answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

In the United States:

For meat and poultry products, you can contact the Food Safety and Inspection Service's Customer Complaint Hotline. For all other foods, you can contact the Food and Drug Administration's hotline. Both numbers can be found on the appropriate Agency's web site.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

The manufacturer should be the first one contacted, unless you're dining out, in which case tell the restaurant manager first.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

The company which made / processed the food.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Whom should you contact if you find a foreign object in your food?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Should you use whom you trust or who you trust?

You can use both who and whom you trust. Who can be used as a subject and an object of a clause, but not object of a preposition. Whom can only be used as an object. She is the one who is always there for me. (not whom because who is the subject of is) _She is the only one who (_or whom) I trust. (object of trust) She is the one on whom (not who) I can rely . (object of the preposition on)


Whom should i contact for hernia?

Your doctor or a doctor.


When Montague makes it to the city whom will he find is that the correct pronoun?

The pronoun whom is incorrect.The relative pronoun 'whom' is an object pronoun used as the subject of the relative clause. The correct subject pronoun is who."When Montague makes it to the city who will he find?"Example for the object pronoun 'whom':"When Montague makes it to the city to whom should he report?"The pronoun 'whom' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'to' (he should report to whom).


Does a direct object answer what or whom?

D.O. is what or whom I.O. is to whom or for whom


What answer is correct to who should we send the letter of commendation or to whom should we send the letter of commendation?

To whom should we send the letter of commendation is correct."Whom" is the object of the preposition "to" and so should be in the objective case.


Should you contact your father whom you have never met?

If he will abuse you, no.


Can whom function as the object of a preposition?

No, "whom" is used as the object of a verb or preposition in formal English, while "who" is typically used in more informal contexts.


Which is is the correct relative pronoun who or whom?

The correct relative pronoun to use depends on its function in the sentence. "Who" is used as a subject, while "whom" is used as an object. For example, "The person who helped me" (who as subject) and "The person whom I helped" (whom as object).


When should a question start with 'whom'?

Whom must be the object of a verb or a preposition, as in "Whom did they suspect of committing the crime," where whom is the object of the verb suspect. In the sentence "Who, do they suspect, committed the crime," who is the subject of the verb committed. It all means the same thing, but it is structurally different.


Whom do I contact if I have knowledge to some stolen equipment of Direct TVs?

The best people to contact should be your local Police


Which is correct Bob and Sue whom you met OR who you met?

"Whom" is not the plural form of the interrogative "who" (as a previous answerer stated), it is the objective form. So it does not matter if you're talking about more than one person or only one person. You should use "whom" when it's acting as an object (direct object, indirect object, object of a preposition), and "who" when it's acting as the subject of a sentence. There's much debate over whether "who" or "whom" should be used as predicate nominative, though traditionally, you would use "who" (this is similar to the debate of whether we should say "It is I" or "It is me", "It is I" is traditionally correct, but more current English speakers say "It is me"). In the example of the independent clause "whom you met", "you" is the subject, "met" is the predicate, and "whom" is the direct object. "Whom" is correct, not "who".


Is whom an object?

Yes, the pronoun 'whom' is the objective form for 'who'. The pronouns 'who' and 'whom' are both interrogative pronouns and relative pronouns. The objective 'whom' is more often seen as the object of a preposition. Examples: Interrogative: To whom should I give my completed application form? Relative: The customer for whom we ordered the special wheels is here for pick up.