Whom did you see is correct, and is required in writing. In speech, people generally say "Who did you see?"
No, the correct way to say it would be Whom does the gun belong to?Other ways to say it:Who's gun is this?To who does this gun belong to?
"Whom" is not the plural form of the interrogative "who" (as a previous answerer stated), it is the objective form. So it does not matter if you're talking about more than one person or only one person. You should use "whom" when it's acting as an object (direct object, indirect object, object of a preposition), and "who" when it's acting as the subject of a sentence. There's much debate over whether "who" or "whom" should be used as predicate nominative, though traditionally, you would use "who" (this is similar to the debate of whether we should say "It is I" or "It is me", "It is I" is traditionally correct, but more current English speakers say "It is me"). In the example of the independent clause "whom you met", "you" is the subject, "met" is the predicate, and "whom" is the direct object. "Whom" is correct, not "who".
The correct form is "Who did you say was elected?". The pronoun "who" is functioning as the subject of the sentence.The pronoun "who" is the subjective form.The pronoun "whom" is an objective pronoun.
Yes, it is.
Whom are your family membersorWho are members of your family
Yes, "each of whom is" is grammatically correct. It is used when referring to individuals within a group, emphasizing that each person is being considered individually.
Nope. It should be "He should have..."
No, the correct phrasing is "To whom will go the part of Romeo." "Whom" is the object pronoun used when referring to the person receiving the action (in this case, getting the part).
No, the correct way to say that would be... "You should just go to work"
You should say for your convenience it is *gramatically correct-*just means correct
No, it is not correct grammatically. The correct phrasing would be "Should I take these?" or "Should I take these ones?"