The answer is A because they are to sentences that are being connected.
A. When do we get....?
B. How do you.... ?
C. Where is that....?
D. Where have you...?
E. Who is coming....?
F. When do you...?
G. What is his...?
H. What is she...?
I. What have you...?
J. What have you....?
K. Where did you...?
L. How did you...?
M. What is the time?
N. Who is the man...?
O. Where do you live?
P. When are you...?
Who - addressing something/someone like who is that? Who does this bike belongs to? Who won gold medal?
When - asking a question in terms of specific details like when did he come to Paris? When will he be back? When did he go shopping? When will I see him again? When is birthday?
How - asking for a reason to your question like how did he fail the test? How come you're not here with me?
What - to find something out like what's your name?
Where - asking of a place like where did we meet? E. G. In Paris
where did you find the book? E. G. Under the chair
Hope this helps!
Linking verbs link the subject to another word that renames or describes the subject.
Examples of linking verbs are: <em>be, become, seem, smell. </em>
For instance, in the sentence <em>Maria will become a doctor</em>, the subject, <em>Maria</em>, is linked to the word <em>doctor </em>which describes her.
Helping verbs are verbs which accompany the main verb and help to either form an interrogative or negative form, or they help in the formation of a tense. Examples of helping verbs are: <em>would</em>, <em>will</em>, <em>can</em>, <em>could</em>.
Action verbs are verbs which describe an action, they describe what the subject is doing, such as <em>run</em>, <em>eat</em>, <em>read</em>.
(Pronoun verbs do not exist as a category of verbs.)
I believe that the answer is A