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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

with whom or with which

Which would be correct in this usage?

Open tickets to the various service teams with which we work.

Open tickets to the various service teams with whom we work.

The service teams are made up of people, but a service team is not itself a person. I'm unclear on which sentence is correct.
  

Top answer

Either can be justified, but I always prefer who/whom when referring to people.

  • Either can be justified, but I always prefer who/whom when referring to people.
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1 Answers
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Either can be justified, but I always prefer who/whom when referring to people.

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