who
pronEtymology
From Middle English who, hwo, huo, wha, hwoa, hwa, from Old English hwā (dative hwām, genitive hwæs), from Proto-West Germanic *hwaʀ, from Proto-Germanic *hwaz, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷos, *kʷís. The sound change /hw/ > /h/ (without a corresponding change in spelling) was due to wh-cluster reduction after an irregular change of /ɑː/ to /oː/ in Middle English (instead of the expected /ɔː/) and further to /uː/ regularly in Early Modern English. A similar change occurred in two. Compare how, which underwent wh-reduction earlier (in Old English), and thus is spelt with h. Compare Scots wha, West Frisian wa, Dutch wie, Low German we, German wer, Swedish vem, Danish hvem, Norwegian Bokmål hvem, Norwegian Nynorsk kven, Icelandic hver.
Definitions
What person or people
What person or people; which person or people; asks for the identity of someone; used in a direct or indirect question.
- You're getting married‽ Who to? (direct question)
- I don't know who it is. (indirect question)
- Who says they care? —They themselves do.
Introduces a relative clause having a human antecedent.
- That's the man who works at the newsagent. (defining)
- My sister, who works in the accounts department, just got promoted to manager. (non-defining)
Whoever, he who, they who.
- Who insults my mother insults me.
- Give it to who deserves it.
- Who steals my purse steals trash.
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Also used with names of collective nouns that are groups of people, especially…
Also used with names of collective nouns that are groups of people, especially singularly-named musical groups or sports teams.
- Who are the Miami Heat?
A person under discussion
A person under discussion; a question of which person.
- A wham-bam caper flick, efficiently directed by Roger Donaldson, that fancifully revisits the mysterious whos and speculative hows of a 1971 London bank heist.
whose
- Who phone just rang?
Initialism of World Health Organization.
- Trump initiated the year-long withdrawal process from the WHO in 2020 but six months later his successor, President Joe Biden, reversed the decision.
Honorific alternative letter-case form of who, sometimes used when referring to God or…
Honorific alternative letter-case form of who, sometimes used when referring to God or another important figure who is understood from context.
- I make my pilgrimage to Thee O God, Who art the pilgrim's hope! Praised be the Virgin, sweet and pure! Be gracious to the pilgrimage.
The television show Doctor Who.
- After three event episodes in a row (the finale, Christmas special and season opener), “Tooth and Claw” is the first “regular” episode of Who we've had in a while.
- This is as wildly different to any episode of Who so far. It's fab.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for who. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA