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236
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Asked on April 7, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
How can someone say whom in contemporary English? It’s dead, and it sounds stuffy and old-fashioned to use archaic forms. In the questions you ask, I’d write “whoever”. Which will be the solution if you use the
singular form definition of criteria?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes