honor of England
with whom
'Whom' is used as the object of a sentence, typically following a preposition or a verb. Use 'whom' when referring to the object of a verb or a preposition, while 'who' is used as the subject. For example, you would say "To whom did you give the book?" because 'whom' is the object of the preposition 'to.'
Johnson = Ioanekoni
Njan enne thanne ninnil arpichirikkunnu
I siendo su paciente dedicado.
quien
Hola señor Johnson...!
The correct form is "Who did you say was elected?". 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.
The pronoun 'whom' is used for the object of a verb or a preposition.The corresponding subject pronoun is 'who'.The pronouns 'who' and 'whom' are interrogative pronouns and relative pronouns.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question. Examples:Subjective: Who gave you the book?Objective: To whom will you give the book? (object of the preposition 'to')A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause (a group of words with a subject and a verb that gives information about its antecedent). Examples:Subjective: The one who gave the party was my neighbor.Objective: The one from whom I received the invitation was my neighbor. (object of the preposition 'from')Using it in a sentence is just how you would say "who". it's just a fancier way of saying "Who"- Whom is this girl/boy you speak of?- and this is whom, again?- Whom?I really hope this helps you!!!
i think it is Samuel Johnson.. but the book really didnt say. i thought that because it said he was a writer..
Whom did you say was coming for dinner? Ask not for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. The landlord from whom he was renting had suddenly passed away.
¿Con quién?