The pronoun whom is incorrect.The relative pronoun 'whom' is an object pronoun used as the subject of the relative clause. The correct subject pronoun is who."When Montague makes it to the city who will he find?"Example for the object pronoun 'whom':"When Montague makes it to the city to whom should he report?"The pronoun 'whom' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'to' (he should report to whom).
The city was founded by Americans in 1850
1664
Sublime
Yes, "whom" can be the object of a preposition (for whom, with whom, of whom, etc.).
Ernest Hemmingway
"Whom" is not a substitute for "who", it's another case. "Who" is the Nominative, while "whom" is either the Dative or the Accusative.To whom do we owe this pleasure?Whom have you told so far?The girl whom I saw yesterday is her sister.
Abernathy.
magua
magua
Luc Carl her on and off boyfriend from Nebraska. They met a while ago in New York city and have been dating on and off ever since.
Hemingway worked on "For Whom the Bell Tolls" while living in Cuba.