrogative adverbs when they modify a verb. In the question How did you announce the deal? the interrogative word how is an interrogative adverb because it modifies the verb did (past tense of to do). In the question Why should I read that book? the interrogative word why is an interrogative adverb because it describes the verb should.

Note, interrogative adverbs always describe auxiliary verbs such as did, do, should, will, must, or might.

Yes-no questions

Yes-no questions can begin with an interrogative particle, such as:

  • A conjugation of be (e.g. "Are you hungry?")
  • A conjugation of do (e.g. "Do you want fries?") - see Do-support § In questions
  • A conjugation of another auxiliary verb, including contractions (e.g. "Can't you move any faster?")

English questions can also be formed without an interrogative word as the first word, by changing the intonation or punctuation of a statement. For example: "You're done eating?"

Etymology

Ultimately, the English interrogative pronouns (those beginning with wh in addition to the word how), derive from the Proto-Indo-European root kwo- or kwi, the former of which was reflected in Proto-Germanic as χwa- or khwa-,[citation needed] due to Grimm's law.

These underwent further sound changes and spelling changes, notably wh-cluster reductions, resulting in the initial sound being either /w/ (in most dialects) or /h/ (how, who) and the initial spelling being either wh or h (how). This was the result of two sound changes – /hw/ > /h/ before /uː/ (how, who) and /hw/ > /w/ otherwise – and the spelling change from hw to wh in Middle English. The unusual pronunciation versus spelling of who is because the vowel was formerly /aː/, and thus it did not undergo the sound change in Old English, but in Middle English (following spelling change) the vowel changed to /uː/ and it followed the same sound change as how before it, but with the Middle English spelling unchanged.

In how (Old English , from Proto-Germanic χwō), the w merged into the lave of the word, as it did in Old Frisian hū, hō (Dutch hoe "how"), but it can still be seen in Old Saxon hwō, Old High German hwuo (German wie "how"). In English, the gradual change of voiceless stops into voiceless fricatives (phase 1 of Grimm's law) during the development of Germanic languages is responsible for "wh-" of interrogatives. Although some varieties of American English and various Scottish dialects still preserve the original sound (i.e. [ʍ] rather than [w]), most have only the [w].

The words who, whom, whose, what and why, can all be considered to come from a single Old English word hwā, reflecting its masculine and feminine nominative (hwā), dative (hwām), genitive (hwæs), neuter nominative and accusative (hwæt), and instrumental (masculine and neuter singular) (hwȳ, later hwī) respectively. Other interrogative words, such as which, how, where, whence, or whither, derive either from compounds (which coming from a compound of hwā [what, who] and līc [like]), or other words from the same root (how deriving from ).

The Proto-Indo-European root also directly originated the Latin and Romance form qu- in words such as Latin quī ("which") and quando ("when"); it has also undergone sound and spelling changes, as in French qui "which", with initial /k/, and Spanish cuando, with initial /kw/.

Forms with -ever

Most English interrogative words can take the suffix -ever, to form words such as whatever and wherever. (Older forms of the suffix are -so and -soever, as in whoso and whomsoever.) These words have the following main meanings:

  • As more emphatic interrogative words, often expressing disbelief or puzzlement in mainly rhetorical questions: Whoever could have done such a thing? Wherever has he gone?
  • To form free relative clauses, as in I'll do whatever you do, Whoever challenges us shall be punished, Go to wherever they go. In this use, the nominal -ever words (who(m)ever, whatever, whichever) can be regarded as indefinite pronouns or as relative pronouns.
  • To form adverbial clauses with the meaning "no matter where/who/etc.": Wherever they hide, I will find them.

Some of these words have also developed independent meanings, such as however as an adverb meaning "nonetheless"; whatsoever as an emphatic adverb used with no, none, any, nothing, etc. (I did nothing wrong whatsoever); and whatever in its slang usage.

Other languages

A frequent class of interrogative words in several other languages is the interrogative verb:

날씨가

Nalssi-ga

Weather-NOM

어떻습니까?

eotteo-sseumni-kka?

be.how-POL5-INTERR

날씨가 어떻습니까?

Nalssi-ga eotteo-sseumni-kka?

Weather-NOM be.how-POL5-INTERR

"How's the weather?"

Chi

You

yaa-vch

do.what-CONC

jaahan

small

huuhed

child

bish

not

gej

that

bi

I

bod-jii-ne

think-PROG-NPAST

Chi yaa-vch jaahan huuhed bish gej bi bod-jii-ne

You do.what-CONC small child not that I think-PROG-NPAST

"Whatever you do, I think you’re not a small child." (Example taken from an Internet forum)

Australian Aboriginal languages

Interrogative pronouns in Australian Aboriginal languages are a diverse set of lexical items with functions extending far beyond simply the formation of questions (though this is one of their uses). These pronominal stems are sometimes called ignoratives or epistememes because their broader function is to convey differing degrees of perceptual or epistemic certainty. Often, a singular ignorative stem may serve a variety of interrogative functions that would be expressed by different lexical items in, say, English through contextual variation and interaction with other morphology such as case-marking. In Jingulu, for example, the single stem nyamba may come to mean 'what,' 'where,' 'why,' or 'how' through combination with locative, dative, ablative, and instrumental case suffixes:

nyamba

IGNOR

nyamarni

2SG.ERG

manjku

skin.name

nyamba nyamarni manjku

IGNOR 2SG.ERG skin.name

What skin are you?

nyamba-mbili-kaji

IGNOR-LOC-through

mankiyi-mindi-ju

sit-1DU.INCL-do

nyamba-mbili-kaji mankiyi-mindi-ju

IGNOR-LOC-through sit-1DU.INCL-do

Where are we sitting?

Nyamba-rna

IGNOR-DAT

arrkuja-nga-nku-ju

scratch-1SG-REFL-do

Nyamba-rna arrkuja-nga-nku-ju

IGNOR-DAT scratch-1SG-REFL-do

Why are you scratching?

Nyamba-arndi-kaji

IGNOR-INST-through

nya-rriyi-rni

2SG-go.FUT-FOC

Nyamba-arndi-kaji nya-rriyi-rni

IGNOR-INST-through 2SG-go.FUT-FOC

How will you go?

(Adapted from Pensalfini[2])

Other closely related languages, however, have less interrelated ways of forming wh-questions with separate lexemes for each of these wh-pronouns. This includes Wardaman, which has a collection of entirely unrelated interrogative stems: yinggiya ‘who,’ ngamanda ‘what,’ guda ‘where,’ nyangurlang ‘when,’ gun.garr-ma ‘how many/what kind.’[3]

Mushin (1995)[4] and Verstraete (2018)[5] provide detailed overviews of the broader functions of ignoratives in an array of languages. The latter focuses on the lexeme ngaani in many Paman Languages which can have a Wh-like interrogative function but can also have a sense of epistemic indefiniteness or uncertainty like 'some' or 'perhaps;' see the following examples from Umpithamu:

Wh-question

Ngaani-ku

IGNOR-DAT

mi’athi-ngka=uurra-athungku

cry-PRS=2PL.NOM-1SG.ACC

Ngaani-ku mi’athi-ngka=uurra-athungku

IGNOR-DAT cry-PRS=2PL.NOM-1SG.ACC

Why are you all crying for me?

Adnominal / Determiner

yukurun

gear

ngaani

IGNOR

yitha-n=antyampa

leave-PST=1PL.EXCL.NOM

kuura

behind

yukurun ngaani yitha-n=antyampa kuura

gear IGNOR leave-PST=1PL.EXCL.NOM behind

We left some gear behind

Adverbial

Yupa

today

miintha

good

iluwa

3SG.NOM

ngaani

IGNOR

ngama-l

see-IMPERF

Yupa miintha iluwa ngaani ngama-l

today good 3SG.NOM IGNOR see-IMPERF

Perhaps she is better today.

(Verstraete 2018)

See also

References

  1. ^ Finnish has vowel harmony, see more here
  2. ^ Pensalfini, Rob. 2003. A Grammar of Jingulu : an Aboriginal language of the Northern Territory. Canberra ACT: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University.
  3. ^ Merlan, Francesca. (1994). A grammar of Wardaman : a language of the Northern Territory of Australia. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-012942-6. OCLC 28926390.
  4. ^ Mushin, Liana (June 1995). "Epistememes in Australian languages∗". Australian Journal of Linguistics. 15 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1080/07268609508599514. ISSN 0726-8602.
  5. ^ Verstraete, Jean-Christophe (2018-09-10), Olmen, Daniël; Mortelmans, Tanja; Brisard, Frank (eds.), "'Perhaps' in Cape York Peninsula", Aspects of Linguistic Variation, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, pp. 247–268, doi:10.1515/9783110607963-010, ISBN 978-3-11-060796-3

interrogative, word, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, english, speaking, world, represent, w. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the English speaking world and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Interrogative word news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message An interrogative word or question word is a function word used to ask a question such as what which when where who whom whose why whether and how They are sometimes called wh words because in English most of them start with wh compare Five Ws They may be used in both direct questions Where is he going and in indirect questions I wonder where he is going In English and various other languages the same forms are also used as relative pronouns in certain relative clauses The country where he was born and certain adverb clauses I go where he goes It can also be used as a modal since question words are more likely to appear in modal sentences like Why was he walking A particular type of interrogative word is the interrogative particle which serves to convert a statement into a yes no question without having any other meaning Examples include est ce que in French li li in Russian czy in Polish chi chy in Ukrainian ĉu in Esperanto aya آیا in Persian ক ki in Bengali 嗎 吗 ma in Mandarin Chinese mi mi in Turkish pa in Ladin か ka in Japanese 까 kka in Korean ko ko 1 in Finnish and da li da li in Serbo Croatian Is it true that would be a similar construct in English Such particles contrast with other interrogative words which form what are called wh questions rather than yes no questions For more information about the grammatical rules for forming questions in various languages see Interrogative Contents 1 In English 1 1 Interrogative determiner 1 2 Interrogative pronoun 1 3 Interrogative adverb 1 4 Yes no questions 1 5 Etymology 1 6 Forms with ever 2 Other languages 2 1 Australian Aboriginal languages 3 See also 4 ReferencesIn English EditInterrogative words in English can serve as interrogative determiners interrogative pronouns or interrogative adverbs Certain pronominal adverbs may also be used as interrogative words such as whereby or wherefore Interrogative determiner Edit The interrogative words which what and whose are interrogative determiners when used to prompt the specification of a presented noun or noun phrase such as in the question Which farm is the largest where the interrogative determiner which prompts specification of the noun farm In the question Whose gorgeous pink painting is that whose is the interrogative personal possessive determiner prompting a specification for the possessor of the noun phrase gorgeous pink painting Interrogative pronoun Edit The interrogative words who whom whose what and which are interrogative pronouns when used in the place of a noun or noun phrase In the question Who is the leader the interrogative word who is a interrogative pronoun because it stands in the place of the noun or noun phrase the question prompts e g the king or the woman with the crown Similarly in the question Which leads to the city center the interrogative word which is an interrogative pronoun because it stands in the place of a noun or noun phrase e g the road to the north or the river to your east Note which is an interrogative pronoun not an interrogative determiner because there is no noun or noun phrase present to serve as a determiner for Consequently in the question Which leads to the city center the word which is an interrogative pronoun when in the question Which road leads to the city center the word which is an interrogative determiner for the noun road Interrogative adverb Edit The interrogative words where when how why whether whatsoever and the more archaic whither and whence are interrogative adverbs when they modify a verb In the question How did you announce the deal the interrogative word how is an interrogative adverb because it modifies the verb did past tense of to do In the question Why should I read that book the interrogative word why is an interrogative adverb because it describes the verb should Note interrogative adverbs always describe auxiliary verbs such as did do should will must or might Yes no questions Edit Yes no questions can begin with an interrogative particle such as A conjugation of be e g Are you hungry A conjugation of do e g Do you want fries see Do support In questions A conjugation of another auxiliary verb including contractions e g Can t you move any faster English questions can also be formed without an interrogative word as the first word by changing the intonation or punctuation of a statement For example You re done eating Etymology Edit Ultimately the English interrogative pronouns those beginning with wh in addition to the word how derive from the Proto Indo European root kwo or kwi the former of which was reflected in Proto Germanic as xwa or khwa citation needed due to Grimm s law These underwent further sound changes and spelling changes notably wh cluster reductions resulting in the initial sound being either w in most dialects or h how who and the initial spelling being either wh or h how This was the result of two sound changes hw gt h before uː how who and hw gt w otherwise and the spelling change from hw to wh in Middle English The unusual pronunciation versus spelling of who is because the vowel was formerly aː and thus it did not undergo the sound change in Old English but in Middle English following spelling change the vowel changed to uː and it followed the same sound change as how before it but with the Middle English spelling unchanged In how Old English hu from Proto Germanic xwō the w merged into the lave of the word as it did in Old Frisian hu hō Dutch hoe how but it can still be seen in Old Saxon hwō Old High German hwuo German wie how In English the gradual change of voiceless stops into voiceless fricatives phase 1 of Grimm s law during the development of Germanic languages is responsible for wh of interrogatives Although some varieties of American English and various Scottish dialects still preserve the original sound i e ʍ rather than w most have only the w The words who whom whose what and why can all be considered to come from a single Old English word hwa reflecting its masculine and feminine nominative hwa dative hwam genitive hwaes neuter nominative and accusative hwaet and instrumental masculine and neuter singular hwȳ later hwi respectively Other interrogative words such as which how where whence or whither derive either from compounds which coming from a compound of hwa what who and lic like or other words from the same root how deriving from hu The Proto Indo European root also directly originated the Latin and Romance form qu in words such as Latin qui which and quando when it has also undergone sound and spelling changes as in French qui which with initial k and Spanish cuando with initial kw Forms with ever Edit Most English interrogative words can take the suffix ever to form words such as whatever and wherever Older forms of the suffix are so and soever as in whoso and whomsoever These words have the following main meanings As more emphatic interrogative words often expressing disbelief or puzzlement in mainly rhetorical questions Whoever could have done such a thing Wherever has he gone To form free relative clauses as in I ll do whatever you do Whoever challenges us shall be punished Go to wherever they go In this use the nominal ever words who m ever whatever whichever can be regarded as indefinite pronouns or as relative pronouns To form adverbial clauses with the meaning no matter where who etc Wherever they hide I will find them Some of these words have also developed independent meanings such as however as an adverb meaning nonetheless whatsoever as an emphatic adverb used with no none any nothing etc I did nothing wrong whatsoever and whatever in its slang usage Other languages EditA frequent class of interrogative words in several other languages is the interrogative verb Korean 날씨가Nalssi gaWeather NOM어떻습니까 eotteo sseumni kka be how POL5 INTERR날씨가 어떻습니까 Nalssi ga eotteo sseumni kka Weather NOM be how POL5 INTERR How s the weather Mongolian ChiYouyaa vchdo what CONCjaahansmallhuuhedchildbishnotgejthatbiIbod jii nethink PROG NPASTChi yaa vch jaahan huuhed bish gej bi bod jii neYou do what CONC small child not that I think PROG NPAST Whatever you do I think you re not a small child Example taken from an Internet forum Australian Aboriginal languages Edit Interrogative pronouns in Australian Aboriginal languages are a diverse set of lexical items with functions extending far beyond simply the formation of questions though this is one of their uses These pronominal stems are sometimes called ignoratives or epistememes because their broader function is to convey differing degrees of perceptual or epistemic certainty Often a singular ignorative stem may serve a variety of interrogative functions that would be expressed by different lexical items in say English through contextual variation and interaction with other morphology such as case marking In Jingulu for example the single stem nyamba may come to mean what where why or how through combination with locative dative ablative and instrumental case suffixes nyambaIGNORnyamarni2SG ERGmanjkuskin namenyamba nyamarni manjkuIGNOR 2SG ERG skin nameWhat skin are you nyamba mbili kajiIGNOR LOC throughmankiyi mindi jusit 1DU INCL donyamba mbili kaji mankiyi mindi juIGNOR LOC through sit 1DU INCL doWhere are we sitting Nyamba rnaIGNOR DATarrkuja nga nku juscratch 1SG REFL doNyamba rna arrkuja nga nku juIGNOR DAT scratch 1SG REFL doWhy are you scratching Nyamba arndi kajiIGNOR INST throughnya rriyi rni2SG go FUT FOCNyamba arndi kaji nya rriyi rniIGNOR INST through 2SG go FUT FOCHow will you go Adapted from Pensalfini 2 Other closely related languages however have less interrelated ways of forming wh questions with separate lexemes for each of these wh pronouns This includes Wardaman which has a collection of entirely unrelated interrogative stems yinggiya who ngamanda what guda where nyangurlang when gun garr ma how many what kind 3 Mushin 1995 4 and Verstraete 2018 5 provide detailed overviews of the broader functions of ignoratives in an array of languages The latter focuses on the lexeme ngaani in many Paman Languages which can have a Wh like interrogative function but can also have a sense of epistemic indefiniteness or uncertainty like some or perhaps see the following examples from Umpithamu Wh question Ngaani kuIGNOR DATmi athi ngka uurra athungkucry PRS 2PL NOM 1SG ACCNgaani ku mi athi ngka uurra athungkuIGNOR DAT cry PRS 2PL NOM 1SG ACCWhy are you all crying for me Adnominal Determiner yukurungearngaaniIGNORyitha n antyampaleave PST 1PL EXCL NOMkuurabehindyukurun ngaani yitha n antyampa kuuragear IGNOR leave PST 1PL EXCL NOM behindWe left some gear behind Adverbial Yupatodaymiinthagoodiluwa3SG NOMngaaniIGNORngama lsee IMPERFYupa miintha iluwa ngaani ngama ltoday good 3SG NOM IGNOR see IMPERFPerhaps she is better today Verstraete 2018 See also EditFive Ws Indeterminate pronoun Sentence functionReferences Edit Finnish has vowel harmony see more here Pensalfini Rob 2003 A Grammar of Jingulu an Aboriginal language of the Northern Territory Canberra ACT Pacific Linguistics Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies The Australian National University Merlan Francesca 1994 A grammar of Wardaman a language of the Northern Territory of Australia Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 012942 6 OCLC 28926390 Mushin Liana June 1995 Epistememes in Australian languages Australian Journal of Linguistics 15 1 1 31 doi 10 1080 07268609508599514 ISSN 0726 8602 Verstraete Jean Christophe 2018 09 10 Olmen Daniel Mortelmans Tanja Brisard Frank eds Perhaps in Cape York Peninsula Aspects of Linguistic Variation Berlin Boston De Gruyter pp 247 268 doi 10 1515 9783110607963 010 ISBN 978 3 11 060796 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interrogative word amp oldid 1127889985, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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