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236
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Asked on April 5, 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 5, 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 5, 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 5, 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 5, 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 5, 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 4, 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 4, 2021 in Grammar.
Yes, it’s fine. In your example, “specifically in San Francisco” is an appositive to “in California”. Appositive says info with context without anything affecting truth. My thourday is in California, the source of information about where I live is not relevant in this case.
Why don’t we give more information about where I live?
- 684768 views
- 84 answers
- 252891 votes
-
Asked on April 4, 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 4, 2021 in Grammar.
Yes, it’s fine. In your example, “specifically in San Francisco” is an appositive to “in California”. Appositive says info with context without anything affecting truth. My thourday is in California, the source of information about where I live is not relevant in this case.
Why don’t we give more information about where I live?
- 684768 views
- 84 answers
- 252891 votes