When we want to ask a question in English, we often use special words called interrogative pronouns. These words help us ask about people, things, places, reasons, and more. They are short, simple, and used every day in English conversation.
Understanding interrogative pronouns is one of the first steps to building real questions in English. Once you know them, you can start communicating in a much more natural way.
Simple Examples to Get Started
Here are a few everyday questions using interrogative pronouns:
- Who is your teacher?
- What is your name?
- Where do you live?
- When does the class start?
- Why are you learning English?
- How are you today?
Each of these questions starts with a special word. That word is the interrogative pronoun. It tells us what kind of information we are looking for.
The Main Interrogative Pronouns in English
There are six main interrogative pronouns in English. Let us look at each one carefully.
| Pronoun | Used for | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Who | People | Who is she? |
| What | Things, ideas | What is this? |
| Where | Places | Where is the school? |
| When | Time | When is your birthday? |
| Why | Reasons | Why are you late? |
| How | Manner, quantity | How do you spell that? |
Who – Asking About People
We use who when we want to know about a person or a group of people.
- Who is your best friend?
- Who called you this morning?
- Who are those people?
What – Asking About Things or Information
We use what when we want to know about an object, an idea, or a piece of information.
- What is your job?
- What do you want for dinner?
- What time is it?
Where, When, Why and How
These four words each have a specific meaning:
- Where asks about a place: Where is the bus stop?
- When asks about time: When do you wake up?
- Why asks for a reason: Why do you like coffee?
- How asks about the way something is done: How do you make pasta?
Note that how can also be combined with other words: How much, how many, how long, how often. These combinations are very useful in daily English.
Why Interrogative Pronouns Matter
Learning interrogative pronouns is important because questions are a key part of communication. When you travel, study, work, or simply talk with people, you need to ask questions all the time.
Without these words, it is very hard to get information. Imagine not being able to ask where the train station is, or what something costs. These small words make a big difference.
They also help you have real conversations. When you ask a question, you invite the other person to speak. This is the heart of communication.
Comparison With Other Languages
If you speak French or Spanish, you will notice some similarities. But there are also some differences. Here is a quick comparison:
| English | French | Spanish |
|---|---|---|
| Who | Qui | Quién |
| What | Que / Quoi | Qué |
| Where | Où | Dónde |
| When | Quand | Cuándo |
| Why | Pourquoi | Por qué |
| How | Comment | Cómo |
One important difference is word order. In English, the interrogative pronoun always comes first, then the auxiliary verb, then the subject. For example: Where do you live? In French, the structure can be more flexible. In Spanish, question marks are also placed at the beginning of the sentence, which does not happen in English.
A Complete Example
Let us look at a short conversation that uses several interrogative pronouns:
- A: What is your name?
- B: My name is Sofia.
- A: Where are you from?
- B: I am from Brazil.
- A: Why are you in London?
- B: I am here to study English.
- A: How long have you been here?
- B: For two months.
This simple conversation shows how natural and useful interrogative pronouns are in real life.
Key Points to Remember
- Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions in English.
- The six main ones are: who, what, where, when, why, how.
- Each one asks about a different type of information.
- Who is for people. What is for things. Where is for places. When is for time. Why is for reasons. How is for manner or quantity.
- They always come at the beginning of the question in English.
- How can be combined with other words to make more specific questions.
Start practicing by writing your own questions using each of these words. The more you use them, the more natural they will feel!
Sources
- Quirk, R., Greenbaum, S., Leech, G., and Svartvik, J. (1985). A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. Longman.
- Murphy, R. (2019). English Grammar in Use (5th edition). Cambridge University Press.
- Biber, D., Conrad, S., and Leech, G. (2002). Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English. Pearson Education.