挥毫泼墨书写青春梦想 结对帮扶体验另一种人生
Tagged with whom whoever-vs-whomever
9 questions
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"Ask him [who or whom] you have the potential to become"? [duplicate]
Which is correct?:
Ask him who you have the potential to become
Ask him whom you have the potential to become
I'm confused over this because "Ask him who you are" and "You are whom?&...
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1
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157
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When he first entered the classroom no one knew who/whom/whoever/whomever he was? [closed]
I am unable to understand which one is the correct?
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2
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Is this how one should use 'who', 'whoever', 'whom' and 'whomever'?
I know that 'whom' can be the object of a preposition, but since 'whom' is an object pronoun, and since only transitive verbs can receive an object(s) --- if this is wrong I'd appreciate it if you'd ...
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Which is right: "It's me/I they want!" & "Who/Whom is it you asked?"?
The questions I have are in the title. Which is right, subject or object pronoun?
It's seems the first, "It's me/I they want!," is a reworking of "Subject + Verb + Object" to "Object + Subject + Verb"...
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"To whom it may concern" or "To whomever it may concern"? [duplicate]
Which is the best usage? "To whom it may concern" or "To whomever it may concern"?
5
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Who vs. whom in complex sentences
I know that who is used when asking about a subject (Who is at the door?) and whom is used when asking about an object (By whom was the door opened?). How do you determine which one to use when the ...
1
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1
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Can a phrase be the object of a clause and how would its subject change? [duplicate]
Take the sentence:
I speak all over to whoever will listen.
...at first blush, I thought, "Ah — whoever should be whomever."
However, I then noted that in the phrase "whoever will listen", whoever ...
5
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2
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May I please help who(m)ever is next [duplicate]
I am bringing up a rather pedantic point here, but, one that has me completely stumped. This is going to require some serious grammar knowledge.
I was in a line at a shop today and the teenager at ...
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Whoever or whomever: 'happy for ___ has the pleasure of working with you next.'
So sad to lose you, yet happy for whomever has the pleasure of working with you next.