We thought the Greeks saw them.
aphrodite travel on a pegaus
Either can be correct, depending on the context. 'Who' is used for the subject of the verb and 'whom' for the object. 'The man who I saw was kissing the girl was your uncle.' (Subject - I saw he was kissing the girl.) 'The man whom I saw kissing the girl was your uncle.' (Object - I saw him kissing the girl.)
No Pegasus is a mythical creature of the greek beliefs.
From one pegaus, you get one if you remove it.
Depends on you
most people thought it was hard to find out who was the founder of Switzerland .But what you don't know is that there was more than one founder but the first person whom saw if was YOURS truly ALFRED ESCHER.YOUR WELCOME(:
In my world it means he though he saw you but is not sure.
"Whom" is not a substitute for "who", it's another case. "Who" is the Nominative, while "whom" is either the Dative or the Accusative.To whom do we owe this pleasure?Whom have you told so far?The girl whom I saw yesterday is her sister.
Asia- when he relized the land he was on was an island he thought he was in Japan
No. There is one word wrong. The sentence should be: I thought of you when I saw it.
The pronoun 'whom' is an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun, the objective form (used as the object of a verb or a preposition).The noun phrase 'to whom' is to ask what person or to relate what person something was told, sent, given, etc.Examples for 'to whom':To whom do I give my completed application? (interrogative pronoun)The person to whom you give the application is the manager. (relative pronoun)Other examples for 'whom':You saw whom at the mall? (interrogative pronoun, direct object of the verb 'saw')The customer for whom we made the cake will pick it up at noon. (relative pronoun, object of the preposition 'for')
Scrooge thought he saw a locomotive hearse going on before him in the gloom.