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ESL forum > Grammar and Linguistics > Prepositions in relative clause    

Prepositions in relative clause



hussamk2000
Yemen

Prepositions in relative clause
 
Hello , everybody

I need your help to choose the best option from the list bellow:

1) John , with whom I played chess yesterday,  is my friend.

2) John , with who I played chess yesterday,  is my friend.

Other options are welcome.

Thanks in advance
 
Hussam


6 Dec 2013      





latty
Cyprus

Hi,

I would choose option 1 ;)


6 Dec 2013     



agnes31love
France

hi!
the correct answer is the first one, but it �s rather formal.

Agnes

6 Dec 2013     



joy2bill
Australia

Well grammatically the first is correct but as a native speaker we would know instantly that English was not your native language as it is far too formal.
We would say: John ,  who I played chess with yesterday , is my friend.
or I played chess with my friend John yesterday.

6 Dec 2013     



carmeladima
Italy

Remember that "who" is a subject pronoun, "whom" is  an object one. So my guess would be:
John, Whom I played chess with yesterday, is my friend.

Hope that will help

6 Dec 2013     



mustaphaspider
United States

with whom is grammatically correct because we use preposition + whom not whois more formal

6 Dec 2013     



essma
Tunisia

the answer is very simple 
who=is for the subject
whom= is for the object 
so here we should use whom since the subject is - I-

6 Dec 2013     



cunliffe
United Kingdom

I go with joy3bill  - whom is far too formal for speech

6 Dec 2013     



douglas
United States

So you all know the "rules", but we native speakers just don �t generally use "whom"-whom is, in most cases, leaving the Englsih language rather quickly.
 
So, if the question concerns some kind of a test, the correct answer is "whom"; if you want to sound "normal", use "who".
 
 
 
 
Cheers,
Douglas
 
 

6 Dec 2013     



Tere-arg
Argentina

1) John , with whom I played chess yesterday,  is my friend.

2) John , with who I played chess yesterday,  is my friend.


1) is correct.
You may say:

a) John , with whom I played chess yesterday,  is my friend.   or

b) John , whom I played chess  with yesterday,  is my friend.

a) is formal


You may use a preposition before "whom", but never before "who".







6 Dec 2013     



Tere-arg
Argentina

We, non-native speakers  do  sound "normal".
Maybe, sometimes, we do not sound "natural"    Smile

6 Dec 2013     

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