Top answer

Yeah, especially as this seem to be appearing in spoken English. Actually, even in writing nowadays that 'whom' would sound overly staid in all but the most formal of situations.

  • Yeah, especially as this seem to be appearing in spoken English.
  • Actually, even in writing nowadays that 'whom' would sound overly staid in all but the most formal of situations.
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5 Answers
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Yeah, especially as this seem to be appearing in spoken English. Actually, even in writing nowadays that 'whom' would sound overly staid in all but the most formal of situations.
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Yes. 'Who' can be used as both a subject and an object pronoun.
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It depends on your audience. The more informal the discourse, the more OK it is.

In conversation, the correct "whomelse" sounds stilted today.
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Who else got percentage in 60s..? Is it a right sentence..?

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