EXAMPLES Whom did Mulan fool? (direct object) She told whom the secret of her identity? (indirect object) The general to whom I spoke was clearly the leader. (object of a preposition) • Rule 4: Use who’s as a contraction, whose as a possessive. Who’s means who is or who has. Whose is a pronoun that shows possession or ownership. EXAMPLES IXL plans. Virginia state standards. Textbooks. Test prep. Awards. Improve your language arts knowledge with free questions in "Use relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, and that" and thousands of other language arts skills. Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics Worksheet #24 Practice Answers 1. PN 2. OP 3. T 4. PN 5. T Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics Worksheet #25 Practice Answers 1. who 2. whose 3. that 4. which 5. Whom Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics Worksheet #26 Practice Answers 1. Each watches her own television show. 2. Everyone except James and Pete helps me on the Published on 8 August 2022 by Eoghan Ryan . Revised on 11 September 2023. Whose and who’s are pronounced the same but fulfill different grammatical roles. Whose is the possessive form of the pronoun ‘who’. Who’s is a contraction (shortened form) of ‘who is’ or ‘who has’. Examples: ‘Whose’ in a sentence. b. those who he thought were guilty. Step 1 - those who (he thought) were guilty. Step 2 - those who were guilty (he thought) Step 3 - those who were guilty, he thought (nominative) a. those whom he thought were guilty. This supposes that "to think" is being used transitively. It seems doubtful in this case. Whom แปลว่า ผู้ซึ่ง, ผู้ที่. แม้ว่า Whom จะมีความหมายว่า ผู้ซึ่ง, ผู้ที่ เหมือนกับ who ใช้แทนคำนามที่เป็นคนเช่นกัน แต่ whom ทำหน้าที่ An interrogative pronoun replaces a noun in a sentence to form a question. What does that look like, exactly? Well, a little bit like that, actually. Who (pronoun) Who. (pronoun) The pronoun who, in English, is an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun, used primarily to refer to persons. Unmarked, who is the pronoun’s subjective form; its inflected forms are the objective whom and the possessive whose. The set has derived indefinite forms whoever, whomever, and whoseever, as well as John is the boy father is a painter. 8. She is the girl I saw at the party last night. 9. The student lent you his book, speaks Italian. 10. The boy to you spoke is my cousin. 11. Marco Polo was a young traveler father was a rich man. Usage of Whom:-1) It can be used in place of object to interrogate. Ex- i) Whom do you want to leave with? ii) Whom is this present for? 2) It can also be used as a object of a clause. Ex- i) This is the person whom I told you about. 3) Whom is always the correct choice after a preposition. Ex- Katrina is the girl with whom I am going to date. bH94.