a part of the society whose laws he cannot respect. a pregnant woman whose waters had broken. a question of whose rights are more important. among whose / which. an event which date is/whose date is. anyone whose parents are dead. both those whose. candidates whose profile best responded. children whose parents.

Note: That predicative use is neighbors is not an Americanism. There are people who will see of who as wrong, and think whom is the correct choice. I can't tell you what to do about that issue. whom is what educated people would probably write when trying to be formal and correct, especially if they don't want to risk being tagged as uneducated

May 21, 2012 at 16:28. – ♦. They are the books of our students is right thugh cumbersome; *. is not used, largely because anyone formal enough to use. in your last answers is both grammatical and idiomatic, though optional. As a point of logic, it might be taken as * I am talking to to our students, but not in the real world.

the man whose wife I work with. the party to whom, or on whose account. the young man whose wife and daughter were cared for. they don't have animals whose lives depend on them. This is my best friends grandmother whose name is Pina. Which, whom, whose. whose beehive had been cropped.

if you prefer.) "Whom" is still considered the more literate and correct word to use. If you want to sound intelligent, write "by whom". If you're chatting with your buddies at the bar, it doesn't matter. Share. Improve this answer.
If the relative pronoun is followed by a verb, the relative pronoun is a subject pronoun. Subject pronouns must always be used. If the relative pronoun is not followed by a verb (but by a noun or pronoun), the relative pronoun is an object pronoun. Object pronouns can be dropped in defining relative clauses, which are then called Contact Clauses. Relative pronouns (who, whoever, whom, whomever, that, what, which, when, where, and whose) introduce relative clauses and can stand alone as the subject in a sentence. Practice what you have When two antecedents are connected to each other by and, the pronoun is plural. Jason or Aisha. If two singular antecedents are connected to each other by or, the pronoun is singular. Omar, who

L'utilisation du pronom whom en anglais. L'utilisation de “who” et de “whom” n'est pas facile car on ne fait pas toujours facilement la différence entre les deux et on utilise l'un pour l'autre. “Whom” est un pronom relatif complément d'objet direct ou indirect d'un verbe ou d'une préposition. Ce pronom est souvent précédé d

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  • whom whose who usage