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How

How is a versatile word in the English language used to ask about the manner, method, or degree of something. As a question word, it seeks information about the way in which an action is performed, a process occurs, or a result is achieved. It can also introduce exclamations or relative clauses in indirect speech, and it appears in fixed phrases such as "how come" or "how long."

In grammar, how functions primarily as an adverb or a conjunction in indirect speech. It can modify

Etymology: "how" derives from Old English hu, related to German wie and Dutch hoe, all from a

See also: how-to, interrogatives, know-how.

verbs,
adjectives,
or
other
adverbs:
"How
did
you
solve
it?"
"How
quickly
the
car
accelerated
was
impressive."
In
indirect
questions,
it
is
embedded
in
reporting
clauses:
"She
asked
how
the
project
would
proceed."
The
word
can
also
operate
as
a
noun
in
the
phrase
"know-how,"
referring
to
practical
knowledge
or
expertise,
and
in
"the
how
of
something"
to
discuss
the
manner
of
doing
it.
Proto-Germanic
root
for
inquiry
into
manner.
Its
usage
has
expanded
in
modern
English
to
cover
abstract
degrees
(how
much,
how
far)
and
to
form
idiomatic
expressions.