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  2. English interrogative words - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_interrogative_words

    The English interrogative words (also known as "wh words" or "wh forms") are words in English with a central role in forming interrogative phrases and clauses and in asking questions. The main members associated with open-ended questions are how, what, when, where, which, who, whom, whose, and why, all of which also have -ever forms (e.g ...

  3. Interrogative word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interrogative_word

    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'.

  4. Tag question - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tag_question

    English tag questions, when they have the grammatical form of a question, are atypically complex, because they vary according to at least three factors: the choice of auxiliary, the negation and the intonation pattern. This is unique among the Germanic languages, but the Celtic languages operate in a very similar way.

  5. Help:Searching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Searching

    If you have a question, then see Where to ask questions, which is a list of departments where our volunteers answer questions, any question you can possibly imagine. A common mistake is to type a natural-language question into the search box and expect an answer.

  6. 21 phrases you've been saying wrong your entire life - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-06-09-21-phrases-you-ve...

    We've listed the most commonly mispronounced words and sayings in the English language. While you may think you're a syntax expert, you'd be surprised how many of these you've actually been saying ...

  7. Controlled vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled_vocabulary

    These irrelevant items (false positives) are often caused by the inherent ambiguity of natural language. Take the English word football for example. Football is the name given to a number of different team sports. Worldwide the most popular of these team sports is association football, which also happens to be called soccer in

  8. Help:Searching/Features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Searching/Features

    locate words as near to each other as you specify. find wildcard expressions and regular expressions. A search matches what you see rendered on the screen and in a print preview. The raw "source" wikitext is searchable by employing the insource parameter. For these two kinds of searches a word is any string of consecutive letters and numbers ...

  9. Article (grammar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_(grammar)

    The words this and that (and their plurals, these and those) can be understood in English as, ultimately, forms of the definite article the (whose declension in Old English included thaes, an ancestral form of this/that and these/those). In many languages, the form of the article may vary according to the gender, number, or case of its noun. In ...