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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Who/Whom

When somebody says they're doing something with someone else, when you'd like to know who the other person is, should you say "with whom" or "with who"?
Thanks,
- Cj. Emotion: big smile
  

Top answer

Anonymous should you say "with whom" or "with who"? " (object of the preposition)

  • Anonymous should you say "with whom" or "with who"?
  • " (object of the preposition)
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2 Answers
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Anonymousshould you say "with whom" or "with who"?
If the question stands alone, you should clearly use "With whom?" (object of the preposition)
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Very formally, all prepositions take the form whom.

With whom?
To whom?
For whom?

In ordinary everyday conversations, many speakers use a different pattern:

Who with?
Who to?
Who for?

CJ

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