What vs. Which – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A1 » What vs. Which – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Exercises:   123456789101112

Read the conversation snippets below. Imagine you are a receptionist at a large company, welcoming a new colleague on their first day. You are asking about their job details and helping them find their office in your 3-story building. Choose the best word to fill in the blank.

1   Hello and welcome to the company! ______ is your new job title?

     (A) What

     (B) Which

     (C) How

     (D) Who

2   We have three floors in this building. ______ floor is your new office on?

     (A) What

     (B) Where

     (C) Which

     (D) Whose

 I need to print your security badge. ______ is your full name?

     (A) How

     (B) Which

     (C) Who

     (D) What

4   We have blue lanyards and black lanyards for the badges. ______ color do you want?

     (A) What

     (B) Which

     (C) Why

     (D) How

5   I need to register your vehicle for the parking lot. ______ kind of car do you drive?

     (A) How

     (B) What

     (C) Which

     (D) When

6   Are you in the Sales team or the Marketing team? ______ team are you joining?

     (A) Which

     (B) What

     (C) Who

     (D) Where

 I will show you to your desk. ______ time does your manager expect you to arrive today?

     (A) When

     (B) Which

     (C) How

     (D) What

 There are two elevators behind me. ______ elevator goes to the basement parking?

     (A) What

     (B) Where

     (C) Which

     (D) The which

 You have a special access code for the doors. Do you know ______ this code means?

     (A) How

     (B) What

     (C) Which

     (D) Why

10   I am making coffee for the new staff. ______ type do you prefer, espresso or cappuccino?

     (A) Which

     (B) What

     (C) Who

     (D) How

11   We have international clients from all over the world. ______ languages do you speak?

     (A) How

     (B) Which

     (C) What

     (D) Who

12   Look at this floor map. There are three empty desks. ______ desk do you want to sit at?

     (A) What

     (B) Where

     (C) Whose

     (D) Which

13   Please read the company manual. ______ do you think about our safety rules so far?

     (A) What

     (B) How

     (C) Which

     (D) Why

14   We have two department directors, Mr. Lee and Ms. Davis. ______ director is your boss?

     (A) What

     (B) Whom

     (C) Which

     (D) Who

15   In your opinion, ______ is the most important skill for your new position?

     (A) Which

     (B) What

     (C) How

     (D) Why

16   ______ of these two training documents do you want to read first?

     (A) Which

     (B) What

     (C) Who

     (D) Which of

17   I need to ask the IT department to install your programs. ______ software do you usually use?

     (A) Which

     (B) How many

     (C) Where

     (D) What

18   We have a morning work shift and an evening work shift. ______ shift are you working today?

     (A) What

     (B) Which

     (C) When

     (D) How

19   Let’s get a welcome gift for you. ______ do you want, a company mug or a company pen?

     (A) What

     (B) How

     (C) Which

     (D) Why

20   I have worked here for five years. ______ is the best thing about working in your industry?

     (A) What

     (B) Which

     (C) How

     (D) Where

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (A) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): “What” is used because there is an unlimited number of possible job titles in the world. It is an open question.
  • Error Analysis: (B) Which is a Common Mistake (only used when choosing from a limited, specific list). (C) How is a Structural Error (“How is your job title” is incorrect English). (D) Who is a Meaning Trap (used for people, not job names).

2  (C) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The options are strictly limited to the three floors in this specific building (Floor 1, 2, or 3). Because the choices are limited and known, we use “Which”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (B) Where is a Meaning Trap (“Where is your office?” is correct, but “Where floor” is grammatically wrong). (D) Whose is a Meaning Trap (asks about ownership).

3  (D) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): When asking for a name, the fixed English phrase is always “What is your name?”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) How is a classic Common Mistake for A1 learners translating directly from their native language. (B) Which is a Structural Error. (C) Who is a Meaning Trap (you can ask “Who are you?”, but not “Who is your name”).

4  (B) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): You are giving a specific, limited choice between two colors: blue or black.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake (used for unlimited choices). (C) Why and (D) How are Structural Errors in this context.

5  (B) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): Asking about the “kind of car” is a general question with hundreds of possible answers (brands, models, colors). Therefore, we use “What”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) Which is a Common Mistake. (A) How and (D) When are Structural/Meaning Errors.

6  (A) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The choice is restricted to exactly two options: the Sales team or the Marketing team.
  • Error Analysis: (B) What is a Common Mistake. (C) Who is a Meaning Trap (teams are not ‘who’). (D) Where is a Structural Error (“Where team” is incorrect).

7  (D) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): To ask for a specific hour on the clock, the correct English phrase is always “What time”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) When is a Meaning Trap (“When does your manager expect you” is correct, but “When time” is wrong). (B) Which is a Structural Error. (C) How is a Structural Error.

8  (C) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): You are talking about two specific elevators located right behind you. The options are physically limited.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (B) Where is a Meaning Trap. (D) The which is a Structural Error.

9  (B) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): Asking for the meaning of a word, code, or phrase is an open question. The standard structure is “What does it mean?”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) How is a very Common Mistake (“How does it mean” is incorrect in English). (C) Which is a Structural Error. (D) Why is a Meaning Trap.

10  (A) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The speaker gives a limited menu of exactly two options: espresso or cappuccino.
  • Error Analysis: (B) What is a Common Mistake. (C) Who and (D) How are Structural Errors.

11  (C) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): There are thousands of languages in the world. This is a general, open-ended question.
  • Error Analysis: (B) Which is a Common Mistake (only used if you gave a list: “Which language do you speak, French or German?”). (A) How and (D) Who are Structural Errors.

12  (D) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): You are looking at a floor map showing a limited number of empty desks (three). You want them to select a specific one from that small group.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (B) Where is a Meaning Trap. (C) Whose is a Meaning Trap.

13  (A) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): To ask for someone’s opinion, the standard English structure is “What do you think about…”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) How is a classic Common Mistake for learners who directly translate “How do you think”. (C) Which and (D) Why are Structural Errors here.

14  (C) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The choice is strictly limited to the two directors mentioned: Mr. Lee or Ms. Davis.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (D) Who is a Meaning Trap (you can say “Who is your boss?”, but you cannot combine it with the noun: “Who director”). (B) Whom is a Structural Error.

15  (B) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): Asking about “the most important skill” out of all possible skills is a broad, unlimited question.
  • Error Analysis: (A) Which is a Common Mistake. (C) How and (D) Why are Structural Errors.

16  (A) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): You are asking the person to choose from a limited set (“these two training documents”). The preposition “of” directly follows the gap, making “Which of” the correct phrase.
  • Error Analysis: (B) What is a Common Mistake (“What of” is incorrect here). (D) Which of is a Structural Error (the word “of” is already in the sentence, so choosing “Which of” would result in “Which of of”). (C) Who is a Meaning Trap.

17  (D) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Software” is a broad category with thousands of options. Because there is no limited list provided, we use “What”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) Which is a Common Mistake. (B) How many is a Meaning Trap (software is uncountable, so “How many” is grammatically wrong). (C) Where is a Structural Error.

18  (B) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The company only has two specific shifts (morning or evening). The choice is limited.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (C) When is a Meaning Trap (“When is your shift” is correct, but “When shift” is wrong). (D) How is a Structural Error.

19  (C) Which

  • Why it is correct (Key): The options are locked to two specific physical items: a company mug or a company pen.
  • Error Analysis: (A) What is a Common Mistake. (B) How and (D) Why are Structural Errors.

20  (A) What

  • Why it is correct (Key): Asking about “the best thing” is a completely open-ended question with infinite possible answers.
  • Error Analysis: (B) Which is a Common Mistake. (C) How and (D) Where are grammatically incorrect in this structure.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

When welcoming a new colleague or asking for information at work, knowing whether to use What or Which is very important. The rule at the A1 level depends on the number of choices:

  1. Use WHAT for Open Questions (Unlimited Choices):
    • Use What when you ask a general question and the answer could be almost anything.
    • Example:What is your job title?” (There are thousands of jobs).
    • Example:What software do you use?” (There are hundreds of programs).
  2. Use WHICH for Specific Choices (Limited Choices):
    • Use Which when the options are limited, restricted, or clearly visible. This usually happens when you give the listener 2 or 3 specific things to choose from.
    • Example:Which floor are you on?” (A building only has a specific, limited number of floors).
    • Example:Which team are you on, Sales or Marketing?” (The choice is locked to only these two).
  3. Fixed English Phrases (Never translate word-by-word):
    • Asking for a name: Always use “What is your name” (Never How is your name).
    • Asking for the time: Always use “What time” (Never When time).
    • Asking for an opinion: Always use “What do you think” (Never How do you think).
    • Asking for a definition: Always use “What does it mean” (Never How does it mean).

Exercises:   123456789101112

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