Who did or whom did?

Who did or whom did?

Who vs Whom is really a Subject vs Object question. You use “who” when you are talking about the subject, and you use “whom” when you are talking about the object. A good rule of thumb is if you can replace “who/whom” with “he”, then it’s the subject, and if you can replace it with “him” then it’s the object.

Who did you go with or who went with you?

You should say either “Who did you go with?” or “With whom did you go?” (but this sounds very formal and old-fashioned). There are actually a few good grammatical points here but many native English speakers routinely ignore some of them. You only need one ‘with’ in the sentence.

Who did you see grammar?

“Whom did you see?”, though, in common practice, most English speakers will use “who”. To be sure, restate the question as a statement, and replace with “he” or “him”. The correct conversion is “You did see him”. Since the statement uses “him”, then the question uses “whom”.

Who saw you and who did you see?

mean completely different things. In Who saw you?, who is the subject of the sentence, so the word who is in the nominative case. In Who did you see?, who is actually the direct object of the sentence, so who is in the accusative case.

Who saw voice change?

Answer. Answer: you were sawn by whom ? passive = object + helping verb + past participle form of the verb + by + subject.

Who do I see or whom I see?

“Who I see” or (“whom I see”) is acting as the object of the verb “to see”. According to the Strunk & White-type grammar prescriptivists, you should use “whom” instead of “who” when it is acting as the object of a verb, analogously to using “him” instead of “he”, or “me” instead of “I”.

What does mean I’m down?

”I’m down” meaning to be amenable to something For example, if your friend invites you to go clubbing on the weekend, you can respond by saying “I’m down” to indicate that you are willing to go out. Alternatively, if you don’t want to go out, you can just say, “I can’t,” and that would be the end of it.

Whats mean I’m down?

So, in English, when you say I’m down for it, it means that you want to do something. If we were living in an earlier time where we were allowed to go out, and if my brother called and said do you wanna go out for dinner tonight? I could respond by saying yeah, I’m down for it.