Goyle
The underlined pronoun "whom" is used as the object of the verb "meet" in the sentence. It refers to the person that Jimmy encountered on the train.
The national defense education act allocated federal funds to train military soldiers
Depends on where in world you are. Even a bite from a rabid dog can be successfully treated in the U.S. these days -- though treatment is not pleasant.
D.O. is what or whom I.O. is to whom or for whom
Give the letter to Mary. to whom?The letter is for Mary. for whom?
whom
It is spelt "whom". It is the objective form of "who".
That is a matter of opinion, thus cannot be answered with a definite "correct" response. Some would say Harry Potter because he has had to endure countless treacheries each year at Hogwarts, searching for the horcruxes and *SPOILER* being an Auror afterwards.
He is a werewolf. During his time at Hogwarts, he goes into the Shrieking Shack to change into a wolf every month at the full moon because he becomes quite dangerous.
The indirect object in a sentence tells to whom or for whom the action is being done. It usually answers the question "to whom" or "for whom." For example, in the sentence "I gave her a book," "her" is the indirect object indicating to whom the action of giving is done.
Yes, "whom" can be the object of a preposition (for whom, with whom, of whom, etc.).
Snake Bite. She used an Egyptian Asp. Don"t get any crazy ideas. Some years ago it hit the Gotham tabloids- Snake-Bite suicide bid. They got the poor jerk anti-venom in time. There are some snakes like the Copperhead for whom no safe or reliable anti-venom is known. Red to Yellow- Kill a Fellow!