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Ragnareal Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Who vs Whom

Here is the man who/whom I think committed the crime.

May I know to who/whom I am speaking?

Who or whom in the above sentences?

When to use who and when to use whom?

  

Top answer

Who or whom in the above sentences? ragnareal Here is the man who/whom I think committed the crime. the man who (I think) committed — subject of verb ragnareal May I know to who/whom I am speaking?

  • Who or whom in the above sentences?
  • ragnareal Here is the man who/whom I think committed the crime.
  • the man who (I think) committed — subject of verb ragnareal May I know to who/whom I am speaking?
  • to whom — object of preposition ragnareal When to use who and when to use whom?
  • 'Who' is subject of a verb; 'whom' is object of a verb or preposition
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3 Answers
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ragnarealHere is the man who/whom I think committed the crime.May I know to who/whom I am speaking?Who or whom in the above sentences?
ragnarealHere is the man who/whom I think committed the crime.

the man who (I think) committed — subject of verb

ragnarealMay I know to who/whom I am sp
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ragnarealWho or whom in the above sentences?

Consider only the clause that contains who or whom. If you need a subject for the clause, use who. Otherwise, use whom.

ragnarealHere is the man who/whom I think committed the crime.

There is no other word

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ragnarealWho or whom in the above sentences?

You can use whom when you intend to be extremely formal. You can use who when you intend to be informal.

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