3
  • 1.) Money is all that I need.

  • 2.) Money is all what I need.

Which one is right? or which one have you not ever seen? and is there any difference between them?

But, what about the following?

  • If we consider the word "all" as an adverb, not as a noun, what would you like to say?

(In addition: I am wondering the reason why my question is labeled as an answered question, because if you look at it you will notice that they are not the same at all.)

F.E.
  • 6,208
nima
  • 467
  • Look here, nima. Though we don't usually respond to such basic questions ; ELL is a better choice. – Edwin Ashworth May 09 '14 at 10:33
  • I'm curious as to what the answer is too. [shrugs] -- That expression ("all what") could possibly be parsed as different types of constructions, depending on the context (and possibly grammar). "Money is all what she wants" is also interesting. In general, "all" could be a determiner, or a fused determiner-head, and as to which it is might be ambiguous. The word "what" could be an interrogative word, or a fused relative. Put them together ("all what"), and it might become ambiguous indeed, and perhaps not so easy to generalize. – F.E. May 09 '14 at 16:51

1 Answers1

-4

enter image description here Money is all that I need- indicates that as of now you need money to complete the activity/task you are intended to do. Money is all what I need- indicates greed for money that is, all you need is money and you don't care for feelings or such thing.

@nima_persian I am attaching an image that shows how to use That and What. See whether it's useful or it gives the reason you asked for.