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Who is the person who ask questions?
A questioner is someone who asks questions, especially in an official or formal capacity. When a detective interviews a suspect, she acts as a questioner. A questioner is also an interviewer, so if you’re producing a radio piece, asking people on the street various questions, you are a questioner.
Who asked you or whom asked?
Whom should be used to refer to the object of a verb or preposition. When in doubt, try this simple trick: If you can replace the word with “he”’ or “’she,” use who. If you can replace it with “him” or “her,” use whom. Who should be used to refer to the subject of a sentence.
How do you use asks in a sentence?
Asks In A Sentence
- Cloete asks himself, will they miss him?
- All that he asks is somewhere better to go to.
- He asks her to marry him, to flee with him.
- He asks for the earring he found, and with it its owner.
- A voice asks if they are content, and they say they are.
- She asks for ‘the pleasure of my company’!
Is it correct to ask who is this?
You would say “Who is this” because this is a Predicate Nominative and shares the same context as the subject. For example, both “Who is this?” (Subjective) and “Whom is that?” (Objective) are correct. Also, “Whose is this?” is also correct (Possessive).
What do we call a person who answers questions?
Noun. answerer (plural answerers) 1. a person or thing that answers or responds.
What to call a person who answers questions?
1 Answer. An answerer answers a question. A defendant (or their lawyer) tries to defend themselves against a criminal charge in court. A respondent (or their lawyer) responds to a motion in court.
Who I should ask or whom?
Is it “Who to Ask” or “Whom to Ask”? The grammatically correct way to phrase this is whom to ask. The phrase to ask really means should I ask. Whenever we need a pronoun that refers to the subject, we use who.
What can I say instead of ask?
appeal (to),
Who is who or that?
“Who’s” can be used as a contraction of “who is” Therefore “Who is that” and “Who is that girl” are both correct. It depends on how specific you want or need to be in identifying the person. You can say “who is that?” when you and your companion are looking at a specific person.
What do you call a person who asks questions?
People who ask questions get answers. A person who asks questions gets answers. . If who acts as an interrogative pronoun—heading a question—then the verb following who is almost always singular,* regardless of the verb agreement expected in the reply: Who asks questions? She asks questions. Many people ask questions. Who is hungry?
What is the difference between who ask and who ask?
Both are correct. In who ask, who is a plural pronoun while in who asks, it is a singular pronoun. “who asks” or “who ask”? If “Who” refers to one, then it is “asks;” if more than one, then it should be “ask.” A. Both of them are correct.
How do you ask someone a question in a sentence?
Ask (someone) + question. You can also use the structure “ask (someone)” followed by the actual question you asked, using who, what, when, where, how, why: I asked my kids who had made the mess in the kitchen.
Is it correct to say he always asks questions?
The word asks exists, but the usage “He always asks” does not. ( ask cannot be used without an object.) Say “He is always asking questions”. But you could certainly say “he always asks good questions in class.” For that matter, I think you could say “He always asks” if the object was understood but not stated.