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Asked on April 27, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 27, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 27, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 27, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 27, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 26, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 26, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 26, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 25, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes
-
Asked on April 25, 2021 in Grammar.
What Stephie says is she not dead; she is alive and kicking, you know? In constructions where the pronoun is object of (and immediately follows) “a preposition,” only whom is acceptable
(to whom)?
In this example, only who is possible: who is ungrammatical. If a pronoun is a verb, the choice between who and whom depends on style level, who being less formal than whom.
- 637783 views
- 59 answers
- 234437 votes