I know that they have same meaning, but when can i use whatever, instead of anything Whatever year it is whatever day it is etc. For example in this phrase
Carol Burnett Whatever GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY
I'll write about whatever, whatever is right
The american heritage dictionary seems to allow both
Both whatever and what ever may be used in sentences such as whatever (or what ever) made her say that The same is true of the forms whoever, whenever, wherever, and however. I'm a bit confused with two similar expressions in the title For whatever reason= meaning some kind of reason, whatever is used as an adjective modifying the noun reason whatever the reason= meaning whatever the reason is/no matter what the reason is, is being.
I always hear people say 'whatever comes in the future.' i want to know whether the followings are correct as well Whatever will come in the future Whatever may come in the future I would like to know your opinion about the difference,in meaning and usage (if there is any of it), between whatsoever and whatever
Or whatever suits you best
If both sentences are correct, do they have the same meaning? 'the fact remains that, for whatever reason, the job was not completed on time' In this case, you have a prepositional phrase (introduced by 'for') and no verb has been omitted. Whatever the answer says the actor will goes for whichever of the two tricks ( that he has planned), so it should be whichever
I don't think i agree I think the speaker intends to mean The actor has the first two planned and as for the 3rd, the 4th and so on, he will goes for whatever, so d (whatever) is the right choice. Good morning or good afternoon, whatever the time you hear this
However, the suggestion in #7 sounds the most natural to me
I realize that it may be hard to understand why we use a dummy it in whatever time it is, but that is the normal way to express such ideas