Jose Carillo's English Forum

Open Forum => Students’ Sounding Board => Topic started by: Joe Carillo on August 25, 2011, 07:37:00 AM

Title: Should we use 'who' or 'whom' for interrogative sentences?
Post by: Joe Carillo on August 25, 2011, 07:37:00 AM
Question posted as a private message by Pipes, Forum member (August 24, 2011):

Which interrogative pronoun is appropriate if the sentence below is rendered into a question?

“You should see Mrs. Laker at the Laker School of English about classes.”

Should it be “who” or the objective form “whom”?

My reply to Pipes:

Formally, since “Mrs. Laker” functions as the direct object of the verb “see,” the question form of that sentence should use the objective interrogative pronoun “whom,” as follows:

Whom should I see at the Laker School of English about classes?”
  
In modern usage, however, the subjective “who” is increasingly preferred for such questions:

Who should I see at the Laker School of English about classes?”

My advice: Use “whom” for your formal written school requirements, but feel free to use the less stuffy “who” in your day-to-day English.