Correct use of ‘Who’ and ‘whom’ in spoken and written English


‘Who’ denotes the subject and ‘whom’ is used for the object?
who: It’s the subject of a verb—e.g., Who gave you that book?
It’s a predicate nominative (a noun in the predicate that renames or refers to the sentence’s
subject)—e.g.,This is who I am.
Whom is an objective pronoun, which is a pronoun that receives the action of a verb. It also has
two main uses:
It is the object of a verb—e.g., Whom should I call?
It is the object of a preposition—e.g., From whom did you get this information?

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