'from whom' is 'de qui' in French. From whom did you receive that letter?> de qui as-tu reçu cette lettre ?
The french worked with John the good
What is the french word french of Jack ? the french word for Jack its Jacques .
No, bonchule isn't a word in french...but "bonchure" is a word in french
The word from French is negligee, which is negligée in French.
Gourmet IS a French word.
The Catalan, French, Portuguese and Spanish languages all claim the word que. The word serves as a relative pronoun and tends to be translated as "How...!" or "What...!" in an exclamation, "what...?' or "who...?" or "whom...?" in a question and "that...," "which...," "who...," or "whom..." in a declaration. The respective pronunciations will be "kuh" in Catalan and French, "kee" in Cariocan and continental Portuguese and "key" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"Who" is an English equivalent of the French word qui. The pronoun in question also translates as "that," "which," "whom" or "whose" according to context and after prepositions. The pronunciation will be "kee" in French.
Who are you
He is your fiancé (French word), on the day of the wedding he is called your bridegroom.
The word "whom" is a pronoun. It is used as the object of a verb or preposition in a sentence.
"Whom's" is not a standard word in English. The proper form to use is "whom," which is the objective case of "who."
No, but the word Whom is a word.
The french worked with John the good
by the 1790's to whom was the word federalists applied
For whom the bell tolls.
What is the french word french of Jack ? the french word for Jack its Jacques .
To whom it may concern Who is a subject pronoun; it is used as the subject of a verb. Whom is an object pronoun. If you find you can replace who/whom with he, she, or they, who is correct. If you find you've replaced who/whom with him, her, or them, then whom is correct.