Please.
Basically whom means the same as who.We should use whom when it's replacing the name of the object of a sentence, that is the second person in the sentence.The girl who is talking;the girl is the subject of the sentence, she's the one doing the verb, she is talking.The girl to whom I am talking;the girl is the object, I am the one doing the verb, I am talking, she is the one the verb is happening to, she is being talked to.Hope that helps.
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."
What is used for things. Whom is used for a person.
In formal speech and in writing the difference between "who" and "whom" is exactly the same as the difference between "he" and "him." That is "who" can only be the subject of a verb and in all other cases "whom" is correct. Always use "whom" as the object of a verb or a preposition, as in to whom it may concern, for whom the bell tolls.
The word 'who' is not used as an object pronoun. The objective form for the pronoun 'who' is whom.Examples:The committee chose whom? (direct object)The person who the committee chose is Morris. (subject of the clause)Who does this library book belong to? (subject of the sentence)To whom does this library belong? (object of the preposition)
and whom may i be talking to
how you will start talking with a girl whom you love is a celebrity
I and you are both pronouns; I is the first person, meaning the person who is speaking, and you are the second person, meaning the person to whom I am speaking. If we were talking about some other person that would be him, her, or them, which are all forms of the third person.
It means that you have (or are in) had the same experience as the person to whom you are talking. That you are in the same state of mind
You would make a tribute for any deceases person whom you has a relationship with. This is usually a way of eulogizing them and bidding them farewell.
The correct phrase is "who often requests." In this context, "who" serves as the subject of the clause, referring to the person making the request. "Whom" is used as an object, which is not applicable here.
Make checks payable to the person or organization that you are paying.
It's the word
The payee is the person to whom the money is owed.The payee is the person to whom the money is owed.The payee is the person to whom the money is owed.The payee is the person to whom the money is owed.
Make the check payable to the person or organization that you want to receive the payment.
You should make the check payable to the person or organization that you are paying.
You should make the check payable to the person or organization that you owe money to.