RonPurewal Wrote:"What" doesn't stand for another noun in the sentence.
In fact, the whole purpose of "what", in this kind of usage, is to refer to something that is not specifically named in the sentence.
E.g.,
I don't know what you bought at the store.
Please tell me what you did last night.
Etc.
Hi Ron,
As you said, the purpose of "What", in this kind of usage, is to refer to something that is not specifically named in the sentence. But, I came across a sentence below.
His studies of ice-polished rocks in his Alpine homeland, far outside the range of present-day glaciers, led Louis Agassiz in 1837 to propose the concept of an age in which great ice sheets existed in what are now temperate areas
From what I understand, the what in the bold part refers to temperate areas.
How is this what different from the one you stated?
Please help. Thanks a ton (: