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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Grammar

When do you use who and whom. and When do you use came and come. Is it I would have came/come.
  

Top answer

Hi. You have posted two unrelated questions, you had better ask one at a time. Who as a relative pronoun refers either to the subject or the object of the sentence but whom only refers to the object of the sentence.

  • Hi.
  • You have posted two unrelated questions, you had better ask one at a time.
  • Who as a relative pronoun refers either to the subject or the object of the sentence but whom only refers to the object of the sentence.
  • It means that wherever you use whom, you can replace it with who but not the other way round.
  • Ex.
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2 Answers
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Hi.

You have posted two unrelated questions, you had better ask one at a time.

Who as a relative pronoun refers either to the subject or the object of the sentence but whom only refers to the object of the sentence.

It means that wherever you use whom, you can replace it with who but not the other way round.

Ex. This is the woman who I saw yesterday. (who
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As for your second question, came is used in past tenses and come for present tenses.

In your example you need past participle of come which is also come.

Not to mention that I would have come talks about past.

Regards

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