Interrogative determiners are also known as interrogative adjectives or question words. They are used in question form. They are used with nouns to ask a question. "What", "which", "whose" are interrogative determiners or adjectives.
What, which, and whose are interrogative determiners.
- used when asking for specific information from a broad group.
- used when asking for specific information from a specific group of people or set.
- used when asking to which person something belongs to.
Directions: Choose the correct answer
1)
Person A: __________ house keys are these?
Person B: Those keys are mine.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
2)
Person A: __________ do you like to do on the weekend?
Person B: I enjoy hiking on the weekend.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
3)
Person A: __________ student is your favorite?
Person B: I don't have a favorite student.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
4)
Person A: __________ time did it start?
Person B: It started at 5 o'clock.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
5)
Person A: __________ car are we taking?
Person B: We are taking John's car.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
6)
Person A: __________ room do you prefer?
Person B: I prefer the room facing north.
a. What
b. Which
c. Whose
Directions: Select the correct sentence.
1) a. Which road should we take?
b. Whose road should we take?
2) a. Whose keys did you find?
b. What keys did you find?
3) a. Whose hospital is being remodeled?
b. Which hospital is being remodeled?
4) a. What child are you babysitting tonight?
b. Whose child are you babysitting tonight?
5) a. What TV shows do you like?
b. Whose TV shows do you like?
6) a. What kind of car do you drive?
b. Which kind of car do you drive?
Quiz 1 Answers
1) c. Whose
2) a. What
3) b. Which
4) a. What
5) c. Whose
6) b. Which
Quiz 2 Answers
1) A
2) A
3) B
4) B
5) A
6) A