✔ 最佳答案
first of all, you'll have to know about the "question pronouns" that are commonly used:
whose
what
where
which
whose comes from WHO, which means it is asking what person recieved the action. usually, you will find the personal pronoun in the answer (my, your, his, her, its, our....)
what will be used when you are asking for A THING that recieved the action, whether or not it is a living thing....e.g. a cat, a dog, an animal, a plant, a book.....
where is asking for A PLACE
which will usually be asking for a thing, which an option to choose from.
1. Where
in the answer, you can find 'drawer' which indicates the place
2. What
the answer suggested 'something' that 'you' are going to do
3. What
the answer 'textbook' is a type of book, so it is a category, which is considered a 'thing'
4. What
since destinations is a noun, which is considered as a 'thing', WHAT will be more appropriate here, instead of using WHERE
5. Whose
notice the 'my' in the answer, that gives you the hint of using WHOSE
6. Where
'on the table' in the answer indicates a place
8. Which
in this case, the answer showed that people are talking about different cats they have in front of them, which gives them a choice, so we use WHICH
9. Whose
"David's" indicates the goldfish belonging to david, who is a person, so WHOSE should be used.
10. What
this is the tricky one. instead of using WHEN which usually indicates time, we use WHAT. it is because TIME is considered a concrete "THING". you can rephrase the question as "what hour is it now", and the HOUR in this question clearly gives the sense of a thing.