whodunwhat
English
Etymology
From who done what, modelled on whodunit.
Noun
whodunwhat (plural whodunwhats)
- A whodunit in which the nature of the crime is a mystery, as well as the identity of the perpetrator.
- 1993, Contemporary Dramatists (page 592)
- In Sleuth Anthony Shaffer created the whodunwhat, where not only the identity of the criminal but the nature of the crime — indeed, the reality and reliability of everything we've seen with our own eyes — is part of the mystery.
- 1997, Rain Taxi (volumes 2-4, page 27)
- Our narrator reads, rereads, and slowly realizes that ulterior "plots" are afoot; a whodunit develops into several whodunwhats; a murder may or may not have happened, or is yet to happen.
- 1999, Time (volume 153, issues 1-7, page 124)
- "It's not a whodunit — it's a whodunwhat," says Cris Barrish, a local reporter. And few foresaw that Capano's brothers Louis, 47, and Gerard, 36, squeezed by prosecutors and threatened with jail time, would turn on Capano in court […]
- 1993, Contemporary Dramatists (page 592)