They met through Harry, whom Eleanor knows.
Before her marriage to Tim McGraw, Faith Hill was engaged to musician Scott Mann. Their engagement was short-lived, and they ultimately parted ways before she met McGraw, whom she married in 1996. Hill and McGraw have since become one of country music's most famous couples.
I've heard she was a hairdresser.
Tara Franti-Rye was in show business before she met and married Michael Franti. She has been an actress and part time model.
need
Apparently he has a Spanish boyfriend whom he met one week before Placebo was formed.
The correct phrase is "Whom did you meet yesterday?" because "whom" is used as the object of the verb "meet" in this question.
I think most grammar books will tell you whom is more or less obsolete as a relative pronoun. Both who and that are ok for people except if you refer to a name:He is the guy that I met at the restaurant.I spoke to Jon, who owns the taxi.
7
If he will abuse you, no.
The relative pronoun is whom, but it is the incorrect case. The relative pronoun 'whom' is the objective case which functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.The correct sentence is, "Mr. Moon who you have met is my assistant."A correct sentence for 'whom' is, "Mr. Moon to whom you were introduced is my assistant."
No, Ruth Bell Graham, whom Billy met in Bible school, was the only woman he ever married.
By whom was Ceasar met.
Ok - this is quite an easy one to remember. You use 'who' when the people that you are talking about are the object of your sentence and "whom' when they are the subject of your sentence. If you get confused, you can use a simple trick... If you can put HE or SHE in the place of who/whom, then you should use...WHO. Example: Bill, who was the boss of the company. He was the boss of the company. So, WHO is correct. If the sentence only makes sense with HIM or HER, then use WHOM. Example: John, whom she met at school. If you put HE in this type of sentence it looks silly...She met HE at school. So, it must be....She met HIM at school...so use WHOM.
dont date a man from a different state whom you have never met. He could be like 90...
You know that he can't. No Guy who has never met you can love you truly.
"Whom" is not the plural form of the interrogative "who" (as a previous answerer stated), it is the objective form. So it does not matter if you're talking about more than one person or only one person. You should use "whom" when it's acting as an object (direct object, indirect object, object of a preposition), and "who" when it's acting as the subject of a sentence. There's much debate over whether "who" or "whom" should be used as predicate nominative, though traditionally, you would use "who" (this is similar to the debate of whether we should say "It is I" or "It is me", "It is I" is traditionally correct, but more current English speakers say "It is me"). In the example of the independent clause "whom you met", "you" is the subject, "met" is the predicate, and "whom" is the direct object. "Whom" is correct, not "who".