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What am I missing here? You are missing the rule that governs these cases! The function of the antecedent in the main clause is irrelevant. Choose the case of the relative pronoun ( who / whom ) on the basis of its function in the subordinate
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The fact that Jim smokes... The pipe that Jim smokes... The first is an example of a content clause or an appositive clause. It is not a relative clause. These structures consist of a noun like fact or belief followed by a clause introduced by
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how and when the relative pronouns are the object
and when they are the subject. who is a subject; whom is an object. There are several steps to learning how to use them. Let's start with the first. You've got to know a verb when you
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i need help defining the difference between 'subjective relative pronouns' and 'objective relative pronouns'
For example:
subject
'The chef who won the competition studied in Paris'
object
'This is
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1 There is a part of me which/that is capable of ... BOTH THAT and WHICH Yes. 2 He's someone that/whom you like. BOTH THAT and WHOM or Leave it out Yes. 3 He's someone that/whom likes you. BOTH Only that. Whom isn't possible since
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1. Neither L nor I know whom it was
— I would call "whom" incorrect, in this sentence; consider:
2. Who was it?
(By the way, the object of "know" is not the relative pronoun; it is the entire phrase "who it was".)
Best
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so you can have two pronouns back to back?
Well, you could say "... writing about the man whom I admire", where "man" is a noun and "whom" is a relative pronoun, and I don't see any fundamental difference
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In the sentence, " Most of us are writing about someone whom we admire."
Can you please help me identify the nouns, pronouns, and adjectives?
I get:
Most-pronoun
us-pronoun
someone-adjective
whom-pronoun
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I recently used the following question on a quiz:
A gentleman ________ I had never seen before smiled at me.
The students were to put the relative pronoun in the first blank and then write whether it was a defining or non-defining relative
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
241 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Commas, Relative Pronouns, Punctuation, Whom, Definite Articles, Questions, Writing, Sentences, Animals, Indefinite, Students
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1. That can usually be omitted when it's a conjunction:
I know he is happy.
2. As a relative pronoun, that can be omitted in three contexts.
i. That is the object of a verb : He is the man I saw there. | This is one of the books I
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