Rules for relative pronouns. 1. When referring to a person use Who, Whom, Whose, Whoever and Whomever. (We will look at the differences between who/whom and whoever/whomever in rules 3 and 4.) Who bought the brown dog? I am the one who bought the brown dog.
1- Structure of Relative Clauses: A relative clause is a dependent clause that begins with a relative pronoun (such as “who,” “which,” “that,” “whom,” or “whose”) or a relative adverb (such as “where,” “when,” or “why”). It functions as an adjective and modifies a noun or pronoun in the main clause. For example
So who is correct. Trick No. 2. If the first trick doesn’t work for you, try this one: Find all the verbs in the sentence. Find the subject that corresponds to each verb. If who/whom is a subject (the one doing the action), use who. If who/whom is an object (the one receiving the action), use whom.The man is doing yoga. The man at whom we are looking is doing yoga. The relative pronoun “who” replaces a human subject. People do yoga. People are flexible. People who do yoga are flexible. “Whose” replaces a possessive adjective. It is used along with a subject noun. It shows that the noun subject in the adjective clause belongs to
Well, no. But it is a meme of epic proportions. Learn all about how this meme came to be and how to use it correctly here. In the who to whom to whomst trajectoryMeLvp7.