The correct sentence is: The girls who I am friends with.
The relative pronoun 'who' is a subject pronoun, functioning as the subject of the relative clause.
To use the object pronoun 'whom', you must place the preposition 'with' before the pronoun, 'The girls with whom I am friends.', making the pronoun 'whom' the object of the preposition 'with'.
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.
Whom do you trust.I might not Trust My fake friend
No. Who was the star.....
The interrogative pronoun is 'whom', an objective pronoun. It appears at the beginning of the sentence because it is a question sentence; to show that it is a correct objective pronoun, you must make the question into a statement: You did invite whom to church.
The correct interrogative pronoun is the objective form whom, which introduces the question as the object of the preposition 'for'."For whom does he play?"
yes it is correct
The correct grammar is 'whom to trust'. I didn't know whom to trust.
well the correct way is whom but everyone says who.
Not Entirely. The initial "whom" in this sentence is the subject of the sentence. When you are using the word "who" or "whom" you've got to pay attention to what the "who" is acting as. When "who" is referring to the subject, you leave off the -m, on "whom," but when you are talking about the direct object of the sentence, then "whom" is perfectly acceptable.So Grammatically speaking "Who has whom now" would be the correct form of this sentence.-------------------------------------------------Whom is used as the object of the sentence and whoas the subject (the one performing the action), therefore "Who has whom now."
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 relative pronoun is whom, but it is the incorrect case. The relative pronoun 'whom' is the objective case which functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.The correct sentence is, "Mr. Moon who you have met is my assistant."A correct sentence for 'whom' is, "Mr. Moon to whom you were introduced is my assistant."
I am friends with your aunt whom you visited recently.
Yes, it is correct. You are correct to use "who" and not "whom" because "who" is the subject of the clause "who has sent him."
The correct form is "from whom". The pronoun "whom" is functioning as the object of the preposition "from".The pronoun "whom" is an objective pronoun.The pronoun "who" is the subjective form. It functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.
Whom do you trust.I might not Trust My fake friend
No. Who was the star.....
The correct interrogative pronoun is who. (Who is next?)The pronoun 'who' functions as a subject in a sentence.The pronoun 'whom' functions as an object in a sentence.