Grammar pro June Casagrande writes on when, how and why to use "whom," while also providing examples from great writers like Shakespeare who eschewed it in their works.
See anything wrong with that sentence? Most people probably don’t, but there is a problem with it and, for me, the problem is eye-opening. Here’s the issue: If you want to be as proper and correct as ...
“If misuse of ‘I’ and ‘me’ is an irritant, the abuse of ‘myself’’ is nothing short of a blot on humanity.” As the jocular gibe above implies, the subjective pronoun “I” and the objective pronoun “me” ...
I just realized that yesterday I promised to talk about how prepositions get thrown into the mix. It's pretty easy really. Let's start out today's discussion with the difference between who and whom.