Question #8167b
2 Answers
Who is the subject of a verb, whom is the object of a verb
Explanation:
'Who' is the subject of a verb
- The one doing the action
'Whom' is the object of a verb
- The one being acted upon
"Whom" is not always used when it should be.
Explanation:
Who and Whom are Relative Pronouns , and pronouns have cases -- different versions, depending on how they are used.
" Who " is the nominative case, used as a subject or a predicate noun:
Who is he?
Is she who we think she is?
(The verb "to be" is a linking verb and NEVER takes an object, always a predicate noun or predicate adjective.)
" Whom " is the objective case, used whenever you need an object in a sentence -- Direct Object, Indirect Object, Object of Preposition:
Whom did you give it to? ("whom" is I.O., "it" is D.O.)
To whom is he speaking? ("whom" is I.O.)
They are the people from whom I received the gift. ("whom" is object of preposition "from"), ("gift" is D.O.)
You gave the present to WHOM? (incredulous) ("present" is D.O.; "whom" is I.O.)
In a sentence with both a direct and an indirect object,
you may give something (D.O.) to someone/thing/a pet (I.O.), or you may do something (D.O.) for someone (I.O.).
A couple more examples of nominative case pronouns versus objective case pronouns:
I gave the book to him/her. ("I" is nominative case; "him/her" are objective case.)
She/He gave the book to me. ("She/He" are nominative case; "me" is objective case.)
" Who " is also an Interrogative pronoun -- used to ask questions and can be singular or plural:
Who is he?
Who are they?
Here is a partial pronoun chart from the site http://www.learnbritishenglish.co.uk/english-pronouns-visual-chart/
that shows the different versions of the Personal Pronouns :
Here's an image from the Bogota Post that adds the Relative Pronouns "Who" and "Whom" in the last two columns:
Sorry if this is too long. Hope it's helpful.