what is the difference between whom and who

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Use who when referring to someone performing an action (subject), and use whom when referring to someone receiving an action (object).

  • There are a few rules when you should use who and whom. “Who” is a subjective pronoun. “Whom” is an objective pronoun. That simply means that “who” is always subject to a verb, and that “whom” is always working as an object in a sentence. Who is like "he" and whom is like "his".

  • It comes down to how they're used in a sentence: use "who" when talking about the subject/the person doing the action, and "whom" when talking about the object/the person receiving the action.

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  • Who is when the word itself performs the or does the action Whom is when that action is recieved by the word e. g Lizzy wrote a letter to his long lost facebook friend whom she had never met.

  • who is used refering to the subject “who here would like to go on a walk?” whom is used refering to an object of a verb “to whom was the letter addressed to?”

  • "Who" is used as the subject of a sentence. For example, "Who is going to the store?" or "Who ate my cookies?" while, "whom" is used as the object of a verb or preposition. For example, "I asked my mom, to whom I owe so much" or, "I am looking for the person with whom I spoke yesterday."

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