Lennie first imaginary conversation was with his aunt Clara
The correct usage would be "whom you are" in formal writing, as "whom" is the objective form of the pronoun "who." In casual conversation, "who you are" is more commonly used.
The boss punished Crooks, a black stable hand.
You say hello, and to whom am I speaking. Then you start on any topic.
the dead woman and the dog are having a conversation
When God's name is used in a conversation, this can be mildly offensive to some. There are people to whom this is no problem and they use his name with ease, but for others it is hard to use God's name in a conversation.
It means "Flojo" (to a male person) or "Floja" (to a female person). The person to whom the word applies depends on who's the 'uptight' one in the conversation... and who says it first.
To send an SMS test message one must first log in to Skype. Click the contact to whom you want to message, in the conversation box click via Skype and select SMS, enter your message into the conversation box and hit send.
It depends in the placement in the sentence (and possibly the formality of the conversation). "Who" is the subjective form; meanwhile, "whom" is the objective form. In proper writing, for instance, it is correct to put "For whom is the present?". Colloquially, it is instinctive to say, "Who is this present for?". The first example is correct in proper grammar (In proper writing, never end a sentence in a preposition e.g. for, from, to, at, before, etc.). As mentioned earlier, "who" is the subjective form. For example, "Who is it at the door?" or "Who is calling me at this hour?" are both examples of the subjective case. Basically, if it is a subject in a normal, declarative sentence, then you say "who." If it is in a prepositional phrase, or if it is a direct/indirect object, then you use "whom." More examples: "For whom are you giving this?" "This is for *name*." "To whom are you talking?" "I am talking to my imaginary friend." "Who ever can it be?" "It's your creepy stalker!" "Who will come to the party?" "No one will come to the party."
Whom settled Iowa in 1865
According to me, its (c)you and him because one needs to address the person with whom in-conversation-with first and then the other person concerned. So, the question will sound like: You and him are going for a walk?
When was first com mercial mobile phone made and by whom?
Talk to him simple start a conversation listen to his hobbys and then be who he likes simple:) !~shadow~!