Adolph Hitler's dog was named Blondi .
In 1921, Hitler had a dog named Prinz. He purchased another German Shepherd shortly after and named him Muckl. During WWII, he had the well-known German Shepherd named Blondi, and before Blonda he owned a mother and daughter set of Shepherds, both of whom were named Blonda. The person who answered before me was mistaken by the named Rolf and Ralf. Those were the names of Haputsturmfuhrer Amon Goeth's dogs. (He was the Kommandant of the Plaszow concentration camp in Poland from 1942-1944.)
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The full adult size of your GSD will depend in large part on the genetic background of its parents. Adult males should range between 24-26" at the shoulder blade, females from 22-24". Males within the standard may weigh anywhere from 65-90 lbs. depending on their bloodlines. Females may weigh anywhere from 50-75 lbs. Although your pup will reach close to adult height by 10-18 months, he will continue to fill out until up to 3 years old.
No, the correct way to say it would be Whom does the gun belong to?Other ways to say it:Who's gun is this?To who does this gun belong to?
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the sovereign people
Woody belongs to Andy.
None. There is nobody to whom triangular numbers belong.
On January 4, 2011, it was announced that Shepherd got engaged on December 26, 2010, to TV writer Lamar "Sal" Sally, whom she had been seeing for over a year. Shepherd and Sally are expected to get married in August 2011 in Chicago
To whom it may concern Who is a subject pronoun; it is used as the subject of a verb. Whom is an object pronoun. If you find you can replace who/whom with he, she, or they, who is correct. If you find you've replaced who/whom with him, her, or them, then whom is correct.
The teacher picked the red pencil off up from her desk and asked, "Whom may this pencil belong to?" "Whom is this gentlemen?" The kind lady asked.
What is a pronoun used for impersonal things eg ideas or objects as in "See what I mean" or "At whatshould I aim?" or "You did what? " Whom is a personal pronoun used to represent people as in "For whom the bell tolls" or "To whom does this book belong?" Note that whom is the object case of who (and normally follows the verb) as in "Who did what to whom?" or "He chose whom he wanted."