Do I use who or whom in this sentence?
Do I use who or whom in this sentence?
How to use who and whom correctly? The answer is simple: If you can replace the word with “he” or “she” then you should use who. However, if you can replace it with “him” or “her,” use whom.
Who or whom I fell in love with?
Most English speakers don’t use “whom” except in formal writing. And in this case you don’t need the “whom” at all. Instead, use: “The woman he fell in love with left him last month.”
Who or whom do you like the most?
“Whom do you like?” is correct. “Who do you like,” though ungrammatical, is used much more commonly. Whom should be used to refer to the object of a verb or preposition. When in doubt, try this simple trick: If you can replace the word with “he” or “’she,” use who.
Who do I feel or whom I feel?
Whom cannot be the subject of “are necessary: it has to be “who”.
Who vs whom exercises?
Choose the correct answer (who or whom?)
- To. who. whom. have you offered the flowers?
- Who. Whom. wrote that beautiful love poem?
- I just want to know. who. whom. made this delicious dish.
- Do you know the man. who. whom.
- My parents will accept. whoever. whomever.
- For. who. whom.
- He is a kind of person for. who. whom.
- Tell me, who. whom.
Who or whom are you talking to?
“”Whom are you talking to” is grammatically correct, with “whom” in the objective case, the direct object of the transitive verb “”talking to”.
Who or whom do you trust?
“Whom can I trust?” is formally accurate, yet both are informally acceptable. In formal grammar, the correct choice would be “whom” because we use the pronoun “who” to refer to the subject of a sentence while “whom” refers to the object of a verb or preposition.
Who I respect or whom I respect?
The Quick Answer: When to Use Who and Whom If a question can be answered with him, the pronoun whom is correct—just remember that both words end with an -m!
Who or whom do I look like?
You are correct about examples 1-1 through 1-4 – whom is the “correct” word, though in modern usage, who is usually used when whom would be appropriate. “Whom does he look like?” would probably sound affected or overly formal to a modern audience.
Who I miss or whom I miss?
8. Who We Miss or Whom We Miss? Whom we miss is correct, not who we miss. Who refers to the subject while whom refers to the object of the preposition or verb.
Who do you live with or whom do you live with?
“Whom do you live with” is technically correct, because when you have the preposition “with”, you would use the object form, “whom”. “Who” is for subjects. Another form of the correct sentence would be “With whom do you live?”