Yes, "By whom was this written?" is a correct question. It is the formal and grammatically accurate way to ask about the authorship of a written work.
The correct way to ask that question would be: "From whom was it?"
Well if you think about it- neither one is correct as it would be: To whom have you written to. or What have you written. or It says that you have written..... I hope this helped xx
Yes, "who is watching whom" is grammatically correct. "Who" is the subject pronoun and "whom" is the object pronoun in this question.
The correct phrase is "Whom did you meet yesterday?" because "whom" is used as the object of the verb "meet" in this question.
The pronoun 'who' is correct as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The pronoun 'whom' is correct as the object of a preposition.Examples:Who did you see at the mall? (subject, interrogative pronoun)The teacher who assigned the work should answer your question. (subject, relative pronoun)To whom should I sent my application? (object, interrogative pronoun)The friend with whom I'm going has a car. (object, relative pronoun)
The correct way to ask that question would be: "From whom was it?"
Well if you think about it- neither one is correct as it would be: To whom have you written to. or What have you written. or It says that you have written..... I hope this helped xx
Yes, "who is watching whom" is grammatically correct. "Who" is the subject pronoun and "whom" is the object pronoun in this question.
The correct phrase is "Whom did you meet yesterday?" because "whom" is used as the object of the verb "meet" in this question.
Yes, it is.
The grammatically correct way would be: To whom did you sell your old car?
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?"
For the question to be written correctly, you need to correct your spelling of the word mean. What did you mean would be correct.
In standard written British English, "to whom" is considered correct. However, in spoken British English, "to who" or "who to" would be more normal.
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 grammar is 'whom to trust'. I didn't know whom to trust.
The pronoun 'who' is correct as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The pronoun 'whom' is correct as the object of a preposition.Examples:Who did you see at the mall? (subject, interrogative pronoun)The teacher who assigned the work should answer your question. (subject, relative pronoun)To whom should I sent my application? (object, interrogative pronoun)The friend with whom I'm going has a car. (object, relative pronoun)