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Anonymous Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Whom verses who, and She/he verses her/him

Would it be written, "She/he whom I love," "Her/him whom I love," "She/he who I love," or "Her/him who I love?"
  

Top answer

All are OK Just put a comma between the pronoun he/she or him/her and the relative clause whom/who I love

  • All are OK Just put a comma between the pronoun he/she or him/her and the relative clause whom/who I love
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4 Answers
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All are OK

Just put a comma between the pronoun he/she or him/her and the relative clause whom/who I love
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He, whom I love, lives with me.

Him whom I love seems incorrect to me. Him/Whom, both of these are of objective case.

He who I love seems incorrect, again. He/Who, both are of subjective case.
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They are all too awkward to live. The woman I love is out of town. I don't trust the woman I love
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He, whom/who I love, doesn't love me back.

I gave a present to him, whom/who I love.

Purists would discourage the use of who in the relative clause because it is supposed to function as the object in the clause who/whom I love. But it is in wide use (at least in non-restrictive relative clauses and in noun clauses).

I don't care who you love.

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