Who is the subject form of the word, and whom is the object form. More clearly, replace your who/whomin the sentence with he/him.
> I am congratulating him. You are congratulating whom? Whom are you congratulating?
> Who is there? He is there.
> Where is he? Where is who?
> To whom are you sending a present? I am sending the present to him.
> Who is sending you a present? He is sending me a present.
Where you would use a subject, use who.
Where you would use an object, use whom.
Hope this helps. :)
Peace, vive le roi, RM25483
Yes, as whom is the object of the preposition of.
An anomaly
It is considered proper style or etiquette to mention yourself last and the other person first, but this is not a grammar rule.Examples:John and I went to the store.Mother sent John and me to the store.If you are wondering when to use "John and I" or "John and me," use "John and I" wherever you would use "I" and use "John and me" wherever you would use "me." This is a rule of grammar.
Whom do you trust.I might not Trust My fake friend
Grammar that we all use, there is no other kind of grammar.
There is a grammar rule for the closing of letters: only the first word should be capitalized. This means that you have to write your phrase like this: To whom it may concern,
The correct grammar is 'whom to trust'. I didn't know whom to trust.
A grammar rule is when you have a rule of grammar which makes your English correct for example; Emma said "Turn on the light please" (correct) Emma said Turn on the light please (wrong) because you have not used speech marks which is breaking a grammar rule because the grammar rule you are breaking is to always use speech marks when someone is talking!
Our USA grammar originated from England's common usage grammar
Yes, as whom is the object of the preposition of.
Grammar.
"Both of whom" is correct grammar. It is used when referring to two people. For example, "I invited John and Mary, both of whom attended the party."
The correct grammar is "You are the one who can't be trusted." "Who" is used as the subject of the clause, while "whom" is used as the object.
An anomaly
It is considered proper style or etiquette to mention yourself last and the other person first, but this is not a grammar rule.Examples:John and I went to the store.Mother sent John and me to the store.If you are wondering when to use "John and I" or "John and me," use "John and I" wherever you would use "I" and use "John and me" wherever you would use "me." This is a rule of grammar.
Whom do you trust.I might not Trust My fake friend
Traditional grammar is correct "textbook" grammar. Functional grammar is colloquial grammar, grammar that people use in regular conversation. For instance, people tend to say "Who are you going with?" even though that is incorrect and the correct form would be "With whom are you going?" (prepositions should always precede their objects, and "who" should be in the objective case "whom").