The following questions can be asked of the various elements in this sentence:
How often did the children’s voices grow louder and louder?
Whose voices grew louder and louder every day?
What grew louder and louder every day?
Did the children’s voices grow louder and louder every day?
Did the children’s voices grow quieter and quieter every day?
How did the children’s voices grow every day?
Why did the children’s voices grow louder and louder every day?
Who always played his radio so loudly?
How often did Grandpa play his radio so loudly?
What did Grandpa always play so loudly?
Did Grandpa always play his radio so loudly?
Did Grandpa ever play his radio quietly?
Whose radio did Grandpa always play so loudly?
What happened every day as a result of Grandpa always playing his radio so loudly?
.
Now let’s look at the questions you can ask. Some can inquire into the subject of the sentence and the words that modify it:
Wessen Geschwister lebten in Darmstadt Whose brothers and sisters lived in Darmstadt
bei der Tante eines Freundes? with the aunt of a friend?
Wer lebte in Darmstadt bei der Tante Who lived in Darmstadt with the aunt of a
eines Freundes? friend?
Lebten seine Eltern in Darmstadt bei der Did his parents live in Darmstadt with the aunt Tante eines Freundes? of a friend?
Some questions will ask about location:
Wo lebten seine Geschwister? Where did his brothers and sisters live?
Some questions seek to distinguish between two persons or things by inquiring which or what:
In what city did his brothers and sisters live?
Some ja-nein questions seek to clarify information in the sentence:
Lebten seine Geschwister in Darmstadt bei dem Onkel eines Freundes?
Did his brothers and sisters live in Darmstadt with the uncle of a friend?
Lebten seine Geschwister in Darmstadt bei der Tante einer Freundin?
Did his brothers and sisters live in Darmstadt with the aunt of a girlfriend?
As you can see, at least eleven questions were able to be derived from a sentence
Wer and was
You are already aware that the interrogative pronouns wer and was are used for questions regard-ing people and things, respectively. Since these pronouns can be declined, the answers to ques-tions that use these words require the use of the same case as the interrogative pronoun. That is, the answer to wer will be a nominative case pronoun or noun such as die Frau, and the answer to wen will be an accusative case pronoun or noun such as den Mann.
Nominative:
|
wer
|
was
|
Accusative:
|
wen
|
was
|
Dative:
|
wem
|
wem
|
Genitive (Possessive):
|
wessen
|
wessen
|
Remember that the accusative and dative forms of was are not used after prepositions. Instead, a prepositional adverb is formed, for example: wofür (for what) or wovon (from what).