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Asked on March 15, 2021 in Grammar.
What is called a statutory “whom” which is used in relation to a preceeding quantifiers i. There is something called a statutory “whom” which is used after a statutory preceeding (“whoms”) and the following method. e: some of, few of, all of, etc. as well as some and.i.e. many and (e.f. more than one or two) of. If you find one, you are obligated to use “whom” afterwards. Don’t try to buy a sample… Ex: Many students will graduate next month. I live in the UK. Ex: There are many students who graduated last month. Ex: What is going on in my life? Some of whom may receive honorary degree because of their exellency. How do I remove in my heart a sound that sounds as weird as above? Because of strict equality of titles, I
am using “them” in my text. Of course not many ppl use whom nowadays but if you wanna make it formal, then you might want to use what
instead of who.
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