Liesel sees the mayor's wife while she is yelling at the mayor. The mayor's wife is standing outside her home, observing Liesel's outburst.
A character trait for Hans Hubermann in "The Book Thief" is his kindness and compassion towards others, especially Liesel, whom he treats as his own daughter despite not being related by blood. Hans is shown to be selfless, caring, and empathetic throughout the story.
The event that started the yelling in the kitchen in the short story "Charlotte's Web" by E.B. White was when Fern's father planned to kill the runt pig, whom Fern had named Wilbur, as it was too small and weak. This angered Fern, leading to a heated argument in the kitchen.
Yes, "whom" can be the object of a preposition (for whom, with whom, of whom, etc.).
"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.
Abernathy.
magua
magua
Hemingway worked on "For Whom the Bell Tolls" while living in Cuba.
you use who as the subject and whom as the object.
"Who" is used as the subject of a sentence, while "whom" is used as the object. Use "who" when referring to the subject of a sentence (e.g., "Who is going to the party?"), and "whom" when referring to the object (e.g., "To whom did you give the gift?").
her name was Megara
Hades