interrogative - meaning and definition. What is interrogative
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What (who) is interrogative - definition

GRAMMATICAL MOOD USED TO EXPRESS A QUESTION
Interrogative mood; Interrogative sentence; Interrogative sentences; Desu ka; Interrogative clause; Declarative question; Disjunctive question

interrogative         
a.
Interrogatory.
Interrogative         
·noun A word used in asking questions; as, who. which. why?.
II. Interrogative ·adj Denoting a question; expressed in the form of a question; as, an interrogative sentence; an interrogative pronoun.
interrogative         
[??nt?'r?g?t?v]
¦ adjective having the force of a question.
?Grammar used in questions. Contrasted with affirmative and negative.
¦ noun an interrogative word, e.g. how or what.
Derivatives
interrogatively adverb

Wikipedia

Interrogative

An interrogative clause is a clause whose form is typically associated with question-like meanings. For instance, the English sentence "Is Hannah sick?" has interrogative syntax which distinguishes it from its declarative counterpart "Hannah is sick". Also, the additional question mark closing the statement assures that the reader is informed of the interrogative mood. Interrogative clauses may sometimes be embedded within a phrase, for example: "Paul knows who is sick", where the interrogative clause "who is sick" serves as complement of the embedding verb "know".

Languages vary in how they form interrogatives. When a language has a dedicated interrogative inflectional form, it is often referred to as interrogative grammatical mood. Interrogative mood or other interrogative forms may be denoted by the glossing abbreviation INT.

Examples of use of interrogative
1. "Here are examples of interrogative sentences," states one grammar booklet in the curriculum he used, Accelerated Christian Education.
2. A generation brought up on Home & Away, surfing, flip–flops and the meaningless interrogative resembles its antipodean contemporaries more than its British forefathers.
3. It ain‘t what you say George W Bush never uses the word ‘torture‘. Instead, he talks about ‘special interrogative procedures‘. I like collecting verbiage like this.