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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Who with? With whom?

Which one is correct being used on its own?
  

Top answer

" is the more formal version, often recommended in textbooks for academic work, but people seldom use it in everyday conversation. " is the ordinary version that almost everyone uses. Both are correct.

  • " is the more formal version, often recommended in textbooks for academic work, but people seldom use it in everyday conversation.
  • " is the ordinary version that almost everyone uses.
  • Both are correct.
  • It's just that they are used in different situations.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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"With whom?" is the more formal version, often recommended in textbooks for academic work, but people seldom use it in everyday conversation.

"Who with?" is the ordinary version that almost everyone uses.

Both are correct. It's just that they are used in different situations.

CJ

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