Upon assembling for the evening performance, the girls are dressed by a practical costumer, whose business it is to see that each one wears her costume properly.
On each side of this door is a detective of great experience, whose business it is to see that none of the employes carry away with them any of the property of the house.
These towers are now used to lodge men, whose business it is to sally forth, not upon Jacobins, but upon smugglers!
They were intended for a priest, a main part of whose business it was to distribute the tithes amongst the poor and the strangers!
It is a good, plain country town, or settlement of tradesmen, whose business is that of supplying the wants of the cultivators of the soil.
At the Bar it torments the Bench, whose Business it is to cut off all Superfluities in what is spoken before it by the Practitioner; as well as several little Pieces of Injustice which arise from the Law it self.
Sentiments which raise Laughter, can very seldom be admitted with any Decency into an Heroic Poem, whose Business it is to excite Passions of a much nobler Nature.
So any person may be legally the servant of another, in whose business, and under whose order, direction, and control, he is acting for the time being.
An under officer of a church, whose business is to take care of the church building and the vessels, vestments, etc.
Formerly, an interior officer on board of British ships of war, whose business it was to see that the ship was kept clean.
Annalists were appointed in each of the principal communities, whose business it was to record the most important events which occurred in them.
With each company was an old harridan, whose business was to show the faces of her troop to any man desiring a companion, and to receive his payment when the selection was made.
And not a few of the lupinaria kept a cashier, called villicus, whose business it was to discuss bargains with visitors, and to receive the money before turning the tablet.
Whose business or profession prevent their attendance in the morning.
But men, whose business is wholly domestic, have little or no use for any language but their own.
The first thing to be done was the election of four corner men, whose business it was to notch and place the logs.
The fatigue-party consisted of choppers, whose business it was to fell the trees and cut them off at proper lengths.
Mr. Simon was much interested, and with the instinct of the true hunter, whose business it is to hunt death for the sake of life, began to think whether here might not be another prepared to receive.
The fields lay about all wet, but there was the sun above them, whose business it was to dry them.
There shall be in each province an intendant, whose business will be to levy the miri, the feddam, and the other contributions which formerly belonged to the Mamelukes, but which now belong to the French Republic.
There was an inspector of the military schools, whose business it was to make an annual report on each pupil, whether educated at the public expense or paid for by his family.
There are inspectors in the docks, whose business it is to examine the coffee and send specimens of it to the broker's office in the city.
She is too much under the influence of some squalid Oriental who carries his pedlar's basket, or whose business is to buy broken glass for sulphur matches Meanwhile Corellia is a blue-stocking, as bad as a précieuse with a salon.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "whose business" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.