Who's and whose are easy to confuse.
Who's means who is or who has.
Whose shows possession (e. g. , never trust a doctor whose plants have died).
The correct choice is whose.
So what is the difference between whose and who's?
The word whose is the possessive form of the pronoun who.
It is used in questions to ask who owns something, has.
Who's is a contraction of who is, as in who's there?
And the friend who's calling, or of who has, as in who's got the time? and the friend who's helped before.
Whoville, sometimes written as who-ville, is a fictional town created by author theodor seuss geisel, under the name dr.
Whoville appeared in the 1954 book horton hears a who!
And the 1957.