The rules of when to use who and whom are actually pretty simple. According to English grammar rules: The word who should be used when the person it’s describing is the subject of a sentence. The word whom should be used when the person it’s describing is the object of a sentence, or if it comes after a preposition.As we have seen above, whose is a possessive pronoun that is used to indicate possession. Who’s is the contracted form of who is, used in informal speech or for brevity. The best way to remember the difference between whose and who’s is to see if the sentence still makes sense when replacing it with who is . 關代除了 who ,還有 whom 、 whose 、 which 、 that ,它們本身都是代名詞,所以統稱為「關係代名詞」。. 此外, when 、 where 、 why 也能用在關係子句,但它們本身是副詞,所以稱為「關係副詞」。. 關代跟關副使用的時機有什麼差別?. 當先行詞是 人 或 物 ,就用 If you use me, him, her, us, or them, then the correct form is whom. Rule of thumb: Generally, if you can omit the who/whom entirely, the correct form is whom. If you need it, then it’s who. Example: Janice is the student the teachers picked as outstanding. (Sentence makes sense without the who/whom structure, so the correct form is whom.)
2. 1. He was bitterly denounced by slaveholders and also by such non-slaveholders as disapproved of all antislavery agitation, and in January 1827 he was assaulted and seriously injured by a slave-trader, Austin Woolfolk, whom he had severely criticized in his paper. 2. 1.