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As Barone, whom advocates Immigration, said “Still, I believe the likelihood is strong that Latinos will eventually become interwoven into American life. With luck, it will take less than 100 years”.

.... writing a research paper, I don't have an opinion on immigration was given to me >_< so help me out?

2007-12-06 18:41:29 · 7 answers · asked by ryan 4 in Education & Reference Homework Help

so then I should replace whom with who?

2007-12-06 18:51:16 · update #1

7 answers

"whom" doesn't do things, "whom" has them done to it.

In this sentence you need a word indicating the doer, so you want "who". " ... who advocates .."

2007-12-06 18:52:09 · answer #1 · answered by Ergot W 4 · 1 0

Replace "whom" with "who." Always say "to whom" to yourself before putting it in a sentence--then you'll see if it's right or wrong. "As Barone, to whom advocates immigration. . . " Does that make sense? Nope, it sure doesn't!

2007-12-07 03:16:02 · answer #2 · answered by Misty Dawn 2 · 0 0

yes replace whom with who

2007-12-07 12:32:24 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Who is the nominative case, whom is the objective case.

2007-12-07 02:46:47 · answer #4 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

Who is asking whom?

2007-12-07 02:48:50 · answer #5 · answered by A.V.R. 7 · 0 0

who = used for a subject
whom= used as a verb

2007-12-07 05:20:09 · answer #6 · answered by Morgan R 2 · 0 0

replace who with 'he' and replace whom with 'him' to figure out which one is proper to use

2007-12-07 02:55:10 · answer #7 · answered by VeinOne 3 · 3 0

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