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Aug 6, 2010 · I can never figure out whether I should use who and whom. Most people use who for both colloquially, but some people say this is not correct. What’s the rule for u
Jul 5, 2019 · Sitting at the end of the stairs, sobbing, having lost my love, career and self-respect, I say to myself, "Who AM I? What is the purpose of my life?" See, here it is
May 6, 2014 · What is the correct usage of who/whom after the first person pronoun "I"? I ___ am most concerned, was not consulted. I think it should be who, but I am not sure.
Jul 19, 2013 · Yesterday I was going through my son's books and at one place it was written I have a long neck, I have spots on my body — what am I? I thought it should hav
Oct 16, 2021 · Asking Google produces this Getting relative pronouns like "who" to agree with verbs can seem tricky. But it's actually quite easy. The pronoun "who" takes the same
May 19, 2018 · I have a question, but I don't know how to ask it correctly. Can you help me to choose and explain it please? I want to ask the next question: If Kate and John are
Is this correct? The person with whom I'm doing the project should be here soon. If it is, is with always a dative preposition (like mit in German)?
Mar 17, 2023 · There is also the idea that if you can place a noun or pronoun after a verb, that noun or pronoun is an object and you should therefore use "whom" to refer back to
Dec 11, 2016 · The examples listed with "me who is" sound bad to me. I'm not sure I would characterize them as acceptable, or say that sentences like "It seems to me, who never kn
Or maybe both are correct? I would be inclined to think that 'whom' is correct, because its case is in sync with the verb 'met'. I know that in the languages with developed cases (