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词汇 who's
释义

Definition of who's in English:

who's

contractionhuːzhuz
  • 1Who is.

    同who is

    who's that?

    那是谁?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • After all - who's to say that any two people hear sound in exactly the same way?
    • It had a fantastic chef, Kam Po But, who's still there and still producing marvellous food.
    • No-one wants to give a chance to somebody who's not guaranteed to be perfect.
    • I'd be very interested to hear from anyone else who's involved in this project.
    • So my Dad calls in after a trip to visit Aunty Wilma, who's recovering from a stroke.
    • My partner, who's a chef too, also takes food home, so there's a lot of variety.
    • The film doesn't necessarily need Jason Mewes, but it needs someone who's funny.
    • Oh yeah, and Catherine Deneuve, who's wonderful in pretty much everything she does.
    • It's about a nomadic storyteller in India named Bram who's preoccupied with Dracula.
    • What's interesting about The Apprentice is that there's no way of knowing who's going to win.
    • Much of Saturday night was spent chatting to Cath, who's heading off to India for a few weeks.
    • I have breakfast with Eric and Elizabeth, who's still at school, then get ready for work.
    • It's not necessarily who turns up, but it's who's there for you when you really need them that counts.
    • God bless the occasional generous law firm partner who's at home to take the call.
    • Time's up and he turns to the task of waking a nephew who's now snoring into his New York Yankees baseball cap.
    • Then there's the blogger who's only blogging because he has no one else to turn to.
    • It's all very well saying that youngsters should have free education, but who's going to pay for it?
    • Women don't mind a man fussing with his hair, but they do mind a man who's too vain to get his hands dirty
    • It's a new experience, living with someone who's a better cook than me, but one I could get used to.
    • A cynic may say it's the feeling of acceptance that comes over a condemned man who's resigned to his fate.
    1. 1.1 Who has.
      同who is
      who's done the reading?

      谁已读过了?

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Every player who's ever had a cruciate injury, including myself, had done exactly the same.
      • I've met an awful lot of drug dealers but I've never met one who's retired to Devon.
      • Laying in a bed close to the burned girl is a man who's been shot three times in the torso.
      • Anyone who's known me for any length of time will remember that I have trouble with my right ear from time to time.
      • I feel like the naughty schoolboy who's been called to the headmistress's office.
      • I join the end of the queue, nodding at a former stranger who's almost become a friend over recent months.
      • For anyone who's ever had a dispute with a neighbour over property, the law could be a boon.
      • He laughs as he says it, but he actually does have the air of a kid who's gotten away with something.
      • It's bloody cold and I get stuck holding Lucy who's already been celebrating quite hard.
      • Anyone who's grown up with an alcoholic parent learns to dread celebrations.
      • He looks like an Essex car dealer who's just become an African tribal king.
      • Not much to ask, not least by anyone who's had to sit through The Quick and the Dead.
      • As anyone who's done it will tell you, backpacking is a great way to travel.
      • Surely no one who's actually read Watchmen wants to see this on the screen?
      • This is a man who's either performed with, or written songs for, everyone in the Soul and Blues world.
      • All that is by the by, as anyone who's been watching the news lately will tell you.
      • This is all the theory anyway, anyone who's frequented a pub knows that it doesn't really work that way.
      • Anyway, I'd better get back to annoying someone who's just bought a digital camera.
      • This alone is insulting to anyone who's lived both in Montreal proper and in a suburb.
      • I've not been one of the fortunate guys who's made a fortune out of the game.

Usage

A common written mistake is to confuse who's with whose. The form who's represents a contraction of ‘who is’ or ‘who has’, while whose is a possessive pronoun or determiner used in questions, as in whose is this? or whose turn is it?

Rhymes

abuse, accuse, adieux, amuse, bemuse, billets-doux, blues, booze, bruise, choose, Clews, confuse, contuse, cruise, cruse, Cruz, diffuse, do's, Druze, effuse, enthuse, excuse, fuse (US fuze), Hughes, incuse, interfuse, lose, Mahfouz, mews, misuse, muse, news, ooze, Ouse, perfuse, peruse, rhythm-and-blues, ruse, schmooze, snooze, suffuse, Toulouse, transfuse, trews, use, Vaduz, Veracruz, whose, youse

Definition of who's in US English:

who's

contractionho͞ozhuz
  • 1Who is.

    同who is

    who's that?

    那是谁?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A cynic may say it's the feeling of acceptance that comes over a condemned man who's resigned to his fate.
    • God bless the occasional generous law firm partner who's at home to take the call.
    • It's all very well saying that youngsters should have free education, but who's going to pay for it?
    • Much of Saturday night was spent chatting to Cath, who's heading off to India for a few weeks.
    • It's about a nomadic storyteller in India named Bram who's preoccupied with Dracula.
    • What's interesting about The Apprentice is that there's no way of knowing who's going to win.
    • Then there's the blogger who's only blogging because he has no one else to turn to.
    • After all - who's to say that any two people hear sound in exactly the same way?
    • Oh yeah, and Catherine Deneuve, who's wonderful in pretty much everything she does.
    • I have breakfast with Eric and Elizabeth, who's still at school, then get ready for work.
    • Time's up and he turns to the task of waking a nephew who's now snoring into his New York Yankees baseball cap.
    • It's a new experience, living with someone who's a better cook than me, but one I could get used to.
    • I'd be very interested to hear from anyone else who's involved in this project.
    • The film doesn't necessarily need Jason Mewes, but it needs someone who's funny.
    • It had a fantastic chef, Kam Po But, who's still there and still producing marvellous food.
    • So my Dad calls in after a trip to visit Aunty Wilma, who's recovering from a stroke.
    • My partner, who's a chef too, also takes food home, so there's a lot of variety.
    • No-one wants to give a chance to somebody who's not guaranteed to be perfect.
    • Women don't mind a man fussing with his hair, but they do mind a man who's too vain to get his hands dirty
    • It's not necessarily who turns up, but it's who's there for you when you really need them that counts.
    1. 1.1 Who has.
      同who is
      who's done the reading?

      谁已读过了?

      Example sentencesExamples
      • For anyone who's ever had a dispute with a neighbour over property, the law could be a boon.
      • It's bloody cold and I get stuck holding Lucy who's already been celebrating quite hard.
      • Anyway, I'd better get back to annoying someone who's just bought a digital camera.
      • Anyone who's grown up with an alcoholic parent learns to dread celebrations.
      • This is a man who's either performed with, or written songs for, everyone in the Soul and Blues world.
      • This is all the theory anyway, anyone who's frequented a pub knows that it doesn't really work that way.
      • He looks like an Essex car dealer who's just become an African tribal king.
      • All that is by the by, as anyone who's been watching the news lately will tell you.
      • I've met an awful lot of drug dealers but I've never met one who's retired to Devon.
      • Laying in a bed close to the burned girl is a man who's been shot three times in the torso.
      • Not much to ask, not least by anyone who's had to sit through The Quick and the Dead.
      • Every player who's ever had a cruciate injury, including myself, had done exactly the same.
      • He laughs as he says it, but he actually does have the air of a kid who's gotten away with something.
      • I've not been one of the fortunate guys who's made a fortune out of the game.
      • As anyone who's done it will tell you, backpacking is a great way to travel.
      • Surely no one who's actually read Watchmen wants to see this on the screen?
      • Anyone who's known me for any length of time will remember that I have trouble with my right ear from time to time.
      • This alone is insulting to anyone who's lived both in Montreal proper and in a suburb.
      • I feel like the naughty schoolboy who's been called to the headmistress's office.
      • I join the end of the queue, nodding at a former stranger who's almost become a friend over recent months.

Usage

A common written mistake is to confuse who's with whose. The form who's represents a contraction of ‘who is’ or ‘who has’: who's going to feed the dog? I wonder who's left the light on again? The word whose is a possessive pronoun or adjective: whose is this? whose turn is it?
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