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WHERE

Where is a common English word used to indicate location, to introduce questions about place, or to link clauses describing location or situation. Grammatically, it functions primarily as an adverb of place, and it can also appear as a relative adverb in relative clauses.

As an interrogative adverb, where appears in questions about location or position: Where is the library? It

As a relative adverb, where introduces a clause describing a place associated with a noun: This is

Etymology: Where derives from Old English hwær, from Proto-Germanic roots, with cognates in other Germanic languages.

Usage notes: In writing and linguistics, where is counted among interrogative, relative, and conjunctive functions. In

can
also
mean
“in
what
place”
or
be
extended
metaphorically
to
situations:
Where
there
is
smoke,
there
is
fire.
the
house
where
I
grew
up.
In
modern
English,
where
is
often
preferred
to
forms
like
“in
which”
or
“at
which”
in
everyday
speech,
though
those
alternatives
appear
in
formal
writing.
computing
and
data
management,
WHERE
is
the
name
of
a
clause
in
SQL
and
other
query
languages
used
to
specify
conditions
for
selecting
data.