Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What special interrogative words are used in English to ask about warm weather?

What special interrogative words are used in English to ask about warm weather?

What weather: What weather?

Common special questions are the words that must be included in special questions (the first one at the beginning). Answer different general questions, and the answers usually include time, place, name, price, reason, etc. Common interrogative words.

Where: where (adverbial)

What: What?

Ask the time (answer with At/ On ... and so on. )

Which: which, which?

Who: who (with he is to answer ... she is ... they are ... and so on. )

Who: Who (accusative)

Whose: whose (the answer is .. these/those are and so on. )

Why: Why (use because answer, ask why)

How about it: How about it (answer with adjectives and ask the degree)

Note: the beginning of special interrogative words is generally wh or h.[ 1]

Three common interrogative phrases

What time: ask the time.

What color: What color (predicate)

What weather: What weather?

What subject: what subject?

What job: What occupation?

How fast: how fast (speed)

How much: How much?

How long: How long (available time, how long will it take)

What is the price?

How long: How many times (ask frequency) (frequency adverb)

How far: How far?

How long: How long?

How old: How old?

4 sample editing

How many children are there in the classroom?

How many children are there in the classroom?

Where is my blue shirt?

Where is my blue shirt?

What's your favorite animal?

What animal do you like best?

What is this?

What's going on here?

How old are you?

How old are you?

Introduction to special problems [1-2]

What kind of special questions are guided?

Example 1

Example 2

What color is your pen? What color is your pen?

What is your job? What do you do?

This leads to special interrogative sentences.

Which box is red? Which box is red?

Which is your cat? Which is your cat?

How to guide special interrogative sentences

How are you? How are you?

How is Jim? How is Jim?

Special interrogative sentences guided by WHO

Who are you? Who are you?

Who is Jim? Who is Jim?

Special interrogative sentences guided by Where

Where is your coat? Where is your coat?

Where is Jim? Where is Jim?

Special interrogative sentences guided by When

When is the movie? When is the movie?

When is the class? When is the class?

Who led the special interrogative sentence?

Whose book is that? Whose book is that?

Whose dog is this? Whose dog is this?