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Which

Which is a word in English that can function as a determiner or as a relative pronoun, and occasionally in interrogative questions. As a determiner, which introduces a noun phrase such as which car or which books. As a relative pronoun, which introduces a relative clause, as in the book which I read. In questions, which asks for a selection from a known set, as in which option should we choose.

In relative clauses, which typically refers to things or animals rather than people (who, whom, or that

In questions, which is used when the set of possible answers is known or limited. It contrasts

Etymology traces which to Old English and Proto-Germanic roots, related to other Germanic languages. See also

are
more
common
for
people).
It
can
introduce
restrictive
clauses,
where
the
information
identifies
a
specific
entity,
or
nonrestrictive
clauses,
which
add
extra
information
and
are
set
off
by
commas,
as
in
The
report,
which
was
published
yesterday,
was
well
received.
In
American
English,
that
is
often
preferred
for
restrictive
clauses,
while
which
is
common
in
nonrestrictive
clauses;
British
usage
is
more
flexible
but
often
uses
that
for
restrictive
clauses
as
well.
with
what,
which
asks
about
a
broader,
more
open
set
of
possibilities.
Examples
include
Which
color
do
you
prefer?
Which
of
these
books
did
you
read?
Some
contexts
also
use
whichever
as
a
compound
determiner
or
pronoun,
extending
the
idea
of
choice
to
a
broader
range.
that,
who,
whom,
and
which
forms
the
family
of
wh-
words
used
for
asking
questions
and
introducing
relative
clauses.