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There is an online English class room which has an increasing number of teachers, most of whom I don't know at all.

I have to book a room by time, e.g. 8 pm Wednesday, to attend class. I don't know who will be assigned to that classroom before I booked a room successfully.

To convey the same idea, should I say

I don't know which teacher will be assigned to me

I don't know what teacher will be assigned to me

Eddie Kal
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PutBere
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  • The fact that the number is increasing makes no difference to the use of which or what. You could have a million teachers, and which would still be appropriate. The general criteria is that when you use which, you are referring to one out of an identified set of things (of any size); when you use what, you are referring to something in general, which isn't specified as coming from an identified set of things. – Jason Bassford May 30 '20 at 15:11
  • Think of it this way: if you are envisioning a particular group of people or things in the context of using the sentence, then which is generally more common; otherwise, it would be what. – Jason Bassford May 30 '20 at 15:14
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    @JasonBassford That is a wrong duplicate target about relative pronouns. This question is about determiners. – Eddie Kal May 30 '20 at 15:31
  • @JasonBassford That reminds me of a comment at that link. Phone numbers are a large, but limited set. You don't say "which is your phone number." – Jack O'Flaherty May 30 '20 at 15:40
  • @JackO'Flaherty You do if you hand somebody a phone book before asking. – Jason Bassford May 30 '20 at 19:30
  • @EddieKal Oops! That's not the one I'd meant to link. It should have been “at which time” vs. “at what time” – Jason Bassford May 30 '20 at 19:35
  • @JasonBassford I don't think so. – Jack O'Flaherty May 30 '20 at 21:20
  • @JackO'Flaherty If I hand you a phone book, and I ask *Which* is your phone number? that would sound natural. If I hand you a phone book, and I ask *What* is your phone number?, that would not sound natural at all. On the other hand, if I don't hand you a phone book, and I'm not presenting you with a choice, then *What* is your phone number? is the more natural phrase. It depends entirely on context. – Jason Bassford May 30 '20 at 21:26
  • @JasonBassford If I'm a police investigator, and I have a phone book with ten or twenty numbers, and say "I have a book of phone numbers. I know one is yours! Which is it?", that might be natural. I can't imagine someone handing a person a city directory and saying, "Which is your phone number?" – Jack O'Flaherty May 30 '20 at 21:35

1 Answers1

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"Which" is more appropriate for referring to one of a known small set, for example, "There are five teachers. I wonder which of them will be assigned." I think "what teacher" fits the situation you describe.

Jack O'Flaherty
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