You’re scrolling through your phone's camera roll. You swipe past a hundred blurry concert photos, screenshots of memes, and bad selfies. Then you stop.
It's a photo of a cheap, slightly run-down coffee shop from three years ago. It’s not a great picture. But you're not seeing a place. You're feeling the entire vibe of that afternoon.
Textbooks say English has words to describe nouns. This is a lie.
Or at least, it’s not the full story. English also has a set of "cheat codes" for describing the invisible bubble around a noun—the memories, feelings, and events that are stuck to it.
These aren't just describing words. They are world-building words. And there are only three you need to know for 99% of daily life: where, when, and why.
The Location Tag for Your Memories
Most people learn where, when, and why as question words. Where is the station?[TRANS]. When does the movie start?[TRANS]. Why did you do that?[TRANS].
This is Level 1.
Level 10 is using them to connect a simple noun to a whole story. They act like a tag, linking a person, place, or time to the drama that unfolded there.
They turn a boring noun into a movie scene.
That's the park where I had my first kiss.
I miss 2019, when we could travel without thinking twice.
More Than Just Information
The pivot is realizing these words aren’t just for facts. They are for feelings.
A less skilled speaker might use two separate, clunky sentences. That is the cafe. We broke up in that cafe.[TRANS]. It’s technically correct, but it has no flow. It’s like two separate photos.
Using a relative adverb stitches them together into a single, emotionally charged memory. It creates a smooth, cinematic flashback.
This is how you add texture to your stories and signal that a place or time has a deeper meaning to you.
He never explained the reason why he suddenly quit his job.
I'll never forget the moment when I realized I was in the wrong city.
The Emotional GPS
Think of these words as a kind of emotional GPS.
A regular GPS gives you a location: "Starbucks on 5th Avenue." It's a cold, hard fact.
An emotional GPS gives you the story at that location. It doesn't just point to the cafe; it points to the cafe where we used to talk for hours[TRANS]. It doesn't just show you a date on a calendar; it shows you the summer when everything felt possible[TRANS].
Where, when, and why don't just modify a noun. They create a mini-dimension attached to that noun. They let you step inside the memory, not just observe it from a distance. They transform a simple label ("the park," "that year") into an arena where life actually happened.
This is the hidden engine behind nostalgia, regret, and fond memories.
The Golden Rule: Stop describing the thing. Start describing the world that happened around the thing. Use where, when, and why to build a stage, and then put your story on it.
View Comprehensive Vocabulary List
This is the house where I grew up.
This is the house where I grew up.
I remember a time when we didn't have smartphones.
I remember a time when we didn't have smartphones.
The reason why I'm late is that the train was delayed.
The reason why I'm late is that the train was delayed.