释义 |
Definition of who's in English: who'scontractionhuːzhuz 1Who is. 同who is 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 Who has.
同who is 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.
UsageA 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? Rhymesabuse, 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'scontractionho͞ozhuz 1Who is. 同who is 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 Who has.
同who is 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.
UsageA 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? |