The correct form is "Who would you like to meet in heaven?". The pronoun "who" is functioning as the subject of the sentence.
The pronoun "who" is the subjective form.
The pronoun "whom" is an objective pronoun.
His paternal grandfather, whom he would never meet.
'Whom' is an objective interrogative and relative pronoun. It is the objective form of the subjective 'who'. Use it where it is the object of the verb to which it relates. Examples: "To whom was that letter sent?" "Who sent that letter?" "For whom was that piece of music written?" "Who wrote that piece of music?" "Whom are you meeting this evening?" "Who is meeting you this evening?" "Please give this book to the person whom you are meeting this evening." "Please give this book to the person who is meeting you this evening." "She decided to give the book to the person whom she was expecting to meet that evening." "She decided to give the book to the person whom she was expecting to meet her that evening." "She decided to give the book to the person who she was expecting would meet her that evening." Make sure you identify the right verb when you are deciding whether to use 'who' or 'whom' as the relative pronoun. If you are in doubt, turn the relative clause into a question and check whether the answer would be a subject or an object (simplest way of doing this: ask yourself if the answer would be 'he' or 'him'). Hence, in the last trio of examples above: 1. [Who/whom] was she expecting to meet that evening? She was expecting to meet [him]. The verb is 'meet' and the relative pronoun is 'whom'. 2. [Who/whom] was she expecting to meet her that evening? She was expecting [him] to meet her. The verb is 'expect' and the relative pronoun is 'whom'. 3. [Who/whom] was she expecting would meet her that evening? She was expecting [he] would meet her. The verb is 'meet' and the relative pronoun is 'who'. In the last example the temptation is to use 'whom', by analogy with the two preceding examples and also, perhaps, because of a mistaken belief that 'whom' is a more formal or 'posher' alternative to 'who'. However, if you analyse your sentences carefully and ask yourself the right questions (and answer them correctly), you will not fall into that trap.
Generally speaking, celebrities are not that easy to meet, because there are too many people who want to meet them, and they don't have time to meet everyone who wants to meet them. I am sure that there are nice people who are not celebritiese whom you could meet.
This question is bizzare. I have no idea, but I'd like to meet a US woman for whom this would be an ok arrangement.
NO... it should be IS Nathan the person whom you would most like to have on your team?
Peter
Heaven was showed to Adam and Eve in the garden Eden when they ate the fruit.
Ask a girl whom you like out. Be a gentlemen and don't forget to give her a great treatment.
Whether or not heaven or hell exists is one question, this is what someone from the christian religion would say: "If he repents and asks for forgiveness from those whom he harmed, he will be forgiven, but if not, those whom he beat will come in the Day of Judgement to ask for their rights, and would take some of his good deeds to add to them as a payment for what harm he caused to them, till all his good deeds finish, and he would then find nothing to help him enter Paradise." Some would say that (saying heaven / hell exists) That as long as he grows out of it and becomes a good person, "god" will forgive him and send him to "heaven"
The pronoun 'whom' can function as a direct object, but it is often difficult to recognize because 'whom' does not actually follow the verb.Example: You will work with foreman whom you will meet later.The subordinate clause is whom you will meet later. It is easier to see that the pronoun 'whom' is the direct object of the verb 'will meet' if you mentally restructure the clause: you will meet whom later.Example: The foreman whom I was assigned to was very supportive.Whom is the object of the preposition to (to whom I was assigned). In this sentence, the the word 'whom' is not essential: The foreman I was assigned to was very supportive.The pronoun 'whom' is more commonly the object of a preposition:To whom do I give my completed application? (interrogative pronoun)The person to whom you give the application is the manager. (relative pronoun)
Ridley Scott
carrie